Monday, September 30, 2013

Shutdown orders issued as Congress misses deadline


Speaker John Boehner heads to the floor of the Republican-controlled House to vote Monday, Sept. 30, on budget legislation at the Capitol.

The U.S. government began a partial shutdown late Monday after House and Senate lawmakers disagreed over Obamacare in a series of votes.
WASHINGTON —  For the first time in nearly two decades, the federal government staggered into a partial shutdown Monday at midnight after congressional Republicans stubbornly demanded changes in the nation's health care law as the price for essential federal funding and President Barack Obama and Democrats adamantly refused.
As Congress gridlocked, Obama said a "shutdown will have a very real economic impact on real people, right away," with hundreds of thousands of federal workers furloughed and veterans' centers, national parks, most of the space agency and other government operations shuttered.
Government shutdown: Cathryn Carroll, of Washington, DC, yells at Republican House membersAP Photo: Cliff Owen
Cathryn Carroll, of Washington, DC, yells at Republican House members as they call on Senate Democrats to 'come back to work' on the Senate steps at the Capitol.
He laid the blame at the feet of House Republicans, whom he accused of seeking to tie government funding to ideological demands, "all to save face after making some impossible promises to the extreme right wing of their party."
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, responded a short while later on the House floor. "The American people don't want a shutdown and neither do I," he said. Yet, he added, the new health care law "is having a devastating impact. ... Something has to be done."
The stock market dropped on fears that political deadlock between the White House and a tea party-heavy Republican Party would prevail, though analysts suggested significant damage to the national economy was unlikely unless a shutdown lasted more than a few days.
A few minutes before midnight, Budget Director Sylvia Burwell issued a directive to federal agencies to "execute plans for an orderly shutdown." While an estimated 800,000 federal workers faced furloughs, some critical parts of the government — from the military to air traffic controllers — would remain open.
Any interruption in federal funding would send divided government into territory unexplored in nearly two decades. Then, Republicans suffered grievous political damage and President Bill Clinton benefitted from twin shutdowns. Now, some Republicans said they feared a similar outcome.
If nothing else, some Republicans also conceded it was impossible to use funding legislation to squeeze concessions from the White House on health care. "We can't win," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
"We're on the brink," Sen. Barbara Mikulski, Md., said shortly after midday as the two houses maneuvered for political advantage and the Obama administration's budget office prepared for a partial shutdown, the first since the winter of 1995-1996.
On a long day and night in the Capitol, the Senate torpedoed one GOP attempt to tie government financing to changes in "Obamacare." House Republicans countered with a second despite unmistakable signs their unity was fraying — and Senate Democrats promptly rejected it, as well.
Government shutdown: A view of the Capitol on the eve of a federal government shutdown late Monday, Sept. 30.Reuters photo: Kevin Lamarque
A view of the Capitol on the eve of a federal government shutdown late Monday, Sept. 30.
Defiant still, House Republicans decided to re-pass their earlier measure and simultaneously request negotiations with the Senate on a compromise. Some aides conceded the move was largely designed to make sure that the formal paperwork was on the Senate's doorstep as the day ended.
Whatever its intent, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., rejected it. "That closes government. They want to close government," he said of House Republicans.
As lawmakers squabbled, Obama spoke bluntly about House Republicans. "You don't get to extract a ransom for doing your job, for doing what you're supposed to be doing anyway, or just because there's a law there that you don't like," he said. Speaking of the health care law that undergoes a major expansion on Tuesday, he said emphatically, "That funding is already in place. You can't shut it down."
Some Republicans balked, moderates and conservatives alike.
Rep. Phil Gingrey of Georgia said it felt as if Republicans were retreating, given their diminishing demands, and Rep. Scott Rigell of Virginia said there was not unanimity when the rank and file met to discuss a next move.
Yet for the first time since the showdown began more than a week ago, there was also public dissent from the Republican strategy that has been carried out at the insistence of lawmakers working in tandem with GOP Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.
Rep. Charles Dent, R-Pa., said he was willing to vote for stand-alone legislation that would keep the government running and contained no health care-related provisions. "I would be supportive of it, and I believe the votes are there in the House to pass it at that point," the fifth-term congressman said.
Other Republicans sought to blame Democrats for any shutdown, but Dent conceded that Republicans would bear the blame, whether or not they deserved it.
Hours before the possible shutdown, the Senate voted 54-46 to reject the House-passed measure that would have kept the government open but would have delayed implementation of the health care law for a year and permanently repealed a medical device tax that helps finance it.
In response, House Republicans sought different concessions in exchange for allowing the government to remain open. They called for a one-year delay in a requirement in the health care law for individuals to purchase coverage. The same measure also would require members of Congress and their aides as well as the president, vice president and the administration's political appointees to bear the full cost of their own coverage by barring the government from making the customary employer contribution.
"This is a matter of funding the government and providing fairness to the American people," said Boehner. "Why wouldn't members of Congress vote for it?"
The vote was 228-201, with a dozen Republicans opposed and nine Democrats in favor.
Unimpressed, Senate Democrats swatted it on a 54-46 party line vote about an hour later.
Obama followed up his public remarks with phone calls to Boehner and the three other top leaders of Congress, telling Republicans he would continue to oppose attempts to delay or cut federal financing of the health care law.
The impact of a shutdown would be felt unevenly.
Many low-to-moderate-income borrowers and first-time homebuyers seeking government-backed mortgages could face delays, and Obama said veterans' centers would be closed.
About 800,000 federal workers, many already reeling from the effect of automatic budget cuts, would be ordered to report to work Tuesday for about four hours — but only to carry out shutdown-related chores such as changing office voicemail messages and completing time cards.
Some critical services such as patrolling the borders and inspecting meat would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent, and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.
U.S. troops were shielded from any damage to their wallets when Obama signed legislation assuring the military would be paid in the in the event of a shutdown.
That had no impact on those who labor at other agencies.
"I know some other employees, if you don't have money saved, it's going to be difficult," said Thelma Manley, who has spent seven years as a staff assistant with the Internal Revenue Service during a 30-year career in government.
As for herself, she said, "I'm a Christian, I trust in God wholeheartedly and my needs will be met." She added, "I do have savings, so I can go to the reserve, so to speak."

