Cosenzi family holds 14th annual “Driving for the Cure” charity golf tournament

For the 14th consecutive year, the Cosenzi family held its “Driving for the Cure” charity golf tournament in honor of the cancer victim patriarch of the family.

Tom Cosenzi, the owner of the Tommy Car auto dealerships, was in the prime of life, a life cut short by brain cancer. His children began this tradition of “Driving for the Cure”, an annual event that has so far raised upwards of $1.5 million for Cancer research..

Carla Cosenzi told 22News, “This is in memory of my dad Tom Costenzi, who was diagnosed in 2007, and at the age of fifty two, passed away in 2009.

All the money raised during the 14th annual fund raising golf tournaments at Longmeadow’s Twin Hills Country Club go directly to Dr. Patrick Wen and his team of researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

“Dr. Wen was able to able to keep my dad alive for a little over two years, when the life expectancy was only six months,” Cosenzi said. “So we’re honored to help support the cause, to help other people not have to endure the type of pain my dad or my family went through.”

To see the full interview, click the link below!

Full Interview

Tommy Car Auto hosts golf tournament to raise money for brain cancer research

The Tommy Car Auto Group held its annual Driving for a Cure Golf Tournament. It was held at Twin Hills Country Club on Shaker Road in Longmeadow.

Carla and Tom hold the event each year to honor their father Tom’s memory, and raise money for brain cancer research.

They have now raised over $1.4 million to support the Jimmy Fund and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Over 40 teams of golfers took part. There were several raffle prizes, an auction, and a pig-roast dinner for the hundreds of attendees.

To see the full interview, click the link below!

Interview

Surprise Squad honors Brooking’s Elementary’s ‘Mr. Sunshine’

School is back in session and so is the Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad. This month, we’re recognizing a Springfield educator who goes above and beyond not only for the students in his classroom, but for his entire community. With a nickname to match his positive energy and infectious smile, John Morgan can brighten any room, but in this case the field outside the Brookings School.

It was a beautiful September day in Springfield and the sun was shining outside Brookings Elementary School when dozens of students, teachers, and community members were waiting to surprise the real sunshine, who was behind a set of doors. “He’s just a fantastic guy and does so much not only for school, but for church, for community,” said Sabrena Brantley.

“It’s really easy to understand now why his nickname is ‘Mr. Sunshine’ because he does change the whole energy in a room or a crowd when he walks in,” Cosenzi noted.

To see the full video, click the link below!

Surprise Squad honors Brooking’s Elementary’s ‘Mr. Sunshine’

Surprise Squad honors special Springfield charter school volunteer

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad is in full swing and in this month’s edition, we are recognizing an educator who volunteers her time to help underserved youth.

We are headed over to Phoenix Charter Academy in Springfield to surprise Nana Shirley. She has been a volunteer there since 2017 and Nana Shirley is a young 85 years old

Once we arrived, it was nothing but high praise for Nana Shirley. “Anything we ask her to do, she is always willing to do it. Sometimes we will say, ‘Nana, we will take care of it.’ She says, ‘No Mr. Johnson, it’s alright.’ It’s a great relief for all of us, in all honesty,” said Phoenix Charter Academy Head of School Calvin Johnson.

“We are all here for Nana Shirley and she deserves this surprise big time,” said Carla Cosenzi, president of Country Hyundai.

To see the full video, click the link below!

Surprise Squad honors special Springfield charter school volunteer

Driving for the Cure golf tournament to raise money for brain tumor research

A local non-profit is driving more than cars. The 14th Annual Tom Cosenzi Driving For The Cure Charity Golf Tournament is an event to raise money for brain tumor research in honor of the late Tom Consenzi. Joining us in a segment sponsored by TommyCar Auto Group is Carla Consenzi, president of the TommyCar Auto Group.

To see the full video, click the link below

Driving for the Cure Internview

Tom Cosenzi Driving for the Cure Golf Tournament to be held in September

The 14th annual Tom Cosenzi Driving for the Cure Golf Tournament is a little over a month away. The annual fundraiser raises money for neuro-oncology research in honor of Tom Cosenzi, who died from brain cancer in 2009. Since the tournament started, it has raised $1.3 million dollars for the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Western Mass News spoke with his daughter, Carla Cosenzi, president of TommyCar Auto Group, on Friday as event draws closer.

