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NAFA's Guide to Fleet Vehicle Policy Development
This is the current working draft of NAFA's new book on fleet policy development. All changes and additions must be made before March 1, 2007, when this forum will be closed and the draft will be sent to the editorial committee. Please log in to contribute or create a user name for yourself by clicking the link in the upper-right of this page.
Introduction to Fleet Vehicle Policy Development
• This guide will provide a unique insight and assist the user with a multidimensional understanding of vehicle policies, their development and caveats associated with situations that may not have been considered at the time of inception. While some of the questions posed may appear to be extreme in nature, they nonetheless illustrate real situations that have and will continue to occur in real world applications. It is vital that the fleet manager, whether reviewing existing policy or developing new ones, be cognizant of questions and consequences that need to be fully understood prior to implementation.
Overview of Fleet Policies & Procedures
• As policies may be specific to particular vehicles and applications, so too, may they be specific to the company or government agency that is responsible for the vehicle. Many times two different fleet managers will develop the same policy but they are expressed in completely different ways. This may be a result of the style of the writer and as much if not more so the desire to blend the essence of the message to mirror existing company or agency policy in structure and tenor. This guide will not provide instruction on how to write policies and procedures, but rather is will provide suggestions which will enable the fleet manager to construct clear and effective communication. When establishing a new policy or procedure the fleet manger may realize an advantage to concentrate first on the substance, expressing the message clearly, then to craft it into the profile of other communication that is in place with the Company. In this method the fleet manager concentrates on the substance first and then integrates the communication into a style consistent with other company or agency communication. After reviewing this guide, the fleet manager may realize that there may be significant opportunities to protect the safety and well being of the employee, the company and the equipment.