Toyota, GM lift U.S. auto sales
Transcription
Toyota, GM lift U.S. auto sales
Whoops of joy cost grads’ diplomas Mormon church reaches out Crestview knocked out in semifinal SPORTS C1 RELIGION B5 NATION A4 Saturday, June 2, 2007 High 88 Low 65 Page A7 87,500 daily/107,000 Sunday readers 50 CENTS DAILY • $1.50 SUNDAY A new dawn for P&G Toyota, GM lift U.S. auto sales Ford offerings dip 6.9 percent By DAVID RUNK The Associated Press had grown over and/or fell over and protruded onto his property and which prevented the full use and enjoyment of his agricultural field, and use and enjoyment of his private property and which encroached on, DETROIT (AP) — Toyota Motor Corp.’s U.S. vehicle sales jumped 14.1 percent in May to its best monthly level ever and General Motors Corp.’s sales rose 9.7 percent, helping boost industry sales 5 percent, as both automakers credited in part the appeal of their more fuel-efficient offerings amid high gas prices. For the second month this year, Toyota outsold Ford Motor Co., which saw sales fall 6.9 percent as it continued to cut low-profit sales to rental companies. Nissan Motor Co.’s sales gained 7.4 percent, DaimlerChrysler AG’s sales rose 3.9 percent and American Honda Motor Co. rose 2.5 percent. GM, the industry’s top seller, said Friday it sold 371,056 light vehicles last month. Car sales, including the Chevrolet Impala and Saturn Aura, rose 16.2 percent to 150,979, while light truck sales, including the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra, gained 5.6 percent to 220,077. GM’s sales include the European Saab brand. GM said its retail sales rose 12.8 percent compared with May 2006. Toyota, which has been gaining market share in the U.S., sold 269,023 Toyota and Lexus vehicles in May, topping its previous monthly record of 242,675 set in March. Car sales rose 16.2 percent to 168,270, while light truck sales, including the Tundra, rose 10.9 percent to 100,753. Toyota said its sales gains came as rising retail gas prices were met by increasing consumer confidence. Analysts predict that Toyota likely will knock Ford off its traditional No. 2 spot for the full year in 2007, but Ford has said it is focused more on returning to profitability in North America. Ford said its sales to retail customers, which were 3 percent lower than a year ago, still marked its best retail month of the year as the Ford Edge and See TREE-TRIMMING • A7 See AUTO SALES • A7 KELLI CARDINAL • The Lima News Procter & Gamble technology leader Marcus Stephens explains the workings of their automated warehousing system Friday during a tour and dedication of the new Lima Distribution Center. Top officials turn out for tour of state-of-the-art facility Distribution Center facts: • Total cost $153 million • 1 million total square feet • 35,000 yards of concrete on site • Facility eliminates 50% of Allen County truck traffic • Facility equal to size of 19 football fields By BART MILLS [email protected] 419-993-2184 See video online at www.limaohio.com/video Thayer Road LIMA — The numbers tell the story of Procter & Gamble’s new distribution center about as well as anything. It’s 1.15 million square feet, or 19 football fields large. It has the ability to store 95,000 pallets of detergents and dryer sheets. But for Plant Manager Todd Hoffman, there are more important numbers, such as 45 — the number of new employees added for the center — or $900 million — the amount the company pumps into the Ohio economy each year. “We think this makes an important statement. It speaks for itself that this, Lima and Ohio, is an important place for us to do business,” Hoffman said. Hoffman showed off the new $130 million distribution center Friday to a crowd of state and local officials that included Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher, Cool Road P&G unveils automated distribution center Bay Bay Bay Bay Bay Bay Storage 6 5 4 3 2 1 bay To P&G production plant Reservoir Road Source: Proctor & Gamble See P&G • A7 Dismissal denied in St. Marys tree-trimming case By BOB BLAKE [email protected] 419-993-2077 WAPAKONETA — A judge has denied a request by an Auglaize County farmer to throw out two felony charges filed against him for trimming Ohio Northern University to demolish University Place Apartments for new hotel ONU Campus in Ada Freed Center 5 Main Street Gilbert Street McIntosh Center 