Volkswagen Dealers Are Just Getting Started in Reparation Hunt
Volkswagen dealers in the U.S. want to be compensated for financial losses stemming from the diesel emissions scandal, and if the results of a recent meeting with company brass is any indication, the demands will soon grow louder.
Alan Brown, chairman of Volkswagen’s U.S. dealer council, led a small delegation of dealers to Germany last week to talk reparations and get a firm grip on the company’s strategy, Automotive News reports.
The size of the settlement they were seeking is unknown, but the meeting with global brand chief Herbert Diess and new Volkswagen Group of America head Hinrich Woebcken didn’t yield any plan to compensate dealers.
Volkswagen of America has been sending dealers an allowance to offset lost sales since shortly after the scandal broke, but that doesn’t cover the big losses some dealers have been hit with, nor does it take away the uncertainty of the future.
Though Volkswagen executives weren’t playing the reparation game just yet, they did shed some light on the brand’s strategy going forward.
Recent musings about Volkswagen becoming a higher-end niche brand sent dealers into a near panic, spurring Brown and others to go looking for assurances.
In a letter distributed to U.S. dealers following the meeting, Brown said Volkswagen had committed to continuing a mass-market strategy of compact and midsize cars and crossovers.
In the short term, Volkswagen was strong-armed by the dealers into providing a larger shipment of 2017 Golf Alltracks, a recently-announced variant of the Golf SportWagen, in order to generate interest and (hopefully) increase sales.
Reparations are sure to be a key topic among Volkswagen franchise owners at the April 2 National Automobile Dealers Association convention in Las Vegas — an event both Diess and Woebcken have said they will attend.
More by Steph Willems
Latest Car Reviews
Read moreLatest Product Reviews
Read moreRecent Comments
- Amwhalbi My 1972 Mercury Capri was my first stick shift car. God, I miss that thing. It was a blast to drive.
- Vid169489471 The technology exists today to produce a variable color temperature (kelvin) LED lamp. It can vary from 2700k that soft orange look to 6500k the bright daylight with the bluish tint.Since everything in a late model car is computer controlled, it would be an easy task to write a few lines of code that enables your vehicle to not only dim down from hi to low beam but to shift color temp down to the 2700k range for oncoming traffic, then back up to 5000k once oncoming traffic has passed. For the operator it would be automatic and seamless. For older cars they could be retrofitted with LEDs that are 2700k on low beam and 5000k on hi beam. As far as standards, there could be a lumens max, and a minimum. Several States already have minimum lumen standards going back to the old incandescent bulbs. Why not update these to national standards.
- Jam169859557 More regulation is needed for ALL vehicle lighting systems. [list=1][*]The lighting that is most blinding are the rapidly flashing red, blue and amber lights on emergency vehicles. The lights themselves are blinding, flashing so rapidly that it's impossible for even the sharpest eyes to adjust. What's worse, is the nature of the emergency requires a careful view of the area surrounding the emergency vehicle. There is something going on that needs to be seen. More flashing lights is not the solution.[/*][*]Brighter headlights need to be regulated. The tall riding vehicles do not need headlights positioned so high that they blind drivers in lower riding vehicles. And those heasdlights need to be aimed properly. When I first started driving my 2020 Subaru Outback, many drivers would flash their lights, hoping I would dim my lights. This stopped after I performed am easy adjustment that tilted the beam lower. Late model Subaru headlamps are designed with a sharp cutoff that project less glare above the hood line. When the headlights are properly aimed, other drivers are not blinded by the beam.[/*][*]Customized light assemblies make it more difficult to see the marker lights (tail lamps, turn signals and side marker lamps) that have been tinted. There are many municiple codes that prohibit this tinting, but these laws are seldom enforced.[/*][/list=1]Solutions: Tight controls on emergency vehicle lighting. In trying to make these vehicles more visible, a dangerous side effect is reducing the ability of drivers to see the surrounding perils.Headlight design regulations that reduce the height of the headlight assemblies. Just because a pickup truck has a hood that sits 4 feet abouve the pavement, it does not mean the headlights need to be so high. Owneres should maintain proper adjustments to their vehicle headlights.Establish and enforce regulation requiring a illumination standard be followed.
- Stl170698708 as someone who hates big government, and their interference;but you can add me to the list of people that are blinded by the lights.unfortunately "the poop is out of the horse and no way is it going back in"They have had 5 years to make lights bigger, badder and brighter because in the vehicle work it is go big or go home!Trucks are the worst because so many people use them to express their dominance and that is big, big, big $$ both at the Original Purchase and in the Aftermarket world.If, we are so lucky to get some good government regulation on this it will also take some very good Court enforcement to get the aftermarket people with fines and lawsuits.Much like the EPA did with the Diesel Tuner Industry that felt emission regulations didn't apply to them.This is from someone that owns said pickup truck with the same bright headlights,but i only use the truck when I have too and always turn off the Fog lights when driving in traffic.
- Art65765977 I saw a porsche 911 with the most amazing headlights from behind approaching the Sunshine skyway in Florida. The pattern was 108 degrees across sweeping the road like a broom. My brother and I were amazed. I don't know what it looked like from the front but i am sure it was better than American cars
Comments
Join the conversation
VW can still save it. VW's niche, for years, was a good handling smaller car, and the lack of customization for the US market was a selling point, not an issue. The owners put up with the bugs because of this. These are the GTi buyers, the R car buyers, but they aren't enough for a mass market brand, or one which aspires to it. Showing us the Scirocco every six months only tweaks the fanbois (guilty here), but is meaningless for the rest of the world. VW has always suffered from the issue of having a euro price point. Cars in Europe are lots more expensive, even before VAT. You won't sell many 35k Golf in the US. Game change. VW needs to do a Hyundai warranty. Having been at the short end of VW "warranty", they need this for the general public. Only Acura sucks as bad for warranty service. VW needs to fix the TDI debacle now. Buy back, make a deal, finish it. You can't pull this band aid off slowly. I recently saw a TDI with a "DAS FRAUD" bumper sticker on it. If this is what your fanbois are doing.... The rest of the market has moved. You can get a well built, sport oriented small car from just about everyone now. Long gone are the days a Jetta went against a Tempo. VW needs to get some US folks to design here in the US and send the plans back to Germany. It works for everyone else in the US market. I've no sympathy for car dealers of any sort, but I can see if I'd invested millions of dollars in good faith, built that glam showroom the OEM is pushing me to do, that I'd be calling my attorney every day to see what heat I can put under VW-USA.
VW seems to be in a state of paralysis and denial. They apparently hardly recognize they have dealers in the US and Canada,and expect them to do exactly as told. Having the dealers kick up a fuss was never something they planned on. This company, with its leaders having already resigned and used to having orders barked from the top down, is a ship barely afloat in stormy seas with a missing rudder. Six months into the scandal, they still haven't come up with a plan to fix the diesels outside the EU, where they have officials in their back pocket who approved the ludicrous fixes like a software reflash and $1.64 flow straighteners. South Korea has gone after VW just as hard as the US, and is having the same problem of no solution forthcoming. A fine has already been assessed. The VW boss said he is waiting on Wolfsburg: http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2016/03/23/0200000000AEN20160323007700315.html