Private jet crashes into hangar at California airport, sparks inferno


Private jet crashes into hangar at California airport, sparks inferno




A multimillion dollar private jet crashed into a hangar at a California airport creating an “unsurvivable” inferno on the ground, a fire official said.
The twin-engine Cessna Citation ran off the end of the runway while landing at Santa Monica Airport at 6:20 p.m. local time (9:20 p.m. ET) Sunday. Such aircraft cost at least $3 million.

Ringo H.W. Chiu / AP
Firefighters work near a collapsed hangar at the site of a plane crash in Santa Monica, Calif., on Sunday.
The was no immediate information on the number of passengers or their conditions, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said.
Santa Monica Fire Department Captain John Nevandro told NBC Los Angeles that the crash was "unsurvivable.” He added: "The building actually collapsed and wrapped itself around the plane."
Gregor said a crane would be required to lift the collapsed hangar from the aircraft and that firefighters would not be able to get to the wreckage until later on Monday.
The aircraft’s tail was visible outside the wreckage, exposing its registration number: N194SJ. According to flightaware.com, the aircraft is registered to Creative Real Estate Exchange, a debt management and real estate company based in Malibu, Calif.
The plane had taken off from Hailey, Idaho, just over an hour before the incident.
The Idaho airport serves the town of Sun Valley and the Sun Valley alpine region, which is known for its world-class skiing.