235 University Place Apt. on the go BUSINESS ............A5 CLASSIFIED ......D1-8 trees on a neighbor’s property to the south. Thomas J. Schmitmeyer, through his Wapakoneta attorney Robert Kehoe, asked Auglaize County Common Pleas Judge Frederick Pepple on Tuesday to throw out the charges of felony breaking and the fence row after asking. The owner of the trees failed to consent and/or trim the overhanging and protruding branches which deprived the farmer from the full use of his corn field,” Kehoe wrote. “Some of the fence posts, branches, tree trunks and roots Ohio Northern University making room for an Inn By BETH L. JOKINEN [email protected] 419-993-2093 ADA — For years potential students and families have visited Ohio Northern University, and others have come on campus to attend performances or other events. But when they were done, they either had to go back home or drive somewhere else to spend the night. 1 A 72-year-old Florida woman died in a house fire that started in her kitchen Friday, unable to get to an exit after a relative put hurricane shutters over the windows in March. COMICS ..............C7 COMMENTARY .....A6 entering and felony theft. Kehoe argued in a brief to the court that Schmitmeyer had a right to trim the trees because their limbs were obstructing areas of his 100-acre farm near St. Marys. “The young farmer was denied the opportunity to trim LIFESTYLE ........B5-7 OBITUARIES .........B2 “It is really a key thing for the university.” — ONU President Kendal Baker Those days should be over by the fall of 2008 when the school opens its own hotel on campus. Construction of the University Inn is expected to begin this fall. President Kendal Baker said there has been talk of a 2 Universal Orlando secured the rights this week to build an attraction centered on the Harry Potter character. It will be called “The Wizarding World of Harry Potter.” PEOPLE ..............A2 REGION/STATE ..B1-4 SPORTS ...........C1-6 PUZZLES/TV .........C8 hotel for some time. “It is really a key thing for the university,” he said. “We just believe that we need to have a space that can accommodate folks that come to our university for a variety of reasons.” 3 The mayor in East Cleveland has ordered the city’s firefighters to cut grass and trim shrubs while on duty to help the city care for parks and other public areas. CLASSIFIEDS ...........866-546-2237 DELIVERY .................800-686-9914 NEWS ......................800-686-9924 The inn, which will include about 40 rooms, will be located south of McIntosh Center, where the University Place Apartments currently sit. The Freed Center for the Performing Arts is just west of the area. Demolition should begin on the apartments next month. Existing university housing will accommodate those in the apartments now, and Baker UNIVERSITY INN TIMELINE July — Demolition of current apartments begin This fall — Construction begins Fall 2008 — Facility opens • Inn located south of McIntosh Center; about 40 rooms See ONU INN • A7 4 Part of the third floor of a building under construction collapsed Friday in Maple Grove, Minn., injuring nine workers and trapping a man for nearly an hour. FREEDOM COMMUNICATIONS INC. © 2007 • Published at Lima, Ohio 5 A Federal Trade Commission study found that half of the ads for sugary, calorie-laden junk food are on children’s TV programs, double the number 30 years ago. 32 pages 4 sections Saturday, June 2, 2007 A7 The Lima News WEATHER TODAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY HIGH: 88 LOW: 65 HIGH: 83 LOW: 60 HIGH: 74 LOW: 56 HIGH: 76 LOW: 54 HIGH: 78 LOW: 60 Partly sunny, 40% chance of t-storms WEATHER TRIVIA: 60% chance of showers and t-storms Mostly cloudy, 50% chance of rain Flagstaff, Ariz., at an elevation of 6993 feet, has had a peak temperature of 93 degrees. YESTERDAY’S AREA TEMPERATURES Source: Water treatment plants, weather observers Source: Ray Burkholder, Pandora weather observer Bellefontaine 86 / 67 Kenton 87 / 67 Sidney NA / NA Celina NA / NA Lima 85 / 70 Van Wert 89 / 70 Findlay 87 / 70 Ottawa NA / NA Wapakoneta 91 / 72 HI TODAY’S OHIO FORECAST Akron Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dayton Lima Toledo Youngstown 87 86 87 89 87 88 90 87 / 64 / 64 / 67 / 66 / 66 / 65 / 65 / 63 PARTLY SUNNY with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s. Mostly cloudy in the evening hours