"We run bi-weekly, monthly, and annual cost reports on each vehicle and each type of vehicle," Alley says. Alley and his staff carefully analyze and track these reports to look for trends with certain vehicles, and to know when a specific vehicle needs to be pulled for PM or more extensive service work.
Recently San Diego combined its police and fire departments under one management organization and virtually all of the city's public safety vehicles are managed by a process of internal service fund replacement. The city tracks vehicle usage based upon assignment fees rather than relying on the city council to allocate the money each year.
"We leverage the internal service fund to help replace overaged and overserviced vehicles," Alley says. "The mayor refers to it as a process reengineering effort."
Unscheduled maintenance and work orders, fuel management information, budgets, road calls, and more are managed in this way in a best practices approach. The combined organization that manages all department fleet vehicles has adopted an internal service fund management process.
"It is a major step for the city to go away from the general fund concept to paying into a fund and having that money fenced so after the life cycle money would be available as needed," Alley says.