Why bother? And other burning questions about Obamacare

Why bother? And other burning questions about Obamacare


Amy Ball, right, counsels Wanda Perry, 48, left, about possible options for health insurance in Delaware once the new exchanges open on Tuesday. Christiana Care Health System in Wilmington, Del., is providing marketplace "guides" to help consumers navigate the system. Perry is currently unemployed and her husband is self-employed. Neither has health insurance now.
Jessica Kourkounis / Getty Images for NBC News
Amy Ball, right, counsels Wanda Perry, 48, left, about possible options for health insurance in Delaware once the new exchanges open on Tuesday. Christiana Care Health System in Wilmington, Del., is providing marketplace "guides" to help consumers navigate the system. Perry is currently unemployed and her husband is self-employed. Neither has health insurance now.
The new health-insurance exchanges open for enrollment on Tuesday, but a new Kaiser Family Foundation/NBC survey shows most Americans are still worried and confused about what it all means. The battle in Congress over shutting down the federal government -- something that could also happen Tuesday -- has people even more perplexed. Here’s what you need to know before day one of Obamacare:
Why bother? Isn’t the government going to shut down and stop this?  Won't Congress delay Obamacare anyway?
Even with a government shutdown, the exchanges will open as scheduled on Oct. 1. The money the federal government is using to run them doesn’t rely on appropriations from Congress. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives has deliberately linked the Affordable Care Act to the continuing resolution -- the law that keeps the federal government funded. They want Democrats in Congress and President Obama to agree to delay or even repeal the law in return for keeping the government running. Not going to happen, say the Democrats and Obama. It's far more likely that the government will shut down for a few days and then both sides will agree to keep cash flowing without bringing the health-reform law into it. 
And it’s very unlikely the Republicans in Congress who have vowed to repeal the health-reform law can succeed, because all laws have to pass the Senate and Democrats who support the law control the Senate. And President Barack Obama would veto any such repeal, of course. Even some Republicans point out that the Supreme Court has ruled Obamacare constitutional and it is now the law of the land.
Got insurance already? You don’t need to worry
Most of us -- 58 percent of non-elderly Americans -- get health insurance through an employer, and 32 percent get government-sponsored insurance such as Medicare or Medicaid. The U.S. Census Department says about 15 percent of Americans don’t have health insurance and these are the people who should be either buying health insurance on the new exchanges, or getting it through Medicaid in the states that are offering it to more people.
The opening of the exchanges doesn't affect anyone who already has insurance. The law does change some of the rules regarding health insurance, but the only thing happening Tuesday is the opening of the exchanges. Other changes go into effect Jan. 1.
Some news reports have highlighted the cases of employers who have decided their workers will be better off buying insurance on the exchanges. This may be because the federal subsidies would actually lower costs for them. If you have workplace-sponsored insurance, your employer must give you a letter detailing what your options are.
What are these exchanges?
The exchanges are a new way to buy health insurance that let people compare the plans available to them and to also see, within minutes, whether the federal government will pay for part of the premiums. They’ve been compared to online sites such as Travelocity or Expedia, where people can compare the prices of airline flights across different carriers. At the same time, the sites check to make sure people are telling the truth about their income and employment.
How much will it cost?
The prices vary based on the different plans -- a lot like employer-provided insurance works now. There are four tiers of coverage: bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The bronze plans usually charge lower premiums, but then you’ll be charged a higher co-pay, which means you pay each time you see a doctor or other provider, each time you fill a prescription, or each time you have a procedure. The platinum plans charge the highest premiums but provide much more care before the patient has to pay a share. In some places, young adults can also buy bare-bones catastrophic insurance for people who really think they’ll only need health care if they have an accident.
A lot depends on where you live. In some counties, a family of four with an income of $50,000 may pay $11 a month for a low-level silver plan. In other places a similar family might pay $280 a month for the same plan. This is because care costs more in different places. You can give the federal government site a run now atwww.healthcare.gov although you cannot actually enroll until Tuesday.
Will the plans be expensive -- more than plans cost now?
Some of the bare-bones plans are likely to cost more than the minimal-coverage plans on the market now, but that’s because you get much more coverage. Many of the plans available now don’t provide much coverage, and can stop paying for services once patients start running up bills. The Affordable Care Act requires insurers to provide a basic level of care, which includes free preventive services such as vaccines, mammograms and wellness checkups. They cannot cap your coverage and they can’t charge you more just because you are a woman, for instance.
Can people get help paying for the insurance?
Many people can get a federal government subsidy. It depends onhow much you make and your family size, but the subsidies can be very generous. It’s a complicated formula but families with incomes of up to $94,000 might get a subsidy. There’s a calculator here that you can use to estimate what it might cost. 
There’s a big exception for people who make very little money. The law assumed that states would expand Medicaid to cover people who earn less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level, which works out to $16,000 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four. But the Supreme Court ruled that states don’t have to, and many states won’t. These people also don’t qualify for subsidies if they make less than the federal poverty level, and right now they are stuck. They’ll either have to pay full price on the exchanges, or go without insurance.
If your employer offers adequate insurance but you decide to go to the exchanges to buy some anyway, you can’t get a subsidy. But you may qualify for one if the insurance you have now isn’t adequate.
What if I don't want to pay?
Technically, you'll have to pay a fine, which varies depending on your income. The argument is that people without health insurance cost everyone money because they do get sick or hurt and they do go to emergency rooms and someone has to pay in the end. The Supreme Court says it's a tax. The IRS can take the money out of any refund you have coming. In reality, it's not clear how hard the federal government will go after holdouts.
What if I’m already sick?
That’s called a pre-existing condition. Right now, insurance companies can refuse to cover you if you’re sick, or they can refuse to pay for care for some condition, such as diabetes, if you had it before you bought insurance. Not any more. Now insurers have to cover everyone, regardless of their health or previous illnesses.
What about if people are too busy to sign up Oct. 1?
Tuesday’s just the first day that the exchanges are open for business. People have six months to sign up for health insurance during what’s called open enrollment. If you get signed up by Dec. 15, you can start using your insurance on Jan. 1, 2014.
So where do I go to get started?
Anyone can go online and sign up at https://www.healthcare.gov/. States that are offering health insurance have their own sites, too, like Delaware and California. Various privately funded groups likeEnroll America  also have websites to help people sign up.