with lows in the mid-60s. Southwest winds up to 10 mph. LO HI LO HI 90s Sunny 70s 70s Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Showers 80s 80s 90s 100s Today’s high temperature: 87 Today’s low temperature: 69 Record high temperature: 93 in 1980 Record low temperature: 37 in 1966 Precipitation today: 0.22” Precipitation this month: 0.22” Precipitation this year to date: 14.10” Precipitation last year to date: 15.22” 80s T-storms 90s 70s Flurries 60s Snow 50s 80s Fronts Cold Warm Stationary Pressure Low High 70s Ice Low Over Northern Plains/Moving Towards Gulf Coast Weather data collected in Pandora as of 6 p.m. TODAY’S SUNRISE: 6:07 a.m.SUNSET: 9:02 p.m. SUNDAY’S SUNRISE: 6:07 a.m. SUNSET: 9:03 p.m. A low pressure system over the Northern Plains will move slightly eastward Saturday, but rain and thunderstorms will remain from the Northern Plains through the Mississippi Valley. A low will move towards the Gulf Coast, bringing substantial rain to the region. “Clearly, we believe in Lima and we hope we can continue to do business here well into the future. We are committed, I am committed to the continued success of Lima and Ohio.” — Robert McDonald, P&G’s chief operating officer Procter & Gamble Chief Operating Officer Bob McDonald holds up a glass of champagne Friday during the dedication of the new Lima distribution center. P&G • from A1 –––––––––––––––––––––––––– “This is automated technology developed some time ago, but they’ve made it better. This is really exciting technology,” Hoffman said. The center includes 142 trailer docks, allowing crews to load and unload as many as 1,000 trailers a day. Incoming items are unloaded with forklifts and stacked on an assembly line and run through a system to size and square the package before it is inventoried and moved into the storage system. When it’s ready to move out, the system retrieves the item and moves it to a doorway where it is moved by forklift onto the outgoing truck. The construction goes beyond the warehouse itself. The full property takes up 59 acres of concrete and asphalt, including a lot capable of holding 1,000 trailers and its own private road and bridge. The company added 45 employees to man the plant and provided more than 70,000 hours of classroom and hands-on training. The new warehouse replaces seven fa- KELLI CARDINAL photos • The Lima News A Procter & Gamble employee demonstrates how to move pallets of detergent around the warehouse Friday during a tour and dedication of the new Lima distribution center. cilities the company once leased around the area. By centralizing the operations, they reduced traffic on local roads by 50 percent. That comes to three million miles a year, or 120 times around the world. P&G’s Chief Operating Officer, Robert McDonald, said the facility and the company’s efforts to work with the state and community in getting it built are a tribute to their commitment to Lima and Ohio. “Clearly, we believe in Lima and we hope we can continue to do business here well into the future,” McDonald said. “We are committed, I am committed to the continued success of Lima and Ohio.” You can comment on this story at www.limaohio.com. TREE-TRIMMING • from A1 ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– over or in his land.” Pepple denied the motion to dismiss on constitutional and common law grounds the same day it was filed — on Tuesday. Schmitmeyer, 39, was indicted by a grand jury on April with one count of breaking and entering, a fifth-degree felony, and one count of theft, also a fifth-degree felony. Schmitmeyer first appeared in court on April 20 and entered pleas of not guilty to both charges. Schmitmeyer is free on an own recognizance bond, according to court records. According to the indictment, Schmitmeyer “did knowingly trespass on the land or premises of another, with purpose to commit a felony” on Jan. 26. The indictment also alleges he “did, with purpose to deprive the owner of property or services, knowingly obtain or exert control over either the property or services without the consent of the owner or person authorized to give consent and the value of the property taken is $500 or more and less than $5,000.” Prosecutor Edwin Pierce declined to comment because the matter is still pending in com- mon pleas court. Kehoe could not be reached at his office for additional comment. Schmitmeyer