Heavy flooding from Tropical Story Harvey has disrupted commercial fleets in the Houston area, as corporations and fleet management companies have begun reaching out to their employees and fleet drivers to ensure their safety and assess damage to fleet vehicles.
The storm has closed major roads, frontage lanes, and exits, which has forced fleet managers to curtail or halt operations.
Commercial vehicle activity has fallen by 88% in the Houston area among fleets using Geotab telematics, according to data released by the telematics provider, which created a time-lapse map showing the sharp drop-off from Aug. 21 to Aug. 28. There are Geotab devices in approximately 52,000 vehicles in Texas, including 8,000 vehicles in the Houston area.
"It's crucial that we do everything possible to help our customers protect the lives and safety of their drivers in the affected areas as we continue to face the outcome of this storm," said Neil Cawse, Geotab's CEO. "Geotab is working closely with our partners to provide relevant data so that commercial and emergency fleets are able to travel safely and respond urgently to the victims of Hurricane Harvey."
Flooding has struck more than 500 roadways in southeast Texas, according to the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT).
Several of the large fleets based in Houston closed their operations ahead of the storm, said Mary Sticha, Element Fleet Management's senior vice president of operational excellence.
"We have reached out to both Element employees and customers in the Houston area," Sticha said. "The primary interest, appropriately, is the safety of those on the ground. Most of our customers, as well as Element, closed their operations ahead of the storm. Given this and the communication challenges, many do not know the impact to their fleets yet. Obviously many vehicles are impacted based on the national news. It will be many more days before people know for sure."
Marvin McClain took a flight into the Austin–Bergstrom International Airport on the evening of Aug. 29 because both Houston airports were closed to assess the American Red Cross fleet.
"I don't know if any of our units were damaged and will do an assessment when I get down there to determine that," said McClain, director of enterprise fleet for the organization. "So far, it seems most were moved out of harm's way, but we have a couple of units that stopped pinging two days ago whose status we need to verify."
McClain will discuss his response to the disaster at the Automotive Fleet Leasing Association's annual conference that begins Sept. 17 in Las Vegas. AFLA leaders hope to raise funds to support McClain's efforts, said Bill Elliott, AFLA's executive director.
Brenda Davis, strategic sourcing category manager for Baker Hughes, has also reached out to employees and begun assessing possible damage.
"Our first concern is our employees and their families and ensuing their safety," Davis said. "As for vehicles, we are currently in assessment mode. Fortunately, we have a limited number of vehicles actually working out of the Houston area, which was the most heavily impacted by flooding, but for the vehicles that are impacted, we will be assessing the damage, determining repair versus replace and either deploying excess vehicles, rental vehicles or disposing and replacing with new vehicles. We will be working closely with our supplier partners, our leasing company, dealers, up-fitters and service facilities to ensure the fastest turn-around time possible."
Before the storm hit, FedEx reportedly moved some of its Houston-based vehicles to higher ground.
UPS, FedEx, the U.S. Postal Service and Amazon have all had to shut down local facilities and service to and from the Houston area until the Harvey clears out later this week, according to a USA Today report. As of today, more than 500 zip codes in Texas are not able to receive deliveries from UPS or FedEx and both companies have set up service alert pages showing which areas are without service. UPS posts service alerts here and FedEx posts theirs here.
FedEx posted a statement on its website saying that the company's "top priority is the safety and well-being of our team members. Although contingency plans are in place, some service delays and disruptions can be anticipated for inbound and outbound shipments in Texas and Louisiana."
Fleet vehicles damaged during flooding must usually be taken out of service and shipped to a salvage auction, depending on the extend of the damage. Cox Automotive, which owns Manheim auto auctions, expects that about 500,000 vehicles will be scrapped as a result of the storm, reports CNBC.
Editor's note: Steve Martinez, web editor of TruckingInfo.com, contributed to this story.
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