It was just a low-key meeting at a Mexican restaurant, but the subject
matter was anything but low-key. Members of the Ohio Body Shop Owners
Association (OBOA) met March 10 in Oregon, Ohio, to discuss their
latest consumer education ad campaign and also to go over some
legislative strategies aimed at countering what they believe are unfair
business practices committed by insurance companies.
The OBOA calls itself “the most aggressive auto body repair association
looking out for and protecting the rights of motor vehicle owners and
auto body repairers.”
“We’re for the consumer,” says Executive Director Dave Murdock. “It’s
what the policies of insurance say, it’s what Ohio law says, and that’s
what we’re all about. Consumer education truly is the key.
“You see all these ads for insurance companies that say, ‘We’ll save
you hundreds of dollars if you switch to us,’” Murdock added. “A
hundred dollars from what? No one’s ever asked that question. The
reason why they’re running those ads is because they’re making so much
money by not paying for claims properly that they have to invest that
money to get as many consumers as possible. It’s a simple game of
mathematics.”
The OBOA is currently in the process of buying radio spots to educate
consumers on their rights on choosing a shop and the difference between
OEM and aftermarket parts.
As far as body shops are concerned, the OBOA is working on such issues
as unrealistic paint and material prices, caps on paint and material,
unrealistic labor times, work performed without compensation and the
inability to recruit quality technicians.
Murdock and members of the OBOA wear their feelings on their
shirt…literally. They created a white button with red block letters
that says, “I’m the Only One,” and wear it at their shops every day.
“Most of the time, when an insurance representative would come in to
look at a car that you’ve notified him that you have, he would look at
a charge on the estimate and say, ‘What’s this?’” Murdock explained.
“And you would say, ‘Well, I have to do this procedure so I’m charging
for it.’ And he would say, ‘You’re the only one who charges for that.’
So we told our members to wear this button at all times. That way, when
the insurance rep comes in, you can just hold your hand up and say,
‘You don’t have to say it. I’m the only one who charges for that.’”
The OBOA believes that consumers are being shortchanged on the repairs
of their vehicles, their second most expensive possession.
“The OBOA is now recognizing that anything short of a correct and safe
repair is a breach of contract and results in what it calls a ‘short’
repair,” Murdock says. “It usually involves the safety of the consumer
and, later on, diminished value. What’s worse, it’s sometimes difficult
for another body technician to find that intentional short repair, to
say nothing of the consumer’s dilemma.”
For more information, visit www.oboa.net.