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SMALL BUSINESS
Cash for Clunkers to End on Monday
By KEN THOMAS and STEPHEN MANNING
, AP
WASHINGTON (Aug. 20) — The Obama administration will end the popular $3 billion Cash for Clunkers program on Monday, giving car shoppers a few more days to take advantage of big government incentives.
The Transportation Department said Thursday that the government will wind down the program on Monday at 8 p.m. EDT. Car buyers can receive rebates of $3,500 or $4,500 for trading in older vehicles for new, more fuel-efficient models.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the program has been "a lifeline to the automobile industry, jump starting a major sector of the economy and putting people back to work." He said the department was "working toward an orderly wind down of this very popular program."
The White House has touted the program's success in providing a targeted boost to the sluggish economy since its inception in late July. Through Thursday, auto dealers have made deals worth $1.9 billion and the incentives have generated more than 457,000 vehicle sales.
But the administration needed to put a halt to the program to avoid surpassing the $3 billion funding level. Consumers were on pace to exhaust the program's coffers in early September and dealers have complained about long delays in getting reimbursed for the car incentives.
John McEleney, chairman of the National Automobile Dealers Association, said he remained concerned that so few dealers had been reimbursed for Clunker deals. But he said the Monday deadline should give dealers time to get their paperwork in order.
"I think if we can get a clean cutoff Monday and get everything processed by then, it will have been a pretty darned successful program," he said.
But Mike Mahalak, who runs a Dodge, Chrysler and Jeep dealership in Winter Haven, Fla., said the Monday end date could lead to a similar rush that nearly crippled the federal government's computer systems that were set up to handle claims.
"That Web site will lock up again once everyone is cramming it again on Monday," Mahalak said. The administration has said it expanded the capacity of the computer network in an effort to improve the process for dealers.
The Transportation Department said they have reviewed nearly 40 percent of the transactions and have already paid out $145 million to dealers. Obama officials said there are no plans to seek additional funding.
Applications for rebates will not be accepted after the Monday deadline, administration officials said, and dealers should not make additional sales without receiving all the necessary paperwork from their customers. Dealers will be able to resubmit rejected applications after the deadline.
The Transportation Department cautioned dealers about making sales this weekend, advising them to make sales only when the buyer's paperwork is clearly in order and can be submitted immediately for repayment.
President Barack Obama said in an interview Thursday that the program has been "successful beyond anybody's imagination" but dealers were overwhelmed by the response of consumers. He pledged that dealers "will get their money." The administration has said it has tripled the number of staffers sorting through the dealer paperwork.
Dealers have complained of delays in getting reimbursed and backlogs of vehicle paperwork getting processed in the program. Dealers have said they face a risk of not being reimbursed but LaHood has pledged that dealers will be paid.
"We do not know how many deals are in the pipeline. We don't know how many dollars are left in the program at this very moment," said Ted Smith, president of the Florida Automobile Dealers Association. "That's fundamental to the health of the dealerships that are participating. If you run out of money before you run out of deals, that's not a good situation."
On Thursday, both Chrysler and General Motors said they would begin providing cash advances to dealers to help cover any cash shortfalls related to the program. The automakers said they would provide the advances for up to 30 days to dealers who have already completed a sale and that they will be available as long as the program remains in effect.
The National Automobile Dealers Association said its trade group met with Transportation officials to discuss concerns about reimbursement delays and ways of fixing the problems. NADA spokesman Charles Cyrill said the association "stressed the importance of addressing — as soon as possible — how the program will end, including the possible suspension of the program."
Dealer say the delays have led to a cash crunch. They typically borrow money to put new cars on their lots and must repay those loans within a few days of a sale.
Some dealers are no longer participating in the Clunker program. The Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association, which represents dealerships in the New York metro area, said about half its 425 members had left the program because they cannot afford to offer more rebates.
Still, the program provided at least a temporary jolt for automakers.
GM announced plans to rehire more than 1,300 workers and automakers have been paying overtime to boost production. Hyundai recalled 3,000 workers in Alabama.
"At a time of great economic distress, cash for clunkers has stimulated increased production by domestic automakers, putting thousands of idled workers back on the job," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.
The government's online reimbursement system was flooded with requests shortly after the program began in late July, overwhelming the computer system and staff set up to process the deals. That led to big delays for dealers trying to file the paperwork they needed to get paid back for the rebates.
