Charged Fleet Logo

Cusp of an EV Evolution: Readers Sound Off

Automotive Fleet readers weigh on a number of pressing fleet topics, such as fleet electrification, managing technology, fixed vs. floating rate funding, "smart" tires, and the differences between commercial and utility fleet management.

Mike Antich
Mike AntichFormer Editor and Associate Publisher
Read Mike's Posts
March 31, 2021
Cusp of an EV Evolution: Readers Sound Off

 

[EMPTY CREDIT]

5 min to read


Cusp of an EV Evolution

Sauter

I appreciate all your hard work in the fleet industry. This year I have started spending a lot of time on the emerging electric truck market. We are on the cusp of an EV evolution and I am excited about it. I have worked with fleet vehicles all my life and here to assist as much as I can with transition from ICE (internal combustion engines) vehicles to EVs.

I look forward to seeing Automotive Fleet magazine highlighting the emerging electric truck options (i.e., Endurance from Lordstown Motors) for fleet in the future.

Ad Loading...

Rick Sauter, VP - Operations for  Allstate Leasing in Towson, Md.


Managing New Tech  

Many fleets both private and public are needing to devise plans for the adaptation of EVs and charging stations, Carshare programs and/or telematics. Each has its own challenges; however, this falls back on the fleet manager to becoming educated and knowledgeable about each of these emerging technologies.  Layer on top of that which markets to target first, installation in the case for telematics, where incentive are actively available and what it takes to apply for and secure EV credits or charging infrastructure incentives, etc.

Stafford

Not only do they need to understand in great detail the updates these new technologies bring, but they also need to account for all the changes it will bring to all aspects of their organization. The fleet manager must become salespeople with the ability to advocate and sell to management these investments. Additionally, how these investments will lower cost, improve efficiencies, provide an ROI. Once these hurdles are made, they have to backstop the sell by providing confidence in the implementation of these upgrades. After which a fleet managers needs the ability to manage staff on the ongoing logistics and driver education required to complete the benefits these technologies are intended to improve.

Michael Stafford, Sales Director, Western Region for  Lordstown Motors in Lordstown, Ohio

Barron

[EMPTY CREDIT]

Informative and Concise

The weekly video updates on the state of the commercial fleet industry by Mike Antich are informative and concise. An easy way to stay current in this ever-changing environment.

Ad Loading...

Jeff Barron, Managing Director for Head of Leasing National Sales for The Bancorp in Crofton, Md.

Fixed vs. Floating Rates

As discussed in the State of the Fleet Industry video report on emerging upward pressures on fleet costs, the commodity prices are going up, which will also trigger inflation. In order to stop the inflation, the federal government will increase interest rates which are now almost zero .

Schreiber

This might control the inflation rate but fleets will pay more in financing their fleet purchases. This might be a good time to start and think of converting floating rates into fixed rates . This is just one more item in the cost basket that fleet managers will have to pay attention to.

Phil Schreiber, Fleet Consultant for Simsbury, Conn.

Baby Needs New Shoes

I read the news item that says Nokian believes that smart tires will become common in five years. Smart tires do not sound like they would be a viable investment, especially since I do not want my car being me when it wants “new shoes.” I do not need to be told about services three months out, and do not want my ‘hoopty’ making appointments for me.

Ad Loading...

Author wished to be Anonymous

(Automotive Fleet reply) --“Hoopty’ is a slang term for a decrepit car is one that is often old and damaged and is in a barely functional state.-- Editor


Utility Fleets Think Different

I read the Market Trends blog “Everything in Fleet Depreciates Except Fleet Manager Expertise” and I have much more to say on this subject. I started at a utility fleet as a car washer/janitor 37 years ago. Worked my up through all phases from floor to road mechanic.

I moved inside to a dispatcher/title clerk. In that capacity I had a thirst for fleet accounting. Utility fleet accounting is different than most fleet accounting practices. Utility fleet uses a mass depreciation system. Therefore, fleet vehicles do not have a specific time frame of depreciation. The asset could be 20 years old and still be on the depreciation schedule.

I finally worked through floor supervisor up to the interim manager. Our shop was a complete in-house operation contracting out less than 1% of repairs (window glass, some upfitting ) We even removed beds, booms, etc. rebuilt them and installed onto new chassis as well as total new installations. I had 37 years of hands-on fleet management. Unfortunately, utility fleets consider that a liability instead of an asset. Utility fleets have become organizations that the fleet manager position is just a placeholder for the accountants. Finance departments are the ones making the decisions. Most utility fleets have gotten away from “lifecycle compliance”  and acceptable “preventative maintenance practices.” As a retired fleet professional (very happy I might add) I just wanted to let you know that your article does portray some large fleet's thinking, but not the utility fleets.

Ad Loading...

Edward Laughlin

Chamuler

Lots of Great Information

I want to let you know that I watch your State of the Fleet Industry video series heavily nowadays.

There is lots of great information in there!

 Josh Chamuler, Director for Pivet Innovation Hub in Phoenix, Ariz.


Blog Creates More Questions

I wanted to comment to say you wrote a nice blog on the “Impact of Fleet Operations of the Work-from-Home Business Model.” After reading the blog, I have a lot more questions than answers.

Ad Loading...

Although it may seem counterintuitive at this point, the shedding of real estate and potentially reduction of traditional travel may afford a savings that a potential expanse of fleet may prove useful as possibly more intra-country activity becomes a focus. If such an evolution occurs in time it may paint a different picture where now there seems to be potential for some fleet to disappear.

As always, thank for always keeping hot topics on the forefront and providing great perspectives and observations.

Author Wish to be Anonymous

(Automotive Fleet reply) The pandemic has opened Pandora’s box on working from home – both good and bad. While it has yet to be determined whether this is long-term or short-term trend, it will impact fleets. -- Editor

Originally posted on Automotive Fleet

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Operations

PG&E PowerHouse demo home in San Ramon with wall-mounted EV chargers, batteries, and electric systems, showcasing all-electric home technologies and energy management solutions.
Chargingby News/Media ReleaseApril 23, 2026

All Electric Test House Could Ease Path To EV Usage

An experimental model home shows how residential charging could enable electric fleet operations by allowing drivers to take EVs home.

Read More →
Lucid electric vehicle equipped with rooftop sensors parked outside a modern building, representing expanded partnership with Uber for future robotaxi deployment.

Lucid Receives New Investments As It Expands Uber Robotaxi Venture

Lucid and Uber partner to provide at least 35,000 vehicles, backed by new investments totaling $750 million to support the deployment of autonomous fleets.

Read More →
Dan Hilson and Martin Romjue photos on the title page.
Chargingby Martin RomjueApril 14, 2026

Software Speeds Up EV Fleet Charging

Learn about a new level of energy management that helps fleets control costs while maintaining service reliability. [VIDEO]

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Two business leaders in blue suits shake hands in front of a U.S. flag and balloons, symbolizing AVILOO’s leadership transition and expansion in the North American EV market.

Brett Lippel Named CEO of AVILOO North America

AVILOO recently appointed Brett Lippel as CEO of its North American operations with the intent to drive nationwide adoption of advanced battery-testing tech.

Read More →
Person charging an electric vehicle at a public EV charging station, holding the charging connector next to a parked electric car outdoors.
Chargingby News/Media ReleaseApril 8, 2026

ChargePoint, South Coast AQMD Reach 90+ EV Chargers Across Southern California

ChargePoint deployed more than 90 EV charging ports, adding new Level 2 infrastructure and management tools to support public and employee access to charging in Southern California.

Read More →
Charged Fleet Off Peak logo thumbnail with symbolic lightning bolt.
Electric Vehiclesby Martin RomjueApril 3, 2026

OEMS Expose Overdue EV Truths

Recent announcements from two automakers underscore a significant shift in the electric vehicle market, driven by EV losses and changing strategies. [VIDEO}

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Map of the United States showing EV cost savings per mile by state, with darker shading indicating higher savings based on fuel and maintenance costs.

New Tool Helps Calculate EV Savings As Gas Prices Surge

A new online calculator from Coltura estimates how much drivers can save by switching to an EV, using real-time local fuel and electricity costs.

Read More →
Two blue large box mobile chargers parked along a row of black Tesla EV sedans in a parking lot.
ChargingApril 1, 2026

Why Off-Grid Charging is Becoming an Operational Choice, Not a Last Resort

Off-grid charging assets have proven to be much more than stopgaps. Fleets can use those tools to hedge against grid delays, capacity bottlenecks, and other uncertainties.

Read More →
Interior view of a Rivian vehicle showing steering wheel and digital display screen with vehicle interface, representing autonomous technology development.
Suppliersby News/Media ReleaseMarch 27, 2026

Uber, Rivian Aim To Deploy 50,000 Self-Driving Robotaxis

Rivian and Uber plan to put the first 10,000 autonomous R2 robotaxis into service starting in 2028 and expand to multiple cities as part of a broader push.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Graphic used with a report on electric and hybrid vehicle collision claims, highlighting industry trends in repair frequency, costs and parts usage as EV adoption grows.

EV Collision Claims Rise 14% In U.S. Despite Slower Sales

Mitchell’s latest EV Collision Insights report found repairable claims for electrified vehicles continued to rise in 2025, even as new BEV sales declined slightly in the U.S.

Read More →