“We have golf, we have a ton of new on-the-course events we are really excited about. Raffles, silent auction, live auction, Dave Madsen is emceeing this year. New York Sound and Motion is filming to do a recap video. We have a cocktail hour followed by a dinner. It should be a really great time,” Cosenzi explained.

To see the full video, click the link below

Tom Cosenzi Golf Internview

Surprise Squad honors Westfield teacher helping students get back on track

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad is back, recognizing teachers who go above and beyond. This month, it’s a teacher in Westfield who wears several hats for the district from running a summer school program for students to coaching varsity boys soccer at the high school and let’s just say he was surprised. “Everything is positive with Andrew,” said Westfield High School Principal Chuck Jendrysik.

Spending hot summer days in the classroom is not typically anyone’s ideal summer vacation, but for the dozens of students gathered outside Westfield High School, there is one person inside that building who not only works hard to make their summer program a success, but also fun.

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers are blown away by the showing of support.

“I think that the reaction from all the kids speaks for itself,” Cosenzi said.

To see the full video, click the link below!

Surprise Squad honors Westfield teacher

Surprise Squad honors Greenfield Teacher who has touched many lives

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad is back recognizing teachers who go above and beyond. In this month’s edition of Surprise Squad, a beloved teacher at Greenfield High School, who is known for her leadership inside and outside of the classroom, received the surprise of a lifetime.

Hundreds of students lined the halls of Greenfield High School to show their support. Houser made sure it would be a surprise she never forgets.

“On behalf of the Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers, we wanted to present to you a check for $500 for you to be able to use for school supplies, plus a $200 gift card to Terrazza Restaurant and $300 to Euphoria Float Spa in Northampton,” said Cosenzi.

To see the full video, click the link below!

Suprise Squad honors Greenfield Teacher

2022 Tom Cosenzi Scholorship

The TommyCar Auto Group is honoring three outstanding students with scholarships to help further their education. The three recipients from Hopkins Academy in Hadley were presented with scholarship certificates worth $1,500 each. The students were chosen for being exceptionally well-rounded, and being involved in their community by volunteering.

Carla Cosenzi, the president of TommyCar Auto Group, told 22News about how the scholarship was formed.

“We created this scholarship in memory of my dad Tom Cosenzi,” Cosensi said. “Education was always really important to him, and something he worked really hard to instill in my brother and I. So when he passed away we decided to honor him with a scholarship to the local high schools in his name.”

After the scholarships were presented, a brunch was held at Esselon Cafe in Hadley to honor the winners.

Click the link to watch the full video

2022 Tom Cosenzi Scholorship

Surprise Squad Honors Special Spanish Teacher in Granby

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad is back recognizing teachers who go above and beyond. This month, it’s a Spanish teacher in Granby who’s in for a special surprise and it was one of our biggest and loudest yet! What brought hundreds of Granby Junior-Senior High schoolers out into the parking lot in the middle of the day? “She’s such a great teacher. She’s really always there for everyone no matter what. She’s such a motherly figure in the school,” said Granby Junior-Senior High School junior Abby Huebner.

It’s all to honor a special Spanish teacher with help from the Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad.

Cosenzi said, “I think you can see from all the students, their enthusiasm, their reaction that Mrs. Pinkney completely deserves everything that she got today.

To read more, click the link below!

Surprise Sqaud Spanish Teacher in Granby

Nurse Appreciation Week

In Northampton, a local business helped celebrate Nurses Appreciation Week. The nurses received some nice mugs, as well as box lunches for the day. The donation was made by Carla Cosenzi and the Tommy-car auto group.

It’s so great being able to support those who support us. Nurses truly do so much and work harder than anyone, so it’s nice to be able to give them something to brighten their days.

Read more in the link below

Town by Town

Presenting sponsor named for - Tom Cosenzi Charity Golf Tournament

Carla Cosenzi & Gayle Bover at the 14th annual golf tournament.

This year‘s Tom Cosenzi Driving for the Cure Charity Golf Tournament will be teeing off this year with a new presenting sponsor. The fourteenth annual event will be presented by CDK Global, an Illinois-based provider of software for automotive dealerships.