5 things to know today about the government shutdown


5 things to know today about the government shutdown



WASHINGTON — Republicans and Democrats in Congress are playing pingpong over funding the government and President Obama's health care law. The first government shutdown since 1996 will occur if lawmakers and the White House don't work things out.

Here are the five things to know about the pending shutdown for Monday, Sept. 30:
The state of play: The new fiscal year starts Tuesday, Oct. 1, so a bill to fund the government must be passed by both chambers in Congress and signed by Obama by midnight tonight.
Who's got the ball? The Senate, because the House passed a spending bill early Sunday that would also delay implementation of the Affordable Care Act for one year. The House also voted to repeal a 2.3% tax on medical devices to help pay for the health care law. Both policy provisions are non-starters for the Democratic majority in the Senate and the White House — so expect the Senate to send the spending bill back to the House without those items. The Senate convenes at 2 p.m. ET.
What about the House? The lawmakers will gavel into session at 10 a.m. ET, but their legislative agenda is unclear. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., says votes could start as early as 11 a.m. ET depending on any Senate action.
Where is Obama? He's meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then the Cabinet.So far, the president hasn't been negotiating with Congress to resolve the budget impasse. As for the health care law, the state-run health exchanges to help people buy insurance are set to begin Tuesday.
Will I feel the shutdown? Yes and no. Social Security recipients will receive benefits, mail service will continue and taxes will still be collected. But if you wanted to visit a national park, historic site or a Smithsonian museum, those gates and doors will shut Tuesday without funding. For more detail, USA TODAY's Gregory Korte provides answers to 66 questions about the government shutdown.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

It’s true you did fall in the shower

It’s true you did fall in the shower at the Echo Village Budget Motel, Winchester
3632 Valley Pike, Winchester, VA 22602 | (540)869-1900 after  you fell I ask you what happened and your reply was my leg gave out, plus you where so soap up it was not funny and you where drinking also , I had to hold the shower curtain up so you could raise off all the extra soap. That is what happened and by the way you where drinking a lot that night. And I took you to the hospital where they would not give you a pain pill, because you where there last week for an over dose. That seems to happen a lot in and out of hospital for pain. That morning you said to me that you would file a law suite against the Motel. The owner told you they were not reasonable for you fall.  I said he did fall but he did not have a leg brace on to prevent the fall or a water proof one. 

You are such a con man.

Like i said your Balance started out in you account at Wells Fargo and by the way i find the receipt in my car tonight at ( about 46.61- Negative) before i put the 200.00 in Wells Fargo on 9-22.2013 after you ask me to do that. i told you the money was not in my account and you said to me that's OK will take it out after two am that morning of 9-23-2013 witch in turned left a balance of 159.09 and you took out 150.00 and and then the balance was 9.61  you said don't worry about. So how you are say that you're overdrawn by 397.00 that's not my problem you added on 197.00 the cost to stay at that motel for a extra week not on my expense...What you are doing is called extortion by law and that is illegal. I also told you i get my check on the 3rd of each month the same time you do, and you need to redeposited that check. I still can not believe you can do that to me after stealing me blind out of my account and taking so much thing out of my apartment that did not belong to you. OMG I should had you arrested for stealing. Also PA state law does not say you have to show me the statement if that was the case so many people would be coning the way you are doing to me. Until i see the statement no dice.11;00 am NO WAY.

