Posts Tagged ‘Vehicle Tracking’

GPS Tracking Systems Lead Police to Stolen Tow Trucks

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

towtruckReal-Time GPS Tracking

The night has always provided the criminal element a cloak of concealment, but not even the darkness would provide two local Florida men the protection they needed to commit grand theft auto. When two unidentified men broke into a Fort Lauderdale tow truck companies secure parking lot and stole two Ford F-450 tow trucks, the trucks owner, Jason Parrett, was not worried. Parrett had piece of mind because of a decision he made earlier in the year to outfit his small fleet of vehicles with GPS tracking technology, specifically, real-time vehicle tracking.

On an early Saturday morning one of Parrett’s employees notified him that the two trucks were not in their designated location. Parrett contacted his employees to verify that they were not in possession of the vehicles and once he had confirmation that the trucks were stolen he decided to access his vehicle tracking system’s data. Parrett used his wife’s Blackberry phone and accessed the vehicle tracking system to view the truck’s location. The vehicle tracking system data showed that one of the trucks was in Lauderdale Manors and the other truck was in a neighboring city. With the data from the vehicle tracking system, Parrett’s employees were able to accurately locate the exact position of the missing vehicles.

Real-Time Tracking Solution

Once the vehicle tracking system led Parrett’s employees to the location of the vehicle, they contacted local police to arrest the suspected thieves. When the police arrived at the scene, the vehicle tracking data was able to provide concrete evidence when the trucks were stolen and everywhere they went.  Parrett initially equipped his tow trucks with vehicle tracking systems to help in routing and documenting mileage for tax purposes. Theft recovery applications for the GPS tracking system were just an added feature. When asked about the crimes, Parrett stated that without GPS tracking technology and equipping his tow trucks with vehicle tracking systems the trucks would have never been recovered. The real-time vehicle tracking systems provided swift justice and recovery of Parrett’s assets.

Vehicle Tracking Helps Municipalities Large and Small

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

GPS vehicle tracking was originally developed by the U.S. Department of Defense for military purposes, but vehicle tracking has had a trickle-down benefit in governments of much smaller size. State government, townships, mid-size cities and even small villages with total population of maybe a thousand residents can reap real rewards by adding vehicle tracking systems to their municipal vehicles.

Vehicle tracking systems note the mileage, speed, direction and stops of a vehicle using GPS satellite signals. The information can be printed out in a vehicle tracking report or viewed over an animated or satellite map on a remote computer. These vehicle tracking reports can be viewed in real time, or recorded in memory for later viewing.

Used in a municipal setting, vehicle tracking devices will let supervisors know if workers are where they should be during their shifts.

Vehicle tracking solutions help municipalities in the following ways:

·         Cut excessive fuel consumption by reducing repeat trips, overlapping routes, speeding, and excessive idling.

·         Save payroll costs by eliminating personal errands on work time, excessive breaks, inaccurate logging of time.

·         Reduce insurance costs by proving safe driving records, and/or having a vehicle tracking system with theft recovery (real-time vehicle tracking).

·         Extend life expectancy of vehicles by keeping better routine maintenance schedules (oil changes, belt checks, tire rotation, etc.)

·         Run services more efficiently, for example snowplowing, street sweeping or police patrols.

·         Defend an employee or prove innocence with a vehicle tracking report, noting speed, location and time, to conflict with a complaint or criminal charge or moving violation.

·         Show evidence against an employee at a disciplinary hearing.

People may not treat someone else’s asset with as much care as their own. The scratch on the car, the ding in the truck bed is not so tragic when the vehicle belongs to someone else. A vehicle’s lifespan can be shortened as a result of reckless driving or negligence. Vehicle tracking can extend the life of a vehicle.

In a municipality, city property is not the ownership of an individual, or a business man or a corporation. City property belongs to the people and taxpayers. City employees and elected officials are obligated to be responsible and accountable with city funds and property.

In a vehicle tracking system, a geo-fencing feature could be activated exactly at the city’s boundary to ensure that municipal vehicles do not leave the jurisdiction they serve.

Employees can remotely clock in or out to the vehicle tracking system, using a cell phone or laptop.

