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   Message 8,052 of 8,306   
   Greg Carr to All   
   17 Toronto GM Dealers Sue GM   
   01 Jul 14 21:36:17   
   
   XPost: can.politics, alt.toronto   
   From: gregcarrsober@gmail.com   
      
   TORONTO - A group of 17 Toronto-area General Motors dealers is suing the   
   automaker, claiming GM failed to provide them with adequate financial   
   support despite receiving million of dollars in aid from taxpayers.   
      
   The Canadian dealers say they have been struggling to make a profit amid   
   a big drop in market share and sluggish sales, and have spent years   
   asking General Motors of Canada Ltd. and its parent company in the U.S.,   
   General Motors Corp., for help.   
      
   But, they say, none of the $10-billion bailout provided to the company   
   by the Canadian and Ontario governments as part of joint funding with   
   the U.S. during the financial crisis in 2009 has been spent in Canada.   
      
   That has created a particular hardship for dealers in the Greater   
   Toronto Area, a major urban market where it is expensive to operate, the   
   lawsuit says.   
      
   "Despite the fact that the Canadian and Ontario governments provided   
   bailout funds to GMCL based on the representations made and assurances   
   given by GM and GMCL ... all of the $10 billion received from Canadian   
   taxpayers . . . (was) directed to GM in the United States," the court   
   filing said.   
      
   "At GM's direction and insistence, GMCL ceded the right to allocate the   
   bailout funds it received from the Canadian and Ontario governments to   
   its parent company in the United States, and GM in turn prioritized the   
   needs of its own dealer network over those of Canadian dealers" despite   
   initial suggestions that the funding would benefit both markets.   
      
   The dealers operate in what they describe as the third-largest market in   
   North America and say GM is aware that the GTA as a market is comparable   
   to major U.S. markets such as New York, New Jersey, San Francisco and   
   Los Angeles.   
      
      
   But according to the court filing, the company did nothing to address   
   declining market share in Canada, or to stop the loss of customers from   
   brands like Pontiac, which were eliminated as part of GM's restructuring.   
      
   The dealers say market share in the GTA has fallen markedly since 2008 -   
   from 12.5 per cent to an all-time low of 5.63 per cent in 2013.   
      
   Without adequate support, the dealers say their business is not viable   
   in the long run, especially since they are required by the company to   
   invest millions of dollars in their dealerships in renovations to meet   
   new image standards.   
      
   GM spokeswoman Adria MacKenzie described the allegations in the lawsuit,   
   which have yet to be proven in court, as being "without merit."   
      
   "We plan to defend against them vigorously," she said. "As the matter is   
   before the courts, we cannot provide any further comment. We will   
   continue to be focused on our customers."   
      
   The lawsuit was filed last week with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.   
      
   In it, the dealers are asking that GM provide them with "an appropriate   
   level of financial support and assistance" and are seeking $400 million   
   in damages.   
      
   They are also asking for a declaration from the companies that they   
   "breached their duties to deal fairly and act in good faith" toward the   
   dealers.   
      
   The GTA lawsuit is the latest in a string of legal battles for the   
   company, including an ongoing U.S. suit in which GM links 13 deaths to a   
   defective ignition switch in cars such as the Chevrolet Cobalt and   
   Saturn Ion. Trial lawyers and lawmakers say claims of wrongful death and   
   injury could total in the hundreds.   
      
   GM has agreed to pay compensation to all victims of crashes in those   
   cars under a program announced Monday, provided they can prove the   
   ignition switches caused the accidents.   
      
   Kenneth Feinberg, one of the top compensation experts in the U.S. who is   
   running the plan, said GM has placed no limit on the total amount he can   
   pay to injured people or relatives of those killed. And he alone — not   
   GM — will decide how much they each will get, even though he is being   
   paid by the company and it didn't like some of the program's provisions.   
      
   Feinberg wouldn't estimate the ultimate cost for GM, but based on the   
   methodology he plans to employ, a large amount of claims could mean a   
   sum running into the hundreds of millions of dollars, if not billions.   
      
   http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/06/30/gm-dealers-lawsuit-canad   
   _n_5544370.html?utm_hp_ref=canada-business   
      
   — With files from The Associated Press   
      
   ----------------------------------------------------------------   
   ----------------------   
   Did Canada and Ontario ever get that money back?   
   --   
   *Read and obey the Bible*   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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