Beware of this guy in Winchester. (Motel on Valley Pike near Rubbermaid plant)

Beware of this guy in Winchester. (Motel on Valley Pike near Rubbermaid pla)



I was trying to help out my Ex when I wrote a check for 200.00 Dollars he told me that he would deposit and then draw on that night after midnight, so he took 150.00 out of the ATM in Winchester Va. So two days later the Check I wrote balanced and then we had a fight, So that the next day I went home and then he emailed me saying that with all the fees it is now 400.00 WTF is he thinking. Now he is coning his own ex out of money not the first time this has happened, please note that he served five years for check feud, how dare you con me, he then barrows money to pay his motel bill and cigarettes and beer for his bad habits in which he needs help for. He was taking a shower when his leg gave out and I had to take him to the hospital were they said it was only bruised, they would not give him any pain pills because he was in there last week for an over dose. He then told me that he only gets 500.00 from SSD because he has to pay for insurance , He is not going to pay any of his friends back with the intentions on skipping out of town. Beware of this guy. He is staying in a Motel on Valley Pike near Rubbermaid plant.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

House Budget Vote Passes In Favor Of New Obamacare Deal-Breaker, Shutdown Loom

House Budget Vote Passes In Favor Of New Obamacare Deal-Breaker, Shutdown Looms



The House voted early Sunday morning to pass a new continuing resolution, 231 to 192, which would fund the government thru Dec. 15.
The plan, which emerged on Saturday, would also impose a one-year delay of Obamacare and a full repeal of the law’s tax on medical devices.
Even before the House voted, Senate Democrats pledged to reject the measure and the White House issued a statement vowing a veto in any event. Republicans are pursuing "a narrow ideological agenda ... and pushing the government towards shutdown," it said.
The Senate is not scheduled to meet until mid-afternoon on Monday, 10 hours before a shutdown would begin, and even some Republicans said privately they feared that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., held the advantage in the fast-approaching end game. If so, a House GOP rank and file that includes numerous tea party allies would soon have to choose between triggering the first partial shutdown in nearly two decades – or coming away empty-handed from their latest confrontation with Obama.
Undeterred, House Republicans pressed ahead with their latest attempt to squeeze a concession from the White House in exchange for letting the government open for business normally on Tuesday. "Obamacare is based on a limitless government, bureaucratic arrogance and a disregard of a will of the people," said Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R-Ind.
Another Republican, Rep. Darrell Issa of California, reacted angrily when asked whether he would eventually support a standalone spending bill if needed to prevent a shutdown. "How dare you presume a failure? How dare you? How dare you?" he said.
Apart from its impact on the health care law, the legislation that House Republicans decided to back would assure routine funding for government agencies through Dec. 15. Under House rules, the measure went to the Senate after lawmakers voted 248-174 to repeal the medical tax, then 231-192 for the one-year delay in Obamacare.
A companion measure headed for approval assures U.S. troops are paid in the event of a shutdown.
The government spending measure marked something of a reduction in demands by House Republicans, who passed legislation several days ago that would permanently strip the health care law of money while providing funding for the government.
It also contained significant concessions from a party that long has criticized the health care law for imposing numerous government mandates on industry, in some cases far exceeding what Republicans have been willing to support in the past. Acknowledging as much, Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., said that as a conservative he had often found during Obama's presidency that his choice was "between something bad or (something) horrible."
GOP aides said that under the legislation headed toward a vote, most portions of the health law that already have gone into effect would remain unchanged. That includes requirements for insurance companies to guarantee coverage for pre-existing conditions and to require children to be covered on their parents' plans until age 26. It would not change a part of the law that reduces costs for seniors with high prescription drug expenses.
One exception would give insurers or others the right not to provide abortion coverage, based on religious or moral objections.
The measure would delay implementation of a requirement for all individuals to purchase coverage or face a penalty, and of a separate feature of the law that will create marketplaces where individuals can shop for coverage from private insurers.
By repealing the medical device tax, the GOP measure also would raise deficits – an irony for a party that won the House majority in 2010 by pledging to get the nation's finances under control.
The Senate rejected the most recent House-passed anti-shutdown bill on a party-line vote of 54-44 Friday, insisting on a straightforward continuation in government funding without health care-related add-ons.
That left the next step up to the House – with time to avert a partial shutdown growing ever shorter.
For a moment at least, the revised House proposal papered over a simmering dispute between Speaker John Boehner and the rest of the leadership, and tea party conservatives who have been more militant about abolishing the health law that all Republican lawmakers oppose.
It was unclear whether members of the rank and file had consulted with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who has become the face of the "Defund Obamacare" campaign that tea party organizations are promoting and using as a fundraising tool.
In debate on the House floor, Republicans adamantly rejected charges that they seek a government shutdown, and said their goal is to spare the nation from the effects of a law they said would cost jobs and reduce the quality of care. The law is an "attack and an assault on the free enterprise and the free economy," said Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas.
Democrats disagreed vociferously. "House Republicans are shutting down the government. They're doing it intentionally. They're doing it on purpose," said Rep. Donna Edwards of Maryland, as Republican lawmakers booed from their seats on the floor.
In the Senate, there was little doubt that Reid had the votes to block a one-year delay in the health care program widely known as "Obamacare." He said the same was true for the repeal of the medical device tax, even though 33 Democrats joined all Senate Republicans in supporting repeal on a nonbinding vote earlier in the year.
The 2.3 percent tax, which took effect in January, is imposed on items such as pacemakers and CT scan machines; eyeglasses, contact lenses, hearing aids and other items are exempt. Repealing it would cost the government an estimated $29 billion over the coming decade.
If lawmakers miss the approaching deadline, a wide range of federal programs would be affected, from the national parks to the Pentagon.
Some critical services such patrolling the borders, inspecting meat and controlling air traffic would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.
The new health insurance exchanges would open Tuesday, a development that's lent urgency to the drive to use a normally routine stopgap spending bill to gut implementation of the law.

