LONG BEACH, Calif. — After 36 years at 2950 N. Bellflower Blvd. in Long Beach, Cal Worthington Ford has become one of the city’s 10 biggest tax revenue generators and home to 115 employees. At the age of 89, local legend Calvin Coolidge Worthington still stars in the store's TV and radio commercials while his grandson, Nick, serves as general manager. So why are they contemplating a move to another part of Southern California?
The answer lies in the dealership’s proximity to Pacific Ford in nearby Lakewood and an incentives package that Worthington executives say Ford Motor Co. put on the table in March. A move from Long Beach could help to solidify the dealership’s market and even increase its size, as large dealerships in exclusive markets are an established model for Japanese automakers operating in the United States.
It would appear, however, that Cal Worthington Ford would rather stay where it is.
According to the Long Beach Press-Telegram, dealership officials first asked the City of Long Beach for financial assistance in 2008. They requested a $200,000 economic development loan to upgrade Worthington's giant electronic sign in the hopes of improving showroom traffic. Negotiations to secure the funds continued into March of this year.
“We’re doing what we can to create whatever incentives are possible within reason to keep the dealership in Long Beach,” Randy Gordon, chief executive of the Long Beach Area Chamber of Commerce, told the Los Angeles Business Journal. “We’re just trying to compete with Ford Motor Co. It’s sort of David and Goliath here, and we don’t know what Ford Motor’s offer is.”











