American Ground 
      Transport*
Page 
      3
            While emphasizing that 
      [t]his is not a study of malevolent or rapacious executives. . . and 
      that many of the corporate actions portrayed in the report can be viewed 
      as reasonable from the point of view of the interests of stockholders, the 
      Snell report reveals the extent to which General Motors and other industry 
      decisions influenced the course of apparently objective planning 
      decisions. 
     When, in the 1920s, the 
      nations auto market seemed to be approaching saturation, GM diversified 
      into the mass transit market, producing city and intercity buses. Thus GM 
      first moved toward the potential of spanning all phases of surface 
      transportation. 
     After its successful 
      experience with intercity buses, General Motors diversified into city bus 
      and rail operations. At first, its procedure consisted of directly 
      acquiring and scrapping local electric transit systems in favor of GM 
      buses. In this fashion, it created a market for its city buses. On June 
      29, 1932, the GM-bus executive committee formally resolved that to 
      develop motorized transportation, our company should initiate a program of 
      this nature and authorize the incorporation of a holding company with a 
      capital of $300,000. Thus was formed United Cities Motor Transit (UCMT) 
      as a subsidiary of GMs bus division. Its sole function was to acquire 
      electric street-car companies, convert them to GM motorbus operation, and 
      then resell the properties to local concerns which agreed to purchase GM 
      bus replacements. In each case, [GM General Counsel] Hogan stated, GM 
      'successfully motorized the city, turned the management over to other 
      interests and liquidated its investment. The program ceased, however, in 
      1935 when GM was censured by the American Transit Association (ATA) for 
      its self-serving role, as a bus manufacturer, in apparently attempting to 
      motorize Portlands electric streetcar 
      system. 
     Smaller companies proved only a 
      beginning, however, as GM influence extended to the nations largest 
      cities: The massive conversion within a period of only 18 months of the 
      New York system, then the worlds largest streetcar network, has been 
      recognized subsequently as the turning point in the electric railway 
      industry. 
     In 1936, GM caused its 
      officers and employees to form National City Lines, Inc. (NCL) the report 
      alleges, and continues: During the following 14 years General Motors, 
      together with Standard Oil of California, Firestone Tire, and two other 
      suppliers of bus-related products, contributed more than $9 million to 
      this holding company for the purpose of converting electric transit systems in 16 states to GM bus operations. The method 
      of operation was basically the same as that which GM employed 
      successfully in its United Cities Motor Transit program: acquisition, motorization, resale. By having 
      NCL resell the properties after conversion was completed, GM and its allied 
      companies were assured that this capital was continuously reinvested in the 
      motorization of additional systems. . .
      Continued on page 4
      
      
      Copyright © 1974 by Third Rail Press, © 1999 by The Composing Stack 
      Inc.
Reprinted by permission. Not responsible for 
      typographical errors.
      *Quotations in this article are taken from AMERICAN GROUND TRANSPORT, 
      A Proposal for Restructuring the Automobile, Truck, Bus, and Rail 
      Industries, © 1973 by Bradford C. Snell. Excerpts used by permission of 
      the author.
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