I missed this discussion when it was active. I read all the comments. The club should merge with similar clubs. I think that "most" clubs should become divisions of the AACA. That will be perhaps another 20 years, but all old car clubs have dwindling membership.
I was surprised when Lee stated the Studebaker Driver's Club SDC) has 12,000 members. If he knows for sure that is great but I highly doubt it. I was a member of the Buick Club of America when it had 7,500 members and there were millions more Buicks made than Studebakers. If SDC is that strong then the rest of the clubs need to find out what is going on!
The PAC Packard Club is not a good fit for KFOCI. I too was a member of that club and I just think it's not a good fit.
What is a good fit is the Nash Club and the Hudson Club. I owned a Hudson Commodore 8 2 years ago and gave it away to the Hudson Club President who lives right here in Des Moines, Iowa.
So - I got their periodical for awhile and I think the culture of the Hudson and Nash club's more aligns with KFOCI. In that all brands are considered independents and differed from the mainstream manufacturers while they were relevant in the marketplace.
Therefore all have members that appreciate the uniqueness of the cars. Of course, both Nash and Hudson have cars dating back to the teens and twenties but the bulk of what would be at a meet or reported in a monthly periodical would be post war.
Merging could see members cross buying and owning the other brands. As mentioned, I have owned a Hudson and 2 Kaisers and have always considered buying a Nash, got close a couple of times. Some of the KFOCI members own Hudson and Nash now.
This should happen sooner rather than later and would take club leadership just having conversations with the other leaders to start.
Benefits would be a better periodical - I know the Hudson magazine was a slick magazine not a newsletter like KFOCI.
Better meets - more cars, more variety and stewardship.
Better national museum status and endowment.
Negatives - perhaps, and this is unknown - one side is stronger than the others and has more content in the monthly magazines, but not sure.
If everyone waits too much longer, then the clubs will fold and this opportunity would be lost. Still, the very best scenario is that the AACA reach out to ALL of the individual marque clubs and offer to make them divisions of the AACA.
The Buick Club of America, and I think even KFOCI have divisions. The BCA has about 20 now, one for each subgroup that has a particular focus. So, if the AACA made that offer, and car clubs joined as divisions, then despite overall declining memberships, the group would have "critical mass" and be able to withstand the cultural shift in the next 20-30 years.
The treasurer of the BCA opined about 2 years ago that he sees membership in the BCA dropping to such levels that solvency would be difficult.
I apologize for not being a member of the KFOCI and yet making some statements on the forum. Right now I don't own any collector cars and am not much of a club joiner but if I did buy any of a particular make of car, I join the club. That is the only reason I was in the Hudson club. I did not renew after I gave my Commodore 8 to the President.