Adams County Changes Policies Following Fleet Corruption Allegations
BRIGHTON, CO - Adams County, Colo., is adopting new policies and creating educational training sessions to prevent future problems. The County's former public works director allegedly provided county equipment, materials, and workers for contractor use.
BRIGHTON, CO - As Adams County, Colo.'s former Director of Public Works Leland Asay faces charges that he provided county equipment, materials, and workers to a contractor for use on contractor jobs, Government Fleet asked the county's current Public Works Director Besharah Najjar, P.E., what changes had been enacted to ensure that county equipment and vehicles are used only for authorized business.
In an e-mail response, Najjar wrote that the county is adopting new policies and creating educational training sessions to deal with the corruption allegations.
The County's Code of Ethics was amended in 2010, requiring staff to complete a computerized test every year to review ethical policies. According to Najjar, the education is an attempt to help employees know the difference between what official county business is and is not, in terms of using county vehicles. It helps confirm that employees understand what official county business looks like. "Most importantly, staff personnel learned that if they see violations to any county policies, they are encouraged to speak up without fear of retaliation," Najjar continued.
The revised policy also explicitly prohibits employees from using, requesting, or permitting use of county-owned equipment, services, materials, machinery, or property.
In addition, the county is working on refining its policies related to use of county equipment. Still in draft form, the policy states that equipment will not be used for personal use or while engaged in outside activity, that county decals are placed on equipment unless unmarked equipment is required, and that no employee can allow unauthorized persons to borrow, rent, or use county equipment.
These changes were enacted after the corruption investigation began in April 2008. Leland and other workers allegedly allowed county equipment and workers to be used for moving materials for the county's primary paving and resurfacing contractor even though the construction agreements stated the contractor would furnish all labor, machinery, equipment, materials, and supplies for the jobs, according to a county investigation.
Driver work schedules and interviews with drivers confirmed county vehicles were used to deliver asphalt to several of the contractor's jobs. Drivers also stated they did not know what the bid specified, but either thought the work would save the county money or just did as they were told by superiors.
In addition, a box paver was discovered to be missing for a year and came back damaged, needing parts and repairs. A fleet analyst looking to inventory equipment was told, "Don't worry about it."
While the case is ongoing, the county is working to improve its transparency and internal communication. "In terms of following the ethical code and policies, what I have emphasized, as a public works director, is that I have an open door policy and that there is no hierarchy for the staff to come and see me any time should they have a concern," Najjar wrote in an e-mail to GF. "In Public Works and at the monthly supervisors' and managers' meeting, the ethical policies and principles of good and transparent government are still being emphasized."
In addition to the fleet charges, county workers and contractor executives are alleged to have billed taxpayers for $1.8 million in work that was never done. The county employees are believed to have received personal benefits from the contractor, according to the Denver Post.
Read updated news about this case at the Denver Post.
By Thi Dao
More Equipment

New Powered Carry Barrel Lift Helps Crews Dump Heavy Barrels Into Trucks With Less Manual Lifting
The Carry Barrel Lift is a new truck-mounted attachment designed to help landscape and municipal crews lift and dump heavy 60-gallon barrels more efficiently while reducing manual strain.
Read More →
New Ranger RWL175 Universal Wheel Lift Delivers Faster, Safer Mounting on Most Wheel Balancers
Ranger’s new RWL175 Pneumatic Wheel Lift is designed to help technicians safely mount wheel assemblies up to 175 pounds while reducing strain and improving shop efficiency.
Read More →
Vanair Introduces EPEQ IM HVAC System
Vanair introduced its EPEQ IM HVAC idle management system, designed to reduce engine idling, lower maintenance costs, and extend vehicle life through factory HVAC integration and automated climate control.
Read More →
Panasonic Connect Launches the TOUGHBOOK 56
Panasonic introduces the TOUGHBOOK 56, a rugged, modular laptop designed for public safety and field operations, featuring AI-ready processing, expanded connectivity, and enhanced security.
Read More →
Sonim XP5plus 5G Available on AT&T and FirstNet
Sonim’s XP5plus 5G rugged device is now available on AT&T and FirstNet, combining push-to-talk capabilities, LMR interoperability, and 5G connectivity for public safety and enterprise users.
Read More →
New BendPak Wheel Spotting Dish Simplifies Lifting and Parking
BendPak added a wