Co-op Garage Start Of A Trend?
The answer to exorbitant prices for oil and parts are in two Maine towns, people are finally breaking that cycle of repair-to-work-to-repair by organizing Cooperative Garages. - reprinted by permission from MAINE Times
September/October 1971
By Mark Mendel
Reprinted by permission from MAINE TIMES/weekly/
$7 a year/13 Main Street/ Topsham/Maine 04086
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"If I could just get my car running I could go out and look for a job. I have to make some money soon, my car needs a new engine."
Life in Maine sometimes seems a struggle between man and machine. Between man and his own automobile. In the summer, men are ahead. Almost anything will run . . . on bald tires . . . with broken windows rolled down. Anything that starts goes.
But the odds change in winter. The battle becomes grimmer. Snow and cold move in and only the strong survive. The poor must struggle hardest. The man who can buy a new car every two years hops from warranty to warranty and the manufacturer has to keep him driving. But for the poor—faced with six dollars an hour labor charges and exorbitant prices for oil and parts—it's not easy.
Even a do-it-himself mechanic has to lie in a foot of cold slush, often taking time off work to catch the daylight. Still there are some tools only a garage has and he eventually has to spend some cash like everyone else. But now, in two Maine towns, people are finally breaking that cycle of repair-to-work-to-repair by organizing Cooperative Garages.
In a garage on Pine Street across the river from the Kennebec Pulp Paper Company in Madison, Vern Clavette is tuning up an old Chevy. Vern used to work up Main Street at Flannagan's Chevrolet where the rate for a mechanic is six dollars an hour. Vern was making $1.80 an hour there. As resident mechanic at the Co-op he makes two dollars with a raise to three if he's hired permanently.
Vern stops working on the Chevy. "This might have cost fifteen dollars somewhere else," he says, "but at this garage we don't charge for mechanic work."
Vern's wife, Lucy, is the Co-op secretary and Vern, a quiet man of 19, has a simple explanation for their membership in the Co-op. "It makes good sense."
It does make good sense. Each family buys a $10 share in the garage to join and monthly dues are four dollars. All repairs are free and all parts are bought at a dealer's discount. Members may work on their own cars or have Vern do it.
The man behind the Madison Co-op Garage is the Reverend Maynard Krider. Reverend Krider is the minister at the Starks United Presbyterian church and he has a lot to say about the Co-op. "The idea began when I was helping distribute surplus commodities in our area. It became evident that transportation was a problem for everyone, especially in Maine's more rural areas. There is no public transportation and some of the older people found it impossible to come in and pick up their commodities.
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