The tournament was started by Cosenzi’s children and friends after his death in 2009 at age 52 from brain cancer. Over $1.3 million has been raised over the last 13 years to help support neuro-oncology researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

”We’re so thankful to CDK Global for their partnership and we are proud to be able to support the world class research that is ongoing at Dana-Farber,“ said Carla Cosenzi, co-owner of TommyCar Auto Group.

Surprise Squad Honors Ludlow Kindergarten Teacher

A local teacher has overcome difficult odds and continues to positively impact her students daily. Ms. Kristen Ortyl, a kindergarten teacher at East Street School in Ludlow, has been serving students for over a decade and has struggled with health issues. Donna Queiros, who nominated Ortyl, discussed her commitment to her students. “She works hard at what she does. She has some personal battles and she comes in every day for the kids and the staff always with a smile on her face,” Queiros explained.

Learning of Ortyl’s dedication, the Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers and Western Mass News teamed up with her fellow teachers, school staff, and teachers to give her the surprise of a lifetime and one she was clearly not expecting.

Carla Cosenzi, president of Country Hyundai, added, “On behalf of Western Mass News and Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers, we want to present you with a $400 gift card to use wherever you want - a day with your friends, a day at the spa, anything that helps you as our way of saying we thank you for the impact you make on all the children.”

To watch the full video, click the link below!

Surprise Squad - Ludlow Kindergarten Teacher

Surprise Squad Honors Springfield School Adjustment Counselor

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers Surprise Squad is back in action and is honoring educators who are making a difference. It was a noisy classroom filled with anticipation. “We’ve been able to sneak around and tip toe and invite all the kids…so she has no idea this is coming,” said Jackie Clini.

Western Mass News camera crews, school staff, and students made a coordinated effort to keep a much-loved school adjustment counselor, Bridget Jansen, in the dark.

Our Hyundai sales manager Mike added - “The way they ran over to her...You can just see how much they like her and appreciate her.”

Doing things like this in the community bring so much joy to everyone and shows the honoree how much they truly mean to the community.

To hear more about the honoree click the link!

Surprise Squad Honors Springfield School Adjustment Counselor

Surprise Squad Honors Local School Bus Drivers

The Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers’ Surprise Squad is back in action, giving back to the community. This year, it’s our cool schools focus, where we’re honoring folks in our local schools going above and beyond.

This month, we’re thanking a group of drivers who have been weathering COVID-19 to keep children safe to and from school. “This is the best batch of bus drivers I’ve ever had the chance to work with,” said retired bus driver Margaret Cresswell. Cresswell said nominating this group for the Surprise Squad’s Cool Schools was a no brainer.

“I love them all and I appreciate what great drivers they are and the love they have for the kids,” Cresswell noted.

Many people working on the front lines have left their jobs, but these road warriors tell Western Mass News that was never an option.

Carla Cosenzi, president of Country Hyundai, added, “To see them [the kids] give the cards that they made, to see the impact they made on all of the children every morning and every afternoon.”

To read more, click the link below!

Surprise Squad - Local School Bus Drivers

Charity golf tournament donates over $12K to a man battling stage IV cancer

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by: Melissa Torres, Jillian Andrews

Posted: Oct 3, 2021 / 06:27 PM EDT / Updated: Oct 4, 2021 / 06:49 PM EDT

NORTHAMPTON Mass. (WWLP) – Over the last 13 years, the Tom Cosenzi Driving for the Cure Charity Golf Tournament has raised more than $1 million with its partnerships, but this year they decided to donate some of their proceeds to a family in need.

The 13th Annual Tournament that was held on September 7th, at Twin Hills Country Club in Longmeadow, MA, raised $12,600 for Stefan Gadecki, a local man that was diagnosed with stage IV Glioblastoma.

“I was not expecting this at all,” said Gadecki.

Gadecki, his loving wife of 13 years, Caitlin, and their two sweet girls, Brynn, 8 and Annika, 5, are now faced with the fight of their lives. The auction proceeds will help the family with medical expenses, living expenses, and offer them an opportunity to have family experiences that are being taken away from them far too soon.

“I’ve got a great support system and it helps me through. I’ve got my kids to motivate me to fight as much as possible,” said Gadecki.

