This article is based on a recent episode of The Fleet Success Show podcast. Watch the full episode here:
You just got the call: your fleet department needs to trim $2 million from its budget. Maybe more. Your city is growing, demands are rising, and the pressure’s on.
You’re not alone.
Across North America, municipal fleet managers are being forced to stretch shrinking budgets without compromising service. Trash still has to be picked up. Police vehicles still need maintenance. Fire engines don’t wait for funding.
But here’s the truth no one tells you: this is your moment to lead.
Fleet managers often default to “defender mode:” protecting their technicians, budget, and operations from cuts. But your real power lies in becoming an advisor.
Your job isn’t to say “no.” It’s to say, “Here are your options, and here’s what each one costs.”
Don’t remove possibilities from the table. Instead, bring data-driven scenarios to the city manager, council, or board. Show them the impact, not just the price.
“You can be right, or you can be married.”
— Josh Turley, RTA CEO
If your fleet hasn’t explored debt financing for asset replacement, you’re missing a massive savings opportunity.
Instead of spending $10M in one year on replacements, you finance and spend $2M upfront, freeing up $8M in operational savings while increasing efficiency.
Old vehicles drain your budget.
When availability drops below 90%, spare ratios increase, rentals go up, and technician hours spike. The result? You're bleeding money across multiple departments, often without realizing it.
Fix: Conduct a fleet availability audit. Identify which vehicles are contributing to downtime and explore whether to:
Use EU analysis to determine how many technician hours your fleet actually requires based on the size, class, and usage of vehicles. You might be:
Similarly, ask: Why are we still assigning 1-ton trucks when a compact SUV would do? The right asset for the right job saves money on acquisition, fuel, and maintenance.
Some of your biggest expenses don’t live in your budget, they live in others:
Run an activity-based cost analysis to find where your time, labor, and dollars are hiding, and whether they belong elsewhere.
When you walk into that next city council meeting, don’t lead with cuts, lead with consequences.
Instead of “we need this tech,” say:
“Removing this tech means 11.3 hours/week of unperformed PMs, which will increase emergency repairs, impact route availability, and create resident complaints.”
Fleet management is a service business. Tie every dollar to outcomes that leadership and residents care about: safety, reliability, and responsiveness.
This is your Apollo 13 moment: you’re in a crisis, with limited tools, and a mission that still has to be accomplished.
With the right mindset, strategy, and support, you can emerge from this challenge stronger, leaner, and more respected than ever.
And remember, you’re not alone. RTA’sr consultants are here to help, whether you need a deep-dive analysis, a second opinion, or just someone to walk through the options with you.
Let’s build the fleet of the future, even in the face of cuts.