is next scheduled to be in court June 26 for a pre-trial hearing and possible change of plea, according to an entry filed with the clerk of courts office on Thursday. You can comment on this story at www.limaohio.com. ONU INN • from A1 ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– said the school could later build a second floor onto the inn for students. The cost of the project is unknown, but Baker said the school will borrow the money and then the inn will generate the income to pay for the bonds. The inn will include a variety Anchorage Atlanta Boston Charlotte,N.C. Chicago Dallas-Ft Worth Denver Detroit Houston Indianapolis Little Rock Montgomery Nashville New Orleans Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix St Ste Marie Tupelo YESTERDAY hi lo 57 39 87 69 81 57 87 66 85 62 88 73 67 45 85 69 88 70 86 66 86 68 91 68 89 63 85 66 85 65 89 69 104 76 78 62 93 66 TODAY hi lo cdtn 60 42 cdy 82 66 cdy 83 67 cdy 83 64 cdy 79 63 rn 82 69 rn 75 47 cdy 87 66 cdy 89 70 cdy 86 65 cdy 86 67 cdy 86 68 cdy 87 65 cdy 88 70 cdy 81 67 rn 88 68 cdy 104 76 cdy 76 55 cdy 90 67 cdy TOMORROW hi lo cdtn 61 44 cdy 83 64 cdy 75 65 rn 80 62 cdy 75 59 cdy 88 67 cdy 75 48 cdy 80 66 rn 91 69 cdy 82 66 rn 87 66 cdy 85 63 cdy 84 64 rn 88 70 cdy 77 62 cdy 78 68 rn 105 76 clr 69 55 rn 84 67 cdy Rain ALMANAC: Friday, June 1, 2007 who said he would like to see Ohio known as the P&G state. “Not just for this great company, but also for the ‘progress and growth’ state, because that is exactly what Procter & Gamble stands for in many ways,” Fisher said. The distribution center is a tribute to engineering and new technologies in warehousing. The huge steel and concrete building houses acres of automated steel tracks stacked three levels tall, three times larger than any other system of its type and capable of managing as much as 280 pallet loads an hour. The 7,800 frames are managed by a computer-monitored program with more than 700 programmable logic controls and a state-of-theart communications system that allows workers to call up items on demand to be loaded into trucks. The system even allows the user to control the order of items so trucks will be automatically balanced for travel. Sunny U.S. TEMPERATURES LO TODAY’S NATIONAL HIGHS Weather Underground for AP Partly sunny of room types, as well as an exercise space. There will not be a restaurant, but food will be available through campus catering. The facility will also include some meeting space. Baker believes the inn will allow the school to hold more programs and seminars for people who visit from outside the area. Those coming to Ada for off-campus events, such as weddings and family reunions, could also use the inn. “We are going to build a facility that we expect to be a successful facility,” he said. “So it is going to have to be at- tractive to other people besides university people and for other reasons besides exclusively just university reasons. ... We think this adds to the resources of the region.” You can comment on this story at www.limaohio.com. WORLD TEMPERATURES RESORT TEMPERATURES Today’s forecasted conditions hi lo cdtn Beijing 69 62 rn Calgary 75 42 clr Dublin 61 42 rn Jakarta 89 75 cdy Kiev 82 62 rn Kuwait 107 80 clr Manila 90 78 rn Melbourne 59 47 rn Oslo 56 46 rn Today’s forecasted conditions hi lo cdtn Atlantic City 85 66 cdy Jacksonville 77 71 rn Las Vegas 99 77 cdy Miami Beach 85 74 rn Orlando 84 70 rn Reno 92 58 cdy San Diego 68 61 clr Savannah 77 68 rn Tampa 82 73 rn NATIONAL EXTREMES National high: 114 at Death Valley, Calif. National low: 27 at West Yellowstone, Mont. AUTO SALES • from A1––––––––––––– Lincoln MKX crossovers continued to make gains. “These new crossovers are the right products at the right time,” Mark Fields, Ford’s president of the Americas, said in a statement. “Consumer demand for the Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX has exceeded our original expectations.” Ford said it now expects Edge sales to reach 120,000 this year — 20 percent higher than its original forecast. Sales of Ford, Lincoln, Mercury, Volvo, Jaguar and Land Rover brands, including fleet sales, totaled 258,391 last month, including 169,265 light trucks and 89,126 cars. Truck sales were essentially flat from a year ago, but car sales dropped 17.7 percent. Ford said its Escape and Mercury Mariner hybrid sport utility vehicles did well for the month. George Pipas, Ford’s top sales analyst, earlier this week had predicted that his company’s retail sales to individual buyers would show a year-over-year monthly increase for the first time since October 2006. But he said Friday that sales during the Memorial Day holiday weekend didn’t rise to his expectations. “The last week of the month was softer for us,” Pipas said during a Friday conference call with analysts and reporters. Pipas, however, said the numbers indicate Ford’s U.S. market share appears to have stabilized between 14 percent and 15 percent, a milestone since it had been losing about 1 percentage point of share per year. The company had set 14 percent to 15 percent as a goal for 2007 and 2008 under its restructuring plan. Industrywide U.S. sales in May rose to 1.56 million from 1.49 million in May 2006, according to Autodata Corp. Car sales rose 6.1 percent to 776,277, while sales of light trucks, which include pickup trucks, vans and SUVs — and generally offer poorer fuel economy than cars — rose 3.9 percent to 787,664. DaimlerChrysler sold a total of 221,164 vehicles in the U.S. last month. Chrysler Group’s passenger vehicle sales, which include the Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge brands, rose 4.3 percent to 199,393 with help from a 20 percent jump in its Jeep brand, while Mercedes sales rose 0.7 percent to 21,771. Dodge sales were up about 3 percent. Chrysler Group’s sales included 59,970 cars, up 15.4 percent, and 139,423 light trucks, essentially flat from the same month a year ago. Michael Keegan, Chrysler’s vice president for volume planning and sales, said the automaker’s “Maximize Your Miles” sales campaign resonates with drivers and will continue this month. He said the appeal of the program is especially reflected in the company’s rising May car sales. “Facing continued pressure on gas prices, the program communicates Chrysler Group’s fuel economy message across all three of our brands and offers customers a great value package based on low-rate financing plus additional bonus cash,” Keegan said. With retail gas prices well above $3 per gallon across the nation, some analysts were expecting lower U.S. sales from May 2006. But rebates and other incentives, which the Edmunds.com auto Web site reported Friday were on the rise last month, may be offsetting uncertainty about future fuel prices. Toyota has been banking on a reputation for reliable and fuelefficient cars — and making monthly sales gains — as its increases U.S. market share. GM and Ford have been working to cut fleet sales, and that effort has weighed on their U.S. sales totals in recent months, but GM still made gains. American Honda, which includes Honda and Acura brands, said it sold 145,367 vehicles in May. That included 87,064 cars, a 2.6 percent increase, and 58,303 trucks, a 2.4 percent rise. Honda said its sales got a boost from the compact Civic and subcompact Fit, as well as the CR-V small crossover SUV. “Small is big right now,” Dick Colliver, executive vice president of American Honda, said in a statement. “Smaller vehicles have become more attractive ... and we expect this trend to continue for the time being.” Nissan said its U.S. sales, including Nissan and Infiniti, rose on good performances by its larger sedans and fuel-efficient small cars. The company said it sold 93,062 vehicles, up from 86,667 during the same month last year. Car sales rose 24.7 percent to 59,911, but light truck sales fell 14.2 percent to 33,151. It said it pushed the fuel-efficient Versa subcompact and Sentra compact cars in May advertising as gas prices were rising. “Obviously people responded to that,” said Brad Shaw, Nissan’s senior vice president for sales and marketing. Ford, meanwhile, announced North American production targets for the third quarter. It said it plans to build 640,000 vehicles in the quarter, down slightly from the 642,000 it built in the third quarter of 2006. For the second quarter of 2007, it left unchanged its production target of 810,000 vehicles. GM also left its second-quarter North American production forecast unchanged, at 1.15 million vehicles, including 403,000 cars and 742,000 trucks. GM gave a third-quarter production forecast of 1.08 million, including 377,000 cars and 698,000 trucks. GM said that is up 2 percent from the third quarter of 2006.