The township of North Brunswick, New Jersey, (population of 38,000) is considering installing GPS tracking systems in municipal vehicles. The township has 150 vehicles and officials want to equip 50 vehicles with vehicle tracking in the first phase of the project.

Vehicle tracking systems are reasonably cost effective, but they can be pricey when used in a fleet arrangement. North Brunswick is considering a quote of $17,500 to set up the system and about $15,000 annually in service fees for real-time vehicle tracking.

Industry-wide, municipalities that install vehicle tracking systems usually experience a great Return on Investment (ROI). A Connecticut town about the same size as North Brunswick put in a real-time vehicle tracking system last year. The cost was $21,000 and annual fees are about $18,000. The first year of the vehicle tracking system, town officials noticed a $32,000 savings in labor costs, vehicle repair bills and paperwork.

One of the biggest challenges for municipalities is getting employees to support and cooperate with a vehicle tracking program. An individual will naturally resist a vehicle tracking program that captures and documents activities of their personal lives, such as where they worship, where they dine or drink or who they visit.

Some town officials who have witnessed great benefits from instituting vehicle tracking systems, recommend disabling vehicle tracking devices once employees clock out for the day. Another municipality launched an incentive program. Each employee got a $750 monthly bonus when he or she agreed to vehicle tracking and consistently completed assignments on time. As an example: City trash pickup improved over a period of six months from 50 percent on-time to 95 percent on-time.

Vehicle Tracking For Vacation

Monday, August 17th, 2009

beachVehicle tracking systems have been used by the general public for 10 to 15 years now, proven efficient and effective when vehicle tracking systems are placed in a car or truck to find out where the driver is, or where he has been.

But what about using vehicle tracking technology to document a vacation?

A person returns from holiday and within days, barely remembers where he was on what day, with or without digital images chronicling the event. Vehicle tracking devices have the amazing capability of recording time, date, destinations, speed and distance. With software provided with these GPS vehicle tracking systems, travels can be seen on a map from anywhere in the world. With vehicle tracking, trips can be recorded, stored and reviewed in great detail again and again for posterity.

A Dayton, Ohio couple who wanted to make their 25th anniversary a once-in-a-lifetime experience took GPS tracking technology along with them last year on safari to Kenya, Africa. The wife wrote a daily travel journal, the husband took pictures and kept the batteries fresh in his passive vehicle tracking device, kept inside a back pack. By collaboration this husband-wife team converted their memorable journey into a coffee table book, handed out to friends and relatives, that none will soon forget.

GPS tracking systems use satellite technology developed by the U.S. Department of Defense. GPS tracking receivers capture satellite signals and calculate location accurately, within a few feet. Vehicle tracking devices today are technologically advanced and have far exceeded their initial applications: to “catch” inefficiencies in fleet tracking, illegal or unsafe driving of new teen drivers, to recover a stolen vehicle or other asset, track an unfaithful spouse, or keep tabs on the elderly with dementia.

Vehicle tracking systems today are affordable for most households, easy to use and can fit almost anywhere.

A 19-year-old high school graduate from Great Britain recently took a months-long backpack trip through Australia. He carried a real-time (or active) palm-sized vehicle tracking device in his backpack. Mom “watched” where her son was on her computer, from the comfort of home. The mother said the GPS tracking device gave her peace of mind that her son was safe.

The teen said it was his idea to wear the GPS tracking device. He planned to use the vehicle tracking reports, along with a diary, to stir powerful memories of his summer of independence and adventure. A months-long trip might be hard to recollect, but the vehicle tracking device knew where he was and what he was doing at any point in the holiday.

Both mom and son said the GPS tracking solution eliminated almost-daily phone calls about the young traveler’s well-being.