“Immediately touched our heart, obviously hits close to home. Stefan has the same stage IV Glioblastoma that out father had. We were so intrigued by how far a lot of the advances in the medical field have come and wanted to reach out and be apart of his story,” said Carla Cosenzi.

This year’s golf tournament took place in September and Tommy Car is already preparing for next year.

If you ‘d like to help the Gadecki family, you can donate through their Go-Fund-Me page.

Click here to view the story.

Hyundai dealers honor service with Salute to Heroes car giveaway

Western Massachusetts automotive dealers, from left, Gary Rome of Gary Rome Hyundai, Carla Cosenzi of Country Hyundai and Jeb Balise of Balise Hyundai, are taking part in the Hyundai Salute to Heroes.

Western Massachusetts automotive dealers, from left, Gary Rome of Gary Rome Hyundai, Carla Cosenzi of Country Hyundai and Jeb Balise of Balise Hyundai, are taking part in the Hyundai Salute to Heroes.

Published: Oct. 03, 2021, 5:00 a.m.

By Jim Kinney | jkinney@repub.com

Western Massachusetts Hyundai dealers — Gary Rome Hyundai in Holyoke, Country Hyundai of Northampton and Balise Hyundai in Springfield — want to honor those who helped their neighbors get through the past two years by bestowing a 2022 Hyundai Tucson SE worth $29,000 in the Hyundai Salute to Heroes giveaway.

The three dealerships will cover all applicable taxes and fees.

Salute to Heroes is a way of acknowledging the ordinary people in our lives who do heroic things. Communities have gone through so much the past year and a half, the dealers said.

“I think that as we peek our heads up out of the pandemic, it’s a good time to not lose sight of everything that we’ve been through, of everything that friends have been through,” said Rome, president of the local dealers association. “This is what people do. It’s like the whole paying it forward kind of thing.”

Carla Cosenzi, president of Tommycar Auto Group which includes Country Hyundai, said the dealers are taking care of the taxes and fees. The recipient will not owe any money to claim the car.

“I think the community has gone through so much in the last year and a half,” Cosenzi said. “It’s a great way for us to say thank you.”

Western Massachusetts automotive dealers, from left, Gary Rome of Gary Rome Hyundai, Carla Cosenzi of Country Hyundai and Jeb Balise of Balise Hyundai, are taking part in the Hyundai Salute to Heroes.

Brian Houser, general manager at Balise Hyundai echoed those sentiments

“It’s definitely been a rough year and a half for everybody in the area,” Houser said.

He thanked Hyundai for its support .

A hero should be someone who was inspiring during the COVID-19 pandemic and associated challenges of the last 18-or-so months. That can be a nurse, teacher, firefighter, police officer, healthcare provider. But the dealers say nominees can also be a grocery store worker, helper at a food bank, delivery person, baker, kennel worker or a single mother working multiple jobs to support her family.

“It can be someone who stayed up all night and went out of their way to help people get vaccine appointments,” Rome said.

“It can be anybody like that,” Rome said. “That’s why we wanted to include it and make it an everyday hero.”

To nominate a hero, visit HyundaiSaluteToHeroes.com and in 300 words or less explain why the nominee is worthy, based on the challenges he or she faced, or the achievements accomplished. Nominations begin today and conclude on Sunday, Oct. 31.

Eligibility covers Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties.

The winner will be chosen by a group of local business leaders and be announced on Nov. 12.

13th annual ‘Driving For the Cure’ charity golf tournament raises money for cancer research

LONGMEADOW, Mass. (WWLP) – In memory of their father, western Massachusetts auto dealer Tom Cosenzi, his son and daughter raised money Tuesday for neuro-oncology research.

Tom Cosenzi, founder of TommyCar Auto Group, was only 52-years-old when he died from brain cancer in 2009. Since then, the “Tom Cosenzi Driving For the Cure” charity golf tournament has raised more than $1 million.

Daughter Carla Cosenzi spoke with 22News as more than 180 golfers began Tuesday’s 13th annual fundraiser, “It’s a very emotional day. It’s a day to remember my dad, and my dad’s memory, with a lot of our associates playing as family. It’s a day when we raise money for Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.”

