Red Government Fleet with star logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Palm Beach County Expects to Save $300K Annually by Outsourcing Parts

WEST PALM BEACH, FL – The Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners approved a vehicle and equipment parts management supply agreement with Genuine Parts Company (NAPA) for an estimated annual cost of $2.25 million.

by Staff
September 26, 2012
2 min to read


WEST PALM BEACH, FL – The Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners approved a vehicle and equipment parts management supply agreement with Genuine Parts Company (NAPA) for the County’s Fleet Management Division for an estimated annual cost of $2.25 million. The County expects to save between $300,000 and $500,000 annually as compared to the previous process, according to Douglas Weichman, CAFM, director of the Fleet Management Division.

An agenda summary from the Board of County Commissioners stated that the County will not only eliminate responsibility for excess inventory and parts obsolescence, but also increase its work order fill rate from the current 66% to a contractually defined performance of 80% after the first six months. The fleet will track technician productivity, vehicle downtime, and percent of scheduled vs. non-scheduled repairs before and after the implementation of the NAPA contract.

NAPA and County staff will determine parts inventory and identify and dispose of obsolete or unusable parts. NAPA will purchase all usable parts. NAPA’s computer system will interface with the Fleet’s fleet management information system (FMIS) to offer seamless data processing.

Four filled parts specialists positions were eliminated, and all four employees have obtained employment, one with NAPA, Weichman said.

Due to concerns about local business contracts, the agreement contains “local preference language” and NAPA is required to purchase parts from existing competitively bid contracts held by local vendors “where the cost of the part is not more than 5% greater than the equivalent NAPA product.” The County expects the agreement to negatively impact less than 12% of the County’s total parts purchased.

The County will pay NAPA a 10% markup for parts costs, as well as operating costs. At the time the agenda was written, the County expected NAPA to continue the start-up phase until the end of September and be fully set up and provide full services by Oct. 1. The contract will continue until Feb. 23, 2015, and will automatically renew for one additional year unless either party chooses to terminate the contract.

Fleet Management was tasked with coming up with ways to increase effectiveness and efficiency while reducing the operating budget, and Fleet decided outsourcing parts would accomplish these goals. According to the agenda, in the past 20 years, Fleet has outsourced transmission work, body work, towing, glass windshield replacement, fuel tank cleaning, fuel system repairs, vehicle washing/detailing, alignments on medium- and heavy-duty trucks, OEM repairs, and repairs to repair shop equipment in order to increase fleet efficiency.

By Thi Dao

More Maintenance

tech-corner-diagnostics
Maintenanceby Mike ClearyFebruary 4, 2026

Tech Corner: Strategies for Diagnostic Success

It takes years to become a great diagnostic technician. Here's what separates the techs who guess from the techs who know.

Read More →
SponsoredFebruary 1, 2026

Why One Car Wash Wasn’t Enough For This Fleet

Limited wash locations can increase travel time, fuel costs, and admin work for fleets. Here’s how one government fleet expanded access and simplified operations.

Read More →
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

Basic Tracking vs Next Generation Fleet Technology

Fleet software is getting more sophisticated and effective than ever, tying big data models together to transform maintenance, safety, and the value of your existing tech stack. Fleet technology upgrades are undoubtedly an investment, but updated technology can offer a much higher return. Read how upgrading your fleet technology can increase the return on your investment.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredJanuary 14, 2026

It’s here: The 2026 Fleet Technology Trends Report

What does AI mean for fleets? Get the answer — and learn other top tech trends.

Read More →
MaintenanceDecember 19, 2025

Keeping Snow and Ice Removal Equipment at the Ready

The best time to prepare winter equipment is before you’ll need it. Here are pre-season tips to keep your equipment on the road and out of the shop.

Read More →
SponsoredDecember 11, 2025

Case Study: How the City of Sugar Land Digitized Its 550-Vehicle Fleet, Saving 100+ Labor Hours Weekly and $1.5M in Budget Gains

See how the City of Sugar Land modernized its 550-vehicle fleet, reclaimed 100+ labor hours weekly, and unlocked $1.5M in budget impact — all with FASTER Asset Solutions.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredDecember 5, 2025

The Road to Smarter Electric Van Transitions: A practical roadmap for integrating electric vans into your fleet

Electric vans are becoming a strategic tool, not just a sustainability move. Get a roadmap that breaks down costs, charging planning, upfit compatibility, and what fleets should evaluate before making the switch.

Read More →
Maintenanceby Staff WriterSeptember 15, 2025

7 Design Principles of Highly Effective Garages

Learn how to create a place where employees feel prepared to do their jobs safely.

Read More →
Maintenanceby News/Media ReleaseSeptember 10, 2025

Amerit Acquires Derotic Emergency Equipment

The acquisition will be integrated with Vector Fleet Management, expanding its reach in the government, emergency, and specialty vehicle sector.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
MaintenanceJuly 25, 2025

The Coffee, the Cell Phone, the Cigarette: Managing Shop Distractions

Fleet managers must eliminate distractions and disruptions in order to increase workplace efficiency, while being aware that employees have their personal lives to attend to as well.

Read More →