This year in government fleet was less about shiny new ideas and more about what held up under pressure. When dollars were harder to stretch, orders moved more slowly than anyone wanted, and staffing gaps showed up in the day-to-day, fleets still had to deliver for the people counting on them.
The work stayed grounded in the same mission: keep vehicles running, keep them available, and keep the public served.
What stood out in our coverage was how often the wins came from steady, practical choices rather than headline moments. Teams got sharper about what they asked for and how they asked for it.
They looked closely at how work moved through the shop and where it got stuck. And when they brought data into the conversation, it was to support decisions and build trust, not to chase dashboards. So what stories showcased these themes? Check them out below
Career Progression, Historical Modeling, Among Factors In Employee Pay Budgeting
Fleet departments are still addressing post-pandemic technician shortages through career progression plans and partnerships with local technical schools to attract and retain skilled workers.
What’s Driving the Next Chapter of Public Fleet Operations
From balancing legacy vehicles with electrification goals to turning underused data into real outcomes, how public fleets can move forward strategically, even when resources are limited and the path isn’t clear.
Aging Vehicles Bring Increased Focus on Budgets, Technology
In response to rising vehicle costs and aging fleets, many organizations are turning to proactive refurbishment and data-driven maintenance strategies to extend vehicle lifecycles, reduce downtime, and optimize budget management.
14 Metrics Government Fleets Should Track
The metrics government fleets should track to get a full understanding of their fleet operation.
5 Steps for Staff Development
A well-defined staff development plan can boost employee productivity and allow fleet managers to plan for the retirements of seasoned employees and even to train their own replacements.
Building Stronger Fleets Starts at the Top: Why Leadership Retention is Critical for Public Sector Success
The conversation around workforce challenges in fleet management often centers on technician and driver shortages, but what about leadership retention?