Carla estimates Tuesday’s charity golf at Longmeadow’s Twin Hills Country Club raised close to $100,000 for neuro-oncology research at Dana Farber.

Surprise Squad helps couple who lost everything in house fire

CHICOPEE, MA (WGGB/WSHM) -- This edition of the Western Mass News Surprise Squad, sponsored by the Hyundai Dealers of Western Massachusetts, focuses on a couple whose lives were upended by a house fire. However, as we found out, they have a great network of support and are aching for an experience to take their mind off of things.

It was April 9, around 4 a.m., when Erika Morrissey and Al Topjian were sound asleep in their Chicopee home.

“We were in different parts of the house. I fell asleep on the couch. She fell asleep in the bedroom. She heard the popping,” Topjian said

Morrissey said she was woken by a noise, perhaps a pounding on the door, and went to investigate.

"The carport was completely on fire…Called out to Al to get up and get out of the house…The fire just ripped through the house once we got out the front door,” Morrissey noted.

Topjian added, “I thought I could put it out with the hose, ran around the side of the house was like 'Nope, can't do that.’'”

In a matter of minutes, their home of five-and-a-half years and everything in it was gone, even their cars.

“It all just went away that day,” Morrissey added.

It was an unimaginable loss for this couple, but made better, they said, through support and good times had with family and friends.

“She has a heart of gold,” Morrissey said.

Morrissey’s co-worker at Baystate Wing Hospital in Palmer, Luann Lauzier, nominated Morrissey for this surprise.

“She comes in with a great big smile, willing to help anybody. When she has her bad moments, she just passes it along and keeps on smiling with us,” Lauzier said.

Lauzier told us that these music lovers really need a mental escape, like a concert. She said it’s one of the couple’s favorite hobbies. Between the fire and pandemic, that’s been tough for the couple to live out…until now.

While we stalled Morrissey and Topjia, the Surprise Squad got ready for this moment.

We hit them with our best shot. The couple scored a pair of VIP tickets to the Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo show at The Big E this fall, which includes all-access to the pre-soundcheck and a Q&A with Benatar.

That wasn’t all.

“On behalf of the Western Mass. Hyundai Dealers, we'd like to present you with this check for $500,” said Carla Cosenzi with Tommy Car Auto Group.

Brian Houser with Balise Hyundai added, “Hyundai realizes that sometimes bad things happen to good people.”

Tim Ferreira with Gary Rome Hyundai explained, "Even if it's just to give them one night out with Pat Benatar tickets and a few extra dollars to help pay a bill, anything we can do to help makes something good of a bad situation.”

Watch the video here!

Auto Dealers Adjust To An Unprecedented Mix Of Stern Challenges

A Different World

Auto dealers are used to adjusting to changing economic conditions and fluctuations with the laws of supply and demand. But in recent months, they’ve had to contend with an almost unprecedented mix of challenges — from dwindling inventory to an historic shortage of used cars. There is no real consensus on just when ‘normal’ will return, but all indications are that it won’t arrive until at least the first quarter of 2022.

As they talked about the past 18 months and what they project for the next few quarters, area auto dealers sounded similar tones and eventually came back to the same word. They are all adjusting.

To be more specific, they’re adjusting to some conditions they’ve rarely, if ever, seen before, and all at once. Things like:

• Used cars populating the showrooms. Yes, there have at times been some higher-end used models or a 1930 Model A in the showroom for effect, but now, area dealerships are showcasing cars with ‘2019’ and ‘2018’ stickers on the windshield, out of necessity — because that’s all they have.

• Lots that are half, or more than half, empty. Inventories of new cars are at levels never seen before as factories, confronting an ongoing microchip shortage, struggle, unsuccessfully, to keep up with what has been steady or even better-than-steady demand because many consumers still have money to spend, and it’s burning a hole in their collective pockets. Meanwhile, used cars are also in short supply. Most dealers report total inventory (new and used cars) to be one-quarter to one-third of what would be considered normal, with many being able to count new-car inventory using just two hands — with a few fingers left.

• Factory ordering becoming the new way of doing business.

• A complicated used-car market that is finally starting to level off in some respects. Still, cars are hard to find, dealers are going to great lengths to find them, and they must be careful not to pay too much and risk watching the market change quickly and profoundly.