I have my Life Back!

The last few months haven't been very nice to me. My ex BF had me arrested and put in jail for domestic violence charges saying i was hitting him and let the record show I didn't touch him as he would beat the shit out of me, I got kick out of my own apartment lost all my furniture and all my pride because of him, I hope you can live with yourself and sleep at night, he also lived there Scott free and it was my place to start with and he had more right to stay there then I did,I was not a loud to go back till he moved out and that same day, I moved back in for one week, and was ask to leave because of all the trouble he has caused  . He Stole 1500.00 dollars out of the checking account leaving me with all kinds of debt, but he did pay me some back 700.00 WOW real nice, I'm still paying for it all. He told all his friends that I was a real Bitch that I was always hitting him that I broke bones, and then put all my business out on the street along with my family's name. The whole thing to this story is I'm back in an different location away from him in a nice house and have a life again, as he's living in a motel and drinking more than ever and asking all he friends for cash and help him pay for the motel bill till the 3rd of the month and they won't get paid back you watch and see. I was willing to help him out then find out he was still badmouthing me be hide my back to his friends well in the long run the liquor bottle won his love over me. We met and spent a week together and the same old him came out again so I walked out on him. And when you tell all your friends make sure you tell them all the truth and not your truth, I now have my life back..


Vintage Car Auction Will Sell Off Low-Mileage Gem



PIERCE, Neb. (AP) - Seventeen years have passed since Ray Lambrecht closed his Chevrolet dealership, a small-town operation in northeast Nebraska with a big and valuable secret.

For decades, the owner of the Lambrecht Chevrolet Co. in Pierce held on to new cars and trucks that didn't sell right away. He stashed them in warehouses, at his farm and in other spots around the town he worked in for 50 years.

Now, his automotive nest egg - about 500 vintage cars and trucks - will go on the auction block. This weekend, visitors from at least a dozen countries and throughout the U.S. will converge on the 1,800-resident town, or bid online. 
Auction Details: Preview Day: 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sept. 27 in Pierce, Neb.

Auction Days: Sept. 28-29, starting at 9:30 a.m.
The two-day auction will feature mostly unsold Chevrolets that have sat untouched for decades. They'll go on the block in as-is condition. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable, including a rare Chevy Cameo pickup, could fetch six-figure bids from collectors who view them as works of art to display or as restoration projects.

"We don't know what they're going to go for because there is no comparison" Yvette VanDerBrink, the auctioneer coordinating the event, told Keloland.

Preparations for the auction began in June, and VanDerBrink has taken calls from as far as Iceland, Singapore and Brazil. The two least-driven cars, a 1959 Bel Air and a 1960 Corvair Monza, each have one mile on their odometer. The oldest vehicle with fewer than 20 miles dates to 1958; the newest is a 1980 Monza with nine miles.

On a recent afternoon, VanDerBrink stepped over hubcaps and engine parts in the cramped, dust-cakeddealership that closed in 1996. In the corner sat the sky-blue 1958 Cameo with 1.3 miles, a cracked windshield and a dented roof - but its interior is unblemished.

Nearby, a red-and-white 1963 Impala waits with 11.4 miles logged. Manufacturer's plastic covers the seats. The car was never titled. A yellowed, typewritten window sticker touts its original price: $3,254.70.