LaHood said some of the submitted paperwork has been incomplete or inaccurate, which contributed to delays. He acknowledged the Transportation Department did not have enough people to process the paperwork but said DOT was ramping up staff.
—
AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf contributed from New York.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-08-20 16:38:41
COMMENTS ( 470 )
CATnDRYER
1:03AM Aug 21 2009
I HOPE THIS WHOLE THING IS ONE HELLUVA LESSON TO THE FEEBLE MINDED CITIZENS THAT PUT THIS MORON IN THE HIGHEST OFFICE IN THE LAND.............WE ARE STILL IN IRAQ ON BUSH'S SCHEDULE TO LEAVE.........HE HAS DOUBLED THE TROUPS IN AFGHANISTAN.........HE HAS TRIPLED THE DEBT BUSH LEFT IN ONLY SIX MONTHS.............HE HASN'T CREATED ONE SINGLE NEW JOB....................THE GAYS ARE STILL NOT TELLIN..........THE CAMEL JOCKEYS ARE STILL IN GUANTANAMO......................THE MORON HAS DONE NOTHING NOTHING NOTHING THAT HE PREACHED DURING THE CAMPAIGN.............................AND WHY?...................BECAUSE HE'S A MORON THAT NEVER DID ANYTHING IN HIS LIFE BUT TAKE HANDOUTS.
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BDYFTNS
1:01AM Aug 21 2009
I don't know how to tell Republicans this, it's gonna be crushing, but the majority of the funding for ACORN took place under the executive guidance of none other than George W, according to the Congressional record. Every year during the Bush administration, ACORN Housing Corporation received more than $1 million (from 2001, when George Bush became president, until 2008, the Bush administration provided over $13 million to ACORN), for such things as housing counseling and working to prevent predatory lending in low-income communities. And many Republicans who are now screaming bloody murder and spinning fantasies about billions of dollars in funding for ACORN (such as loony-tunes Michelle Bachmann, who was probably given this information by a space alien), as well as accusing ACORN of being the cause of the housing crisis, were sitting right there when Bush handed out the dough. And let's be clear here: The accusation that ACORN contributed to the housing crisis by âbullyingâ and âintimidatingâ banks into irresponsible lending to minorities by, perhaps, invoking the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) is more right-wing fantasy (which many of my comment-writers seem to have bought hook, line and sinker). The problem here is that, according to housing experts, a large number of subprime loans weren't even made under the CRA, which applies only to depository institutions. And as far as President Obama being âin bedâ with ACORN, it was more right-wing fantasty that Dems were funneling money to ACORN via the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (which created the Troubled Asset Relief Program). At the risk of gravely disappointing my many disapproving comment-writers, neither the draft proposal nor the final version of the bill contained any language at all mentioning ACORN
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Electricgibson88
1:01AM Aug 21 2009
Whats so popular about this program. Let me see if I understand this. We the taxpayers foot the bill for walfare and scumbags to buy a car on our backs and this helps the economy how? In six months all these cars will be repo'd because they can't afford it then they will blame Obama for this. Sounds like a stupid program to me.
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CHARLEYBOB
12:58AM Aug 21 2009
The United States Government could screw up a two car funeral, and they want to control health care? I have used the VA system and it worked pretty well for me. It depends on which hospital or clinic you work with. I am now on Medicare. Of course I paid in to Medicare for years. Medicare is not free. Last year I paid uncle and my supplemental plan almost $5,000. There are other incidentals like co-pay and deductibles you must pay for. I do have one question for the Pres. (the worlds greatest salesman). Assuming there are 47 million uninsured in the U.S. and some of them, whoever they are will be covered under P.T. Barnum's plan, where are the doctors and support personnel coming from that will treat these people? Many areas now are short of doctors and nurses. Mandrake the magician could not cover that shortage. It means that some folks will come up short on their medical care. In the meantime, this bill (I think) starts in 2011 or 2012, what was the ******** will take years and billions to set up a computer system that will store everyone's medical records......
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CATnDRYER
12:58AM Aug 21 2009
THE GOVERNMENT IS BRIBING PEOPLE TO BUY CARS......WITH MY MONEY. .....I WONDER IF ANY OF THOSE LEECHES EVEN THINK ABOUT THE TAXPAYERS THAT BOUGHT THEIR CAR FOR THEM........AND I WONDER IF THEY CAN COME UP WITH ONE SINGLE SOLITARY REASON WHY I SHOULD BE BUYING THEM A NEW CAR.
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