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Press Release
Daimler/Mercedes Benz, Port of Long Beach Condemned for Teaming Up in a Predatory Lending Scheme to Target Low-Wage Truck Drivers.
Consumer, Minority, Civil Rights & Worker Advocates deliver report to German Embassy in DC, Detroit Corporate HQ to warn of “Foreclosure Crisis on Wheels”.
August 20, 2008
For more information contact:
Contact: Dan Pavlish (213) 595-4055 Richard McIntire, NAACP (410) 580-5787 Richard Holober, CFC (650) 375-7840 Lizette Jenness Olmos, 202-833-6130 ext 16
WASHINGTON, DC &
FARMINGTON HILLS, MI --- A delegation of
high-ranking representatives from civil rights,
minority, consumer and worker rights’ advocacy
groups including the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and
the League of United Latin American Citizens
(LULAC) were joined today by several dozen
activists carrying signs calling for an end to a
predatory lending scheme by Daimler/Mercedes
Benz and the Port of Long Beach. Noisy protests
at the German Embassy in Washington, DC and
Mercedes-Benz’ parent company in the
Detroit-area culminated with
the simultaneous delivery of a report to company
and diplomatic officials entitled “Foreclosure
on Wheels: Long Beach’s Truck Program Puts
Drivers at High Risk for Default.”
In a written statement by NAACP Chairman Julian
Bond read at the German Embassy, Bond emphasized
that Daimler/Mercedes’ participation in the Long
Beach financing scheme may have widereaching
effects in communities of color that are already
struggling economically: “The current subprime
mortgage debacle illustrates how many
institutions profit by enticing minority and
low-income borrowers with schemes using too-easy
credit to finance purchases with loans they are
unable to repay…. We ask Daimler’s corporate
officials to show their commitment to socially
responsible business practices by abandoning
this risky, dangerous venture – if not for the
sake of Daimler shareholders and their company’s
image, then for the sake of the truck drivers
and their communities.”
The report analyzes the financial risk and
details concerns that the Port of Long Beach, in
partnership with Daimler, has wrongfully placed
the burden for cleaner commerce on
Latino-American and immigrant port drivers by
targeting the workers – not their companies – to
sign up for risky loans to replace a fleet of
16,000 aging vehicles. Under the terms of the
lease-to-own scheme, Daimler will
financially back low-emissions trucks (costing
$100,000-$200,000 after volume discounts) to any
driver whose dirty diesel rig was recently
banned by the port, regardless of his/her credit
worthiness and ability to pay. Port drivers,
before the cost of fuel skyrocketed, netted an
average of $11 an hour. The monthly payment for
the trucks is between $500-1,000 for seven
years, with a balloon payment of
$7,000-$15,000 at the end of the lease term.
“Instead of trying to help residents and
workers, a public, government entity has
outrageously teamed up with Daimler/Mercedes to
hoodwink the hard-working drivers who haul cargo
from our shores to America’s stores” said LULAC
President Rosa Rosales, whose organization
helped lead the German Embassy protest and
delegation. A
Daimler official told Long Beach officials in a
public forum on June 30 that the company expects
“over 40%” of port drivers to have “high
difficulty meeting the payments,” a staggering
acknowledgement overridden by Daimler’s strength
in “managing collections,” i.e., repossessing
trucks. Before a
crowd in Michigan outside of Daimler’s corporate
home, Patricia Castellanos of the Los Angeles
Alliance for a New Economy urged the Long Beach
Port and the German luxury giant to avoid the
same discriminatory practices that provoked
domino-effect defaults in the mortgage market,
and to instead focus lending efforts on
capitalized trucking companies to avoid scarring
communities. “We believe that there is an
undeniable link between clean air, efficient
port operations, and fairly-paid employee
drivers. Achieving the environmental goals
requires shifting the responsibility to where it
rightfully belongs: to a stable, accountable and
asset-based trucking industry.”
Richard Holober, executive director of the
Consumer Federation of California added: “These
kinds of discriminatory loans won’t just affect
the thousands of California’s port drivers as
individual borrowers, but entire families and
their futures as well. The companies that profit
from global trade are in a financially more
stable position to invest in the new clean
technology we need to keep our communities
healthy – low-wage workers aren’t.”
“Foreclosure on Wheels: Long Beach’s Truck
Program Puts Drivers at High Risk for Default,”
was issued jointly by the Consumer Federation of
California , the NAACP, the League of United
Latin American Citizens (LULAC), and the Los
Angeles Alliance for a New Economy. Southern
California port drivers and their advocates are
submitting the report to Daimler/Mercedes-Benz
officials at the Port of Long Beach this week.
Click here to read the
Foreclosure on Wheels - Long Beach’s Truck
Program Puts Drivers at High Risk for Default
(PDF Format)
Click here to read the
“Foreclosure on Wheels”: Key Report Takeaways
(PDF Format)
### Founded in
1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and
largest civil rights organization. Its members
throughout the world are advocates for civil
rights in their communities, conducting voter
mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in
the public and private sectors.
The League of United Latin American Citizens (www.lulac.org)
advances the economic conditions, educational
attainment, political influence, health and
civil rights of Hispanic Americans through
community-based programs operating at more than
700 LULAC councils nationwide.
The Consumer Federation of California is a
non-profit organization, established in 1960,
that advocates for consumer protection laws and
regulations. The Los Angeles Alliance for a New
Economy is a non-profit organization that has
issued numerous reports on poverty, employment
and economic development. Founded in 1993, LAANE
is recognized as a national authority on issues
affecting the working poor. By promoting a
practical approach to social change, LAANE has
helped set in motion a broad movement based on
the principle that hard work deserves fair pay,
good benefits and decent working conditions. # # #
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