N.A.D.A. Estimates That 700 Dealerships Will Close in 2008.

Kate Linebaugh writes in the October 28, 2008, Wall Street Journal that with the credit crunch and new vehicle sales on track for a 25 year low, the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) estimates 700 new-car dealerships will close this year.  This is up from 430 last year.

The markets most vulnerable to dealer closings are California, which has the most dealers of any state, followed by Texas, Pennsylvania and New York.

Read the Full Article Here.

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Nightmare: You’re Driving Franken-Car!

Imagine this Halloween Nightmare:  You discover that your car is really two cars that were “clipped” together by a body shop at the request of an insurance company in order to save money over paying salvage value.

Whether it was your car that was involved (heaven-forbid) in the serious accident and a “clip-job” was ordered, or you purchased the car used and later discovered the clip, you and your occupants’ safety is especially at risk in the event of a second accident.

“Clipping” is a penalty in football, and it should be in the car market. One of the reasons I’m a consumer advocate attorney is to stand up for people when corporate greed puts health and safety at risk.

Read about Clipping in an article written by 

Louis Green

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Many Car Dealers are in Trouble

St. Petersburg Times business reporter Robert Trigaux wrote an interesting column in the October 5, 2008, Sunday paper about hard times for US Car Dealers.

Read the Article Here.

Louis Green

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VP Debate Palin “Darn right it was the predator lenders”

As a Consumer Advocacy lawyer, I can tell you that my colleagues and I have been on the front lines for years, dealing with the anguish of clients who have been victims of mortgage scams, of mortgage accounts that have been assigned and re-assigned into huge pools; who have had mortgage servicers who played games with their payments; and who have fallen for home equity scams and wound up in foreclosure.

We’ve tried to sound the alarm with limited success in Congress and State legislatures, but people funded initiatives don’t quite have the same pull as powerful industry lobbies.   Sometimes, a successful lawsuit or compelling story attracts dedicated journalists who tell the stories and get the ears of legislatures.

Unfortunately, as with Katrina, the early warning signs were ignored, and the dams have burst.

I’ve followed recent analysis of the “mortgage crisis” and have put the lion’s share on consumers for taking out overextending mortgages.  The post-mortem doesn’t take into account the advertising campaigns that got people into the offices of mortgage brokers where people were lied to and subjected to deceptive and often high pressure sales, drive-by appraisals, high closing costs, etc.

I want to hear how candidates for national office discuss this because I want to know if they get it.

I watched the Vice Presidential debate last night and was pleasantly shocked to hear this exchange with Sarah Palin:

Gwen Ifill:  Who do you think was at fault? I start with you, Gov. Palin. Was it the greedy lenders? Was it the risky home-buyers who shouldn’t have been buying a home in the first place? And what should you be doing
about it?

PALIN: Darn right it was the predator lenders, who tried to talk Americans into thinking that it was smart to buy a $300,000 house if we could only afford a $100,000 house. There was deception there, and there was greed and there is corruption on Wall Street. And we need to stop that.

Those darn predator lenders.  Exactly, Gov. Palin. Kudos, you got the point, and you expressed it to America.  We DO need to stop that.  Please tell Senator McCain.

Barak Obama, with his background in the grassroots, also gets it and has for a while.

BIDEN: But here’s the deal. Barack Obama pointed out two years ago that there was a subprime mortgage crisis and wrote to the secretary of Treasury. And he said, “You’d better get on the stick here. You’d better look at it.”

Yes, we should all look at it and make sure that consumers are the first to be protected.

Could it be that consumer advocacy has become, dare I say, sexy?

Louis M. Green

http://louismgreen.com

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