They are scattered across 16 states with Texas taking the biggest hit by losing six units. California and Georgia lose three units each. Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, North Carolina and Ohio each drop two stores, and one unit exits each of the following states: Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oklahoma and Rhode Island. As a result, 550 store employees, 3% of the total, will lose jobs, and the company's store count drops to 560 in 35 states and Puerto Rico.

"Today is the first of several difficult, but essential steps that we will take towards revitalizing the Pep Boys brand and returning to dominance in the automotive aftermarket, an industry pioneered by our founders, Manny, Moe & Jack," said Jeff Rachor, president and CEO, during the conference call. The new strategy centers on a "hub and spoke" model, he said, which calls for adding smaller neighborhood service shops to existing supercenters. The new service centers will be added "through organic growth and opportunistic local acquisitions," he said.

The closures follow by weeks a $166.2-million sale-leaseback agreement, as GlobeSt.com previously reported. Today, Rachor said that pact, which involves 34 locations, had closed.

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