Attention Public Agency Fleets based in Butte, El Dorado, Placer, Sacramento, Solano, Yolo and Yuba Counties:
The Sacramento Clean Cities Coalition requests your input to the US Department of Energy's 2023 Annual Support Survey. New non-MEMA member Fleets that respond to the survey by April 1st, 2024 will receive a “free” 2024 Fleet Membership to Nor-Cal MEMA (a $275.00 value).
What MEMA Does For You
MEMA saves you time and money. Through MEMA and its membership, you'll learn how to run a more costeffective and CARB compliant fleet while saving money. You can make valuable contacts through networking with our 400+ Members face-to-face at bi-monthly meetings and seminars. MEMA also provides access to networking, publications, meetings, government representation, seminars, online information, and industry trade shows. We understand you can't always attend an event, so the MEMA online networking databases and forum will put you in touch with all your MEMA colleagues. MEMA also understands that education and training are necessary in this ever-changing industry and offers various training opportunities and an archive of free educational webinars. Tap into a dynamic career network that includes job postings and job wanted postings by joining MEMA today.
So, if your organization would be willing to simply export a spreadsheet (Excel or CVS format) of your fleet inventory that contains the VIN field it would be very helpful. Our only plan is to extract the vehicle weight and fuel-type data available in the VIN so that we can model the emission reductions occurring. We will not share the VIN numbers with anyone.
If your organization is unable to provide VIN data for all vehicles (for example, police vehicles), please consider stripping these from the data provided. Or, if your fleet data management system can produce custom queries, please consider exporting the fields noted in the attached spreadsheet.
By providing us with this data we can provide information to the US Department of Energy about the progress the Sacramento Region has made toward impacting energy used and emissions reduced in transportation. Cooperating fleets are also more likely to improve our region’s ability to attract a larger percentage of the billions of federal and state grant funds for vehicles, infrastructure and workforce training that are being made available.
Please return the data requested from the web link below to: [email protected] and thank you for your cooperation.
http://www.cleancitiessacramento.org/annual-report.html
Please subscribe to the Sacramento Clean Cities mailing list here: www.cleancitiessacramento.org and check out the back page to find out how engaging with Clean Cities can benefit your fleet!
The Sacramento Clean Cities Coalition requests your input to the US Department of Energy's 2023 Annual Support Survey. New non-MEMA member Fleets that respond to the survey by April 1st, 2024 will receive a “free” 2024 Fleet Membership to Nor-Cal MEMA (a $275.00 value).
What MEMA Does For You
MEMA saves you time and money. Through MEMA and its membership, you'll learn how to run a more costeffective and CARB compliant fleet while saving money. You can make valuable contacts through networking with our 400+ Members face-to-face at bi-monthly meetings and seminars. MEMA also provides access to networking, publications, meetings, government representation, seminars, online information, and industry trade shows. We understand you can't always attend an event, so the MEMA online networking databases and forum will put you in touch with all your MEMA colleagues. MEMA also understands that education and training are necessary in this ever-changing industry and offers various training opportunities and an archive of free educational webinars. Tap into a dynamic career network that includes job postings and job wanted postings by joining MEMA today.
So, if your organization would be willing to simply export a spreadsheet (Excel or CVS format) of your fleet inventory that contains the VIN field it would be very helpful. Our only plan is to extract the vehicle weight and fuel-type data available in the VIN so that we can model the emission reductions occurring. We will not share the VIN numbers with anyone.
If your organization is unable to provide VIN data for all vehicles (for example, police vehicles), please consider stripping these from the data provided. Or, if your fleet data management system can produce custom queries, please consider exporting the fields noted in the attached spreadsheet.
By providing us with this data we can provide information to the US Department of Energy about the progress the Sacramento Region has made toward impacting energy used and emissions reduced in transportation. Cooperating fleets are also more likely to improve our region’s ability to attract a larger percentage of the billions of federal and state grant funds for vehicles, infrastructure and workforce training that are being made available.
Please return the data requested from the web link below to: [email protected] and thank you for your cooperation.
http://www.cleancitiessacramento.org/annual-report.html
Please subscribe to the Sacramento Clean Cities mailing list here: www.cleancitiessacramento.org and check out the back page to find out how engaging with Clean Cities can benefit your fleet!
A collaborative network of more than 75 Clean Cities coalitions boosts the country’s economic vitality, energy security, and quality of life by advancing the deployment of affordable, efficient, and clean transportation fuels and technologies. Coalitions provide the technical expertise local decision makers and fleets need to understand and implement alternative and renewable fuels, electric vehicles, idle-reduction measures, fuel economy improvements, new mobility choices, and emerging transportation technologies.
As technology deployment partners with the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Vehicle Technologies Office (VTO), Clean Cities coalitions leverage expertise from federal agencies, national laboratories, and their fellow coalitions. VTO’s Technology Integration Program and DOE’s national laboratories offer technical assistance, information resources, online training, and an array of data and analysis tools. Coalitions bring this expertise directly to the communities they serve and develop community-driven solutions based on a unique understanding of local needs, opportunities, and markets. They build networks of community stakeholders and provide hands-on problem-solving support to fleets.
Thriving on a culture of collaborative change, coalitions harness 30 years of expertise to continue moving our transportation systems into the future.
DOE designated the first Clean Cities coalition in 1993 in response to the Energy Policy Act of 1992, and the network has evolved and expanded ever since. The network has built bipartisan support, made deep connections within the transportation industry, and created active partnerships with 20,000 public and private stakeholders. Coalitions hold the respect and trust of both fleets and industry through their ability to provide objective data and real-world lessons learned, smoothing the transition to alternative fuels and advanced vehicle technologies.
Coalitions are instrumental in bringing clean transportation technologies to communities large and small, one project, one local decision, and one fleet at a time. Together, they create a compounding impact nationwide that advances U.S. energy independence and reduces vehicle emissions while supporting regional economic development and job growth.
As technology deployment partners with the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Vehicle Technologies Office (VTO), Clean Cities coalitions leverage expertise from federal agencies, national laboratories, and their fellow coalitions. VTO’s Technology Integration Program and DOE’s national laboratories offer technical assistance, information resources, online training, and an array of data and analysis tools. Coalitions bring this expertise directly to the communities they serve and develop community-driven solutions based on a unique understanding of local needs, opportunities, and markets. They build networks of community stakeholders and provide hands-on problem-solving support to fleets.
Thriving on a culture of collaborative change, coalitions harness 30 years of expertise to continue moving our transportation systems into the future.
DOE designated the first Clean Cities coalition in 1993 in response to the Energy Policy Act of 1992, and the network has evolved and expanded ever since. The network has built bipartisan support, made deep connections within the transportation industry, and created active partnerships with 20,000 public and private stakeholders. Coalitions hold the respect and trust of both fleets and industry through their ability to provide objective data and real-world lessons learned, smoothing the transition to alternative fuels and advanced vehicle technologies.
Coalitions are instrumental in bringing clean transportation technologies to communities large and small, one project, one local decision, and one fleet at a time. Together, they create a compounding impact nationwide that advances U.S. energy independence and reduces vehicle emissions while supporting regional economic development and job growth.