By Mike Antich
It is these procedures and regulations that determine the
types of fleet each of us operates and its characteristics. Think about it. By
creating policy such as to who is eligible for a company vehicle, you are, in effect,
determining the size of your fleet. In my discussions with fleet management
companies over the years, they tell me that the best managed fleets tend to be
those that adhere to a written fleet policy.
Fleet policy is crucial and it should be part of each
company’s business strategy. Every affected department should be involved in
the process of creating fleet policy. However, it is the fleet manager who
should manage the policy creation process.
Once a policy is established, it is your responsibility to
communicate these policies to your drivers. Each of your drivers should know
the rules governing the use of a company vehicle and what actions will be taken
for non-compliance. A common problem is that the fleet manager communicates
policy to the drivers’ managers, but the word doesn’t gets down to the
individual drivers. To avoid this problem, many companies teach policies and
procedures regarding company vehicles as part of the new employee orientation
and provide printed fleet policy manuals with each fleet vehicle.
The Danger of Policy Exceptions
When dealing with driver-related problems, the last thing you want to do is
create a new problem in the course of resolving one. The surest way to do so is
to make an exception to your company’s vehicle usage policy. It is extremely
important that the rules governing the withdrawal of a company vehicle
privilege be uniformly enforced for all employees.
You should not set precedent by allowing exceptions. If your
company becomes embroiled in litigation involving a company vehicle because of
a problem driver, these exceptions and prior policy precedents can be used
against you. The most carefully developed policy can be torn to shreds by a
precedent-setting exception, which could be used to accuse you and your company
of negligent entrustment and/or negligent retention.
No policy can anticipate all possibilities, but consistency
in dealing with all the drivers assigned company vehicles at different
locations is essential. To accomplish this, it is crucial for senior management
to give the fleet manager the appropriate authority to address non-compliance
by drivers and those departments’ assigned vehicles. This will go a long way
toward reducing and sometimes eliminating driver compliance issues.
The fleet manager must have the authority and backing of
upper management to address a driver’s inability to operate and maintain an
assigned vehicle. This authority allows the fleet manager to address violations
of fleet policy without approval or direction from upper management. If
litigation occurs, the first thing an attorney is going to ask is to review
your company vehicle policy.
With this in mind, it is critical that a fleet manager makes
sure all drivers uniformly adhere to company fleet policy. There should be no
exceptions to your company vehicle policies. This simple rule will make your
job a lot easier and may save you from a lot of potential grief.
Let me know what you think.
mike.antich@bobit.com