Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Car shops forced to get creative

Supply chain snags, parts shortages delay repairs to vehicles

- KALEA HALL

John Sellek of Brighton, Mich., remains carless two months after his 2015 GMC Acadia was T-boned, causing thousands of dollars in extensive damage to the driver’s side.

Sellek, founder of Harbor Strategic Public Affairs firm, has been using rentals since that Oct. 28 crash. He treks to Lansing, Mich., from Brighton for work and needs a vehicle, but the rental insurance is now up. Instead of forking over hundreds of dollars every week, Sellek and his wife have decided to share a vehicle for now.

“I never could have imagined that this would go on so long that my insurance would actually run out,” he said.

Accidents happen. But when they happen these days, it’s taking weeks to months for collision shops and dealers to get the parts they need to fix the vehicle, leaving customers like Sellek without the wheels they need. The wait is yet another example of how the pandemic has thrown a wrench in the supply chain system and forced repair shops and parts distributo­rs to get creative with temporary fixes and find new vendors to help customers get back on the road.

“It’s been incredibly eye opening because we all know about the supply chain problems around the world,” Sellek said. “We know that there’s no chicken at Meijer [supermarke­ts] some days. We know that when I ordered something from IKEA it took literally five months for it to show up. We know and understand all those things are happening, but there are ways that it’s pervasive in the areas that you wouldn’t suspect that more directly impact your life.”

When the world shut down in the first half of 2020 because of the pandemic shock and then reopened a few months later, restarting the supply chain was slow and complicate­d but the demand side was not. Auto parts suppliers in some cases had to slow down making parts for older vehicles to push more parts for new vehicles out the door. A labor shortage slowed the supply chain even more at the plants and at the ports and docks where supplies are unloaded.

“A significan­t portion of repair parts, particular­ly for collisions, come from Taiwan,” said Dan Hearsch, managing director in AlixPartne­rs’ automotive and industrial practice. “Lots of that is backed up at the ports, so availabili­ty of that stuff is not great.”

The more significan­t issue is the auto suppliers are less focused on making aftermarke­t parts for repairs to vehicles on the road and more intent on building parts for new vehicles, Hearsch added: “They’re focusing on just keeping the OEM [original equipment manufactur­er] plants running. The last thing that they want to make or have to make are service parts because service parts have a whole other level of complexity.”

The situation is not getting better, Hearsch said, because the focus remains on getting new vehicle production back up and running. For the past year, automakers have struggled to keep up with the demand because of the global shortage of semiconduc­tors, or microchips that are used to power systems in the vehicle from the heated seats to the infotainme­nt systems.

Dave Hebert, manager of Berkley Collision in Berkley, Mich., has had to get creative with parts to keep his customers on the road. Instead of just relying on new parts, the shop has found rebuilt and remanufact­ured parts at times to fix people’s vehicles faster.

“But unfortunat­ely the parts that we can’t get new, the supplies from the other directions, have now dwindled down,” he said.

Hebert has been working on vehicles for at least 40 years and can recall when a part or two would have a low stock, but he said he has never experience­d an issue that affected this many parts at once. He also sees the situation is getting worse because of the low stock now popping up in the “alternativ­e parts” supply.

Hebert’s advice for customers who’ve been in an accident and need repairs: “Thoroughly check to make sure that all the parts are available before they surrender the car for repairs.”

These supply woes have led to price increases. The consumer price index on motor vehicle parts rose 10% from November 2020 to November 2021, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“There’s absolutely been inflation in this sector,” said Paul McCarthy, president of the Automotive Aftermarke­t Suppliers Associatio­n. “One thing I’d say to consumers is that, for better or for worse, it’s coming from authentic increases in the cost of manufactur­ing and distributi­ng these goods. … We’ve actually been struggling to pass on the cost increases as much as we can.”

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