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NY Assembly and Senate Hear Bills to Make Insurance Co. Parts Mandates Illegal Two bills before the New York legislature seek to make insurance company requirements to use specific vendors or process for parts or materials procurement illegal. Assembly Bill 7234 (A7234), Introduced by Sen. John DeFrancisco and titled ‘An act to amend the insurance law, in relation to collision and comprehensive coverage on motor vehicles’ and Senate Bill 5786 (S5786), also sponsored by Sen. DeFrancisco, propose to amend Section 1, Subsection (a) of Section 2610 of the New York insurance law generally known as the anti-steering section that currently

makes it illegal for an insurer to require a specific repair shop. The bills seek to ban insurance company requirements for collision repair parts and materials procurement programs, clearly aimed to block PartsTrader (see all cover stories this issue.)

AB 7234 AB 7234 amends the insurance law directing that no insurer providing collision or comprehensive loss shall require a repair facility to use a specific vendor or process for the procurement See NY Bills Block Mandates, Page 8

Mississippi Collision Repair Association and Parts Suppliers File Suit Against PartsTrader

Plaintiff include the Mississippi Collision Repair Association (MSCRA) OEM parts dealers and other parts suppliers and dozens of collision repair principals, including prominent local repairers John Mosley (Clinton Body Shop) and Doug White (Capitol Body Shop). The suit seeks the court’s declatory judgment and injuction to block State Farm from requiring the PartsTrader ordering process in Mississippi. The requested injunction is to 1) Prohibit the Defendants from forcing implementation of PartsTrader in the State Farm Select Service shops, See Suit Against PartsTrader, Page 10

Change Service Requested

P.O. BOX 1516, CARLSBAD, CA 92018

The Mississippi Collision Repair Association and Parts Suppliers are seeking industry support in suit against State Farm and PartsTrader. Over 30 plaintiffs, mostly Mississippi body shop owners, have filed an injunction against State Farm and PartsTrader in an attempt to prohibit the insurer from forcing any Select Service shop in Mississippi to use PartsTrader. The suit was filed Aug. 28 by Jackson, MS-based attorney for the nearly three dozen plaintiffs, John Arthur Eaves, Jr., in the Hinds County, MS, Chancery Court against State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company and PartsTrader LLC.

VOL. 3 ISSUE 7 OCTOBER 2013

AASP/NJ Announces Support of MCRA Suit The Alliance of Automotive Service Providers of New Jersey (AASP/NJ) has announced its support of the Mississippi Collision Repair Association’s (MSCRA) recently filed suit against State Farm and PartsTrader in an attempt to prevent the insurer from bringing the PartsTrader program to Mississippi. “The collision industry has clearly rejected the concept of PartsTrader, yet State Farm is taking the position that they are going to force PartsTrader on the collision industry,” said Charles Bryant, AASP/NJ executive director. “State Farm’s attempt to create the appearance that they are trying to help the collision industry solve a problem has clearly failed.” On Aug. 28, MSCRA and two dozen collision repair facility opera-

tors filed a lawsuit in the Hinds County, Miss., Chancery Court against State Farm and PartsTrader, stating the required PartsTrader program can damage their cycle time and therefore, harm customer satisfaction. See next related story. “If PartsTrader was good for the collision industry, State Farm would have been able to convince the industry to accept the concept by now,” said Bryant. “We believe the suit is without merit and we intend to vigorously defend the suit,” said State Farm spokesperson Roszell Gadson. See also SCRS position statement on parts procurement (p. 22 this issue) and ASA letter to State Farm’s Ed Rusk, Jr. (p. 28 this issue). The Indiana Autobody Association also commented (see p. 8 this issue.)

Special SNAPSHOT of the Collision Industry, survey by Collision Repair Educational Foundation and I-CAR p. 22

State Farm and PartsTrader Offer More Info on Roll-Out, Use of the System by John Yoswick

Whether or not they participate in State Farm’s Select Service program, shops and parts vendors still have lots of questions and concerns about PartsTrader as State Farm continues its roll-out of the program. Here is some additional information addressing some of those questions that representatives of State Farm or PartsTrader have provided. Roll-out schedule. PartsTrader rolled out in September in major markets in California, Nevada and Utah, and in October in Michigan and Ohio. It will reach major markets in Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee later this year. Vendor choice. Shops are not required to get price quotes from anyone beyond their designated preferred dealer. In fact, Partstrader’s

Dale Sailer said, the system defaults to sending a job’s parts list only to the shop’s preferred dealer, though the shop can expand the search from this default. State Farm does not get data about whether a Select Service shop’s parts list for a job went only to the shop’s preferred dealer for quotes. A shop can “direct order” a part through the system without waiting for any parts quotes; State Farm does know, however, if a Select Service shop does this. And if a dealer always gives a shop the same discount, the dealer can set the system up to automatically respond with that discount to all requests for quotes from that shop. “Dealers don’t have to hire a whole bunch of people to fill out quotes,” Sailer said. See More on PartsTrader, Page 48

Presorted Standard US Postage PAID San Bernardino, CA Permit #2244


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