Vehicle Tracking For Taxes

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Vehicle Tracking

taxesAs oil and gas prices continue to climb, car manufacturers are realizing that the best way to make a profit is to develop fuel-efficient smart cars that run cleaner, longer, and greener. At first glance this seems like a great thing for consumers and for car manufacturers, unfortunately the tax loving government does not see things in the same light. Many state governments have been drafting legislation to equip vehicle tracking and GPS tracking devices to motorist’s method of transportation for tax purposes. As cars become more efficient and less gas dependent, the tax money generated from gas will decline, resulting in less tax money for the government to “appropriately” allocate. The government’s solution would be to install a vehicle tracking system to every vehicle, calculate the miles driven, and tax each person according to the vehicle tracking system’s record of how many miles were driven.

Vehicle Tracking: Solution or Problem?

Vehicle tracking systems have been commonly used by business to monitor driver’s mileage and other important data. The information provided by a vehicle-tracking system supplies businesses the essential data to enhance efficiency. However, when a person is on the clock working there is an understanding about the enforcement of vehicle tracking or GPS tracking technology.  The vehicle tracking systems not only make paperwork and documentation easier for employees, but the GPS tracking systems can also help in routing and planning. Therefore, employees and employers have a positive and progressive feeling about the vehicle tracking technology.

Vehicle tracking technology being used on company time is much different than vehicle tracking technology being used on personal time, and it has a completely different condonation and begins to cross constitutional rights that every American is entitled. Coexisting with a vehicle tracking system or other GPS monitoring system while on the job most people feel is acceptable and sometimes beneficial. However, when a vehicle tracking or GPS tracking system is being used to monitor an individual’s car on personal time is where the gray area begins to evolve. At first glance, yes it appears that a vehicle tracking system would effectively monitor and tax those who use the roadways more than those who rarely frequent the roadways. Doesn’t it seem like an easy solution? Unfortunately, the vehicle tracking or GPS tracking system would not only be recording an individual’s mileage driven but the vehicle tracking system would also be recording other specifics such as location, date, time, addresses, stops, etc. The vehicle tracking system could record whether an individual was at a bar. The vehicle tracking system could record whether an individual was speeding. The vehicle tracking system could record what church or other organizations a person is affiliated with. This is where the potential problem is with a vehicle tracking system being on every individual’s form of transportation.

GPS Tracking Data Provides too much Information?

GPS tracking systems provide such qualitative data that some people might feel an invasion of privacy if their car or motorcycle had a vehicle tracking or GPS tracking system monitoring it. If the vehicle tracking system records detailed information other than just mileage then there is the potential that the government could access and store the highly sensitive information. What could the government do with the information recorded from the vehicle tracking system? Are vehicle tracking systems the solution to the tax problem? Is there a better solution?

GPS Tracking Technology Helps Locate Accident

Monday, August 10th, 2009

GPS Tracking

accidentTarrytown, NY- When Dian Schuler was driving herself and five children in her minivan back from a camping trip nobody could have envisioned the tragedy about to occur. Diane placed a phone call to her brother stating that she was feeling disoriented and not feeling well overall. Her brother suggested that she pull the car over and he would meet her to either navigate her home or personally drive her. The next event was one of tragic proportions. Diane was involved in a car accident as she was driving the wrong way on the highway that led to the death of 7 people in total. Authorities were able to track the accident scene using GPS tracking system technology that was part of her cell-phone hardware.  Unfortunately, she did not have a vehicle tracking or GPS tracker installed to the vehicle so her brother could view her location in real-time and see that she was clearly in danger.

Vehicle Tracking Systems & GPS Tracking

Vehicle tracking systems and GPS tracking technology as a whole has been growing at an elevated rate over the past 5 years. Many people have false beliefs about vehicle tracking technology, believing for example that any cell phone can be traced via GPS tracking technology under any circumstances.  Although a government agency or police department can get an approximation on a person’s location using cell phone vehicle tracking technology, it is impossible to trace the location if the cell phone does not have power and the ability to transmit. Thankfully, Diane’s phone did have some battery life left and the authorities were able to use GPS tracking technology to quickly and accurately find her location.

Tragedy

Authorities are still trying to piece together the events that led to the fatal accident. Toxicology reports are being run to ensure alcohol or drugs did not play any involvement in the accident. One thing is for sure, vehicle tracking technology helped authorities discover the accident scene swiftly, and GPS tracking will continued to be used as a tool for authorities to try and help save lives.