In this Aug. 12, 2013 photo, Art Nordstrom holds a sign at the former Lambrecht Chevrolet car dealership in Pierce, Neb. In September, bidders from at least a dozen countries and all 50 U.S. states will converge on Pierce, a town of about 1,800 in northeast Nebraska, for a two-day auction that will feature about 500 old cars and trucks, mostly Chevrolets that went unsold during the dealership?s five decades in business. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable could fetch six-figure bids. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)
A man holds a sign from the former Lambrecht Chevrolet dealership. (AP)

Ray Lambrecht opened the downtown dealership with his uncle in 1946, on the corner of Main Street and Nebraska Highway 13. Live elephants meandered out front that day, with Chevrolet banners across their backs.

The U.S. Army veteran quickly established himself as an unusual salesman: He gave his lowest price up-front, without negotiation, and encouraged hagglers to try to find a better deal elsewhere. He rarely advertised, but was one of the first dealers in Nebraska to lease vehicles.

His low-price, high-volume approach helped secure regular government contracts, and he often sold cars to the state. In 1954, Lambrecht drove then-Gov. Robert Crosby down Main Street in a parade celebrating the 100-year anniversary of Nebraska as a territory.

Lambrecht rarely sold cars or pickups that were more than a year old, and he used holdover models as a kind of rainy-day fund. Unlike most dealers who lowered prices to move out-of-date inventory, he assumed the older cars would appreciate over time.

"I believe that Dad's sales approach reflected his personal style," said his daughter, Jeannie Stillwell. "He is a very honest, straightforward man who was focused on giving his customers the best price right from the start. Negotiating over price was a waste of time, and so that element of the sale was eliminated."

The most valuable vehicles were stored for decades at a nearby warehouse, until a heavy snow collapsed the roof. Some were damaged, but many were saved and moved elsewhere. And the models at the dealership are among the best preserved, even as the building gave way to bats and holes in the roof.

The rest of the cars sat under trees at a nearby farm the Lambrechts owned, in the company of trade-in vehicles he didn't want to resell. Years passed, and trees started to poke through fenders and rusted pickup beds. The dealership's longtime mechanic lived on the farm, but when he died, his family moved away. Vandals and thieves pounced.

Ray and his wife, Mildred, retired in 1996. Ray, 95, and Mildred, 92, live in town, but the couple's health has declined. They decided to sell the collection so others could enjoy the cars and pickups, Stillwell said.

This family photo which was provided by Jeannie Stillwell, daughter of Ray Lambrecht of the Lambrecht Chevrolet car company in Pierce, Neb., shows Mildred Lambrecht, wife of Ray, and their son Mark in a brand new 1953 Corvette, in front of the dealership. In September 2013, bidders from at least a dozen countries and all 50 U.S. states will converge on Pierce, a town of about 1,800 in northeast Nebraska, for a two-day auction that will feature about 500 old cars and trucks, mostly Chevrolets that went unsold during the dealership?s five decades in business. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable could fetch six-figure bids. (AP Photo/Jeannie Stillwell Family)
This photo shows Mildred Lambrecht, wife of Ray, and their son in a then-new Chevy in front of the family dealership. (AP)

News of the auction enthralled the vintage car community, where rumors have swirled for years about a quirky Nebraska dealer who held on to his old vehicles. Nowadays, most classic cars have new paint jobs, interiors and engines. A true "survivor" has most, if not all, of its original material.

"This kind of stuff is absolutely the rarest of the rare," said Mark Gessler, president of the Historic Vehicle Association in Gaithersburg, Md. "You can see plenty of cars that have been restored. We want to ensure that we're celebrating the original craftsmanship, the original technique. It's a touchstone of our past."

The low-mileage cars and pickups will likely generate the greatest interest from collectors, who view them as works of art to be displayed, said Jay Quail, executive director of the Chicago-based Classic Car Club of America. Quail said he often sees old cars on eBay billed as classics, even though they're refurbished.

"I'd look at it and think, 'My God, it would have been worth way more if you just hadn't touched it,'" Quail said. "It's like having a Picasso in your garage. Collectors will pay for a car that's totally unmolested."

At the same time, Quail said it's difficult to savor a barely-driven beauty.

"As a collector, do I just want to have the car sit?" he said. "If I bought a '63 Corvette with only one mile on it, I don't think I'd enjoy it very much. You couldn't drive it."