• Even some workforce issues. Indeed, dealerships are not immune to the challenges facing businesses in seemingly every sector when it comes to hiring and retaining workers.

Add it all up, and it’s been a year described, alternately and by different people, as ‘interesting,’ ‘challenging,’ and ‘frustrating.’

“We went from trying to jump-start the auto industry after COVID happened — we had these great incentives and offers for customers who maybe weren’t in the market to incentivize them to buy a car — to now not even having the inventory levels to support that. It’s been a wild ride.”

“It’s an interesting world out there, that’s for sure,” said Ben Sullivan, chief operating officer for Balise Motor Sales, noting that, over the past 18 months, dealers have had all sorts of challenges thrown at them, from the sudden standstill after COVID-19 hit to the current situation where they simply don’t have enough cars to sell.

Carla Cosenzi, president of the TommyCar Auto Group, which includes Northampton Volkswagen, Country Nissan, Country Huyndai, Volvo Cars Pioneer Valley, and Genesis of Northampton, agreed.

“We went from trying to jump-start the auto industry after COVID happened — we had these great incentives and offers for customers who maybe weren’t in the market to incentivize them to buy a car — to now not even having the inventory levels to support that,” she said. “It’s been a wild ride.”

Moving forward, the $64,000 questions concern how long this period of extreme adjustment will continue, and what things will look like when it does.

There is no real consensus on the answers, but most believe it will be well into 2022, and perhaps a year or more from now, before the dust fully settles and the lots at area dealerships start to look like they did back in early 2020, when the challenges were much different and there were … too many cars.

“I think we’re at the bottom of the curve when it comes to availability,” said Sullivan. “From now through the fourth quarter, it will start to improve, but it won’t be back up to what we would call normal historical levels until June of next year.”

Cosenzi agreed. “They’re saying that October is when we’re going to see the inventory slowly start to trickle back in,” she said, noting that ‘they’ means the manufacturers. “We’re not going to get back to the same levels by then, and the expectation is that, by mid-2022, we’ll be back to something approaching normal.”

Mike Kuzdzal, general manager of Metro Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram in Chicopee, concurred.

“The manufacturers are optimistic month over month that they’ll hopefully be able to ramp up production, but they just can’t keep up with current demand,” he noted. “As they make these cars and put them in an in-transit mode to us, we’re selling them before they even hit the ground.

“My hope is that, by the end of quarter one next year or the beginning of quarter two, we can get back to what we used to be,” he went on. “But the manufacturers are going to have to go double or triple time to get us there.”

 

A Different Gear

Kuzdzal told BusinessWest his dealership is one of many in the area that have placed signs on the property saying ‘we buy used cars’ — or words to that effect.

And, by and large, these signs are working, he said, noting that, just before he spoke with us, he bought a car off the street.

Such transactions, once quite rare, have become somewhat commonplace, said Kuzdzal and others we spoke with, noting, first, that COVID has yielded conditions whereby many families can do with at least one fewer car in the driveway, and, second, that prices for such vehicles have never been higher — and no one knows how long they’ll stay this high.

“Because of the pandemic and people working from home, a second or third car is not required,” Kuzdzal explained. “They’re sharing one car and saying, ‘I’m going sell my car at an all-time high and save that monthly payment, the excise tax, and insurance — and if I do go back to work, I’ll get back in the market.’”

Transactions like one he described are more than welcome, because traditional sources of used cars — everything from new-car trade-ins to rental cars — have dried up in dramatic fashion. So dealers have had to get creative.

“We’ve been acquiring a lot of vehicles from our service customers and past customers,” said Cosenzi, adding that her dealerships are now also buying essentially any car that comes off lease, where before they would cherry-pick. “We came up with a really easy five-minute trade process that has helped us generate quite a bit of used vehicle inventory.”

Overall, those signs offering to buy used cars or print, TV, and radio ads stating that ‘no one will pay more for a used car than we will’ are just part of the changed landscape in auto sales.

The dramatically lower volumes of inventory, used cars in the showroom, factory ordering, and essentially selling cars long before they reach the showroom, or even leave the factory, are other components of this altered state, one in which dealers say business is still solid in many respects, but altogether different.

Inventory is perhaps the biggest issue, and it has changed the landscape in all kinds of ways, the most noticeable being the lonesome lots at area car stores. The dealers aren’t used to it, and neither are local residents.

Indeed, Sullivan noted that more than a few people have asked if Balise has divested itself of the massive Chevrolet dealership on West Columbus Avenue. That Chevy store is quite visible from I-91, especially the ramp leading to the South End Bridge, which means people can see — or, in this case, not see — the rows of vans and trucks that have historically populated the south end of the property.

“Every single car that comes in is sold the day it lands there,” he said, adding that this phenomenon helps explain the bare pavement and put the inventory problem in perspective.

But not as well as some of the numbers offered by the dealers we spoke with.

“Where we normally run with 350 to 450 new cars and maybe 150 used cars, now we’re down to south of 100 of both, so we’re at a quarter of our running inventory,” Kuzdzal said.

Sullivan noted that the Balise family of dealerships includes more than a dozen makes, foreign and domestic, each one having inventory issues that have fluctuated over the past several months, with some doing better now than they were in the spring and others still struggling. He noted that, at the huge Honda store on Riverdale Street in West Springfield, there are normally 250 new cars on the lot. One day a few weeks ago, there were seven.

“It’s a situation we certainly haven’t seen, and each manufacturer will hit that low point at a different time. When Honda was out, Toyota had cars; when Toyota was out, Honda had cars. Each month, it kind of moves around, but at this point, heading into the fourth quarter, things will start to get back to what we call a more normal state.”

“It’s a situation we certainly haven’t seen, and each manufacturer will hit that low point at a different time,” he explained. “When Honda was out, Toyota had cars; when Toyota was out, Honda had cars. Each month, it kind of moves around, but at this point, heading into the fourth quarter, things will start to get back to what we call a more normal state.”

Cosenzi, who concurred with that assessment, noted that the TommyCar stable was helped initially by the fact that it traditionally keeps large volumes of inventory on its lots to offer consumers a wide selection.

“Our dealerships are usually crammed with cars,” she noted. “And that really helped us when this happened; we had a larger supply available to us when the chip shortage hit. Some dealers that only carry a one- or two-month supply ended up in trouble, while we carried a three and a half or four-month supply.”

 

Shifting Expectations

Given the shortages of microchips and other parts they’re facing, Sullivan said manufacturers, for the most part, are now only churning out the most popular, and sellable, variations of given models, and customers are adapting to this altered state.

“We’re used to carrying hundreds and hundreds of vehicles at every dealership, and customers are used to looking at 30,000 buildable combinations of a Honda Accord,” he explained. “They’ll say, ‘I want a blue one with a beige interior and this sunroof; I want this, but I don’t want that.’ The way the manufacturers have adapted through this is they’re only building the most commonly sold and fastest-churning vehicles that they have — they’re only doing certain trim levels.

“You’d think that customers would be mad,” he went on. “But they actually seem relieved. They’re saying, ‘OK, that’s the way they’re going to come in; I’ll take that one.’ Customers have been unbelievably accommodating, saying, ‘I really wanted a red one, but I guess a black one is OK.’”

Kuzdzal concurred, and noted that, in most ways, it’s easier to sell the few cars that the dealers do have on their lots.

“The consumer is coming in with his or her defenses down,” he explained. “They know it’s a tough time to get cars, and if we have it, they should buy it. If they don’t, we’ll sell it to the next person, so that makes the negotiations much easier.

“It’s never been like this,” he went on. “It’s a very comparable time to when we had the gas issue, when we spiked over $5 a gallon. But it has not slowed business down like it did then; it’s a different time, and we have to react to what’s coming our way. Inventory is at an all-time low, used cars are at an all-time high as far as value is concerned, and people are taking advantage of that.”

In addition to using that word ‘adjusting,’ all those we spoke with inevitably came back to that other word you hear and read so often these days — normal.

Some spoke of what is obviously a new normal, while others speculated on when and even if things would return to what used to be the norm.

But Sullivan spoke for everyone, and put things in their proper perspective, when he said, “I can’t wait to return to the old normal.”

Just when that will happen is anyone’s guess, but it seems certain that it can’t be a short drive from here.

Read the article here: https://businesswest.com/blog/auto-dealers-adjust-to-an-unprecedented-mix-of-stern-challenges/