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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: February
1, 2005
Shurden Authors Measure to Reform State Vehicle
Management; Save Millions for Oklahoma Taxpayers
A veteran State Senator has introduced legislation
to reform the way Oklahoma purchases, manages and disposes of state-owned
vehicles.
Citing a November 2004 report by the State Auditor and Inspector
which said the state could save more than $20 million on vehicle
costs over the next 10 years if authority over state-owned vehicles
was centralized, State Senate Frank
Shurden has introduced the “Fleet Management Reform Act.”
“Under the current system we don’t even know how many
cars the state owns,” said Shurden, D-Henryetta. “Centralizing
control of the state fleet will save millions that could be better
spent on education and health care.”
Shurden said Senate Bill 545 encompasses the recommendations made
by State Auditor and Inspector Jeff McMahan in his November audit
report.
It gives the state’s Fleet Manager in the Department of Central
Services greater authority over how many and what types of vehicles
are purchased, how money is spent on upkeep for those vehicles and
how the vehicles are disposed of once they are declared surplus
property, Shurden said.
DCS currently maintains a state motor pool but also authorizes 22
other agencies to operate their own fleet of vehicles. Under Senate
Bill 545, the Fleet Manager would determine whether a new vehicle
is needed and what type of vehicle should be purchased before any
agency is allowed to add to its fleet or replace a worn out vehicle.
“The audit found that some agencies were using SUVs where
less expensive vehicles would have served the same purpose and found
that some vehicles were regularly being washed and detailed at $50
or $100 a pop. There’s no justification for that,” Shurden
said.
He said another provision of the bill will help preserve the resale
value of vehicles by allowing them to be identified as state-owned
by using a bumper sticker rather than paint or a decal on the side
of the car.
Shurden’s legislation also requires written authorization
by the Fleet Manager before any employee in any agency can drive
a state-owned vehicle home.
Additionally, Senate Bill 545 requires that the Fleet Manager issue
an annual report on the number and use of state-owned vehicles and
deliver it to the Governor, Speaker of the House and President Pro
Tempore of the Senate.
Shurden explained that, if enacted, Senate Bill 545 will give the
Fleet Manager the authority to implement further recommendations
in the Auditor and Inspector’s report – things that
should be done but aren’t legislated in the bill.
For example, he said, the report found that the state could save
$2.4 million immediately by selling and not replacing 1,000 unnecessary
cars. It said another $2.3 million could be saved annually by replacing
other cars in the 11,365 fleet with cheaper models, for a total
savings of $20.7 million during the next seven years.
“That’s money that would be spent wiser making a better
tomorrow for our children,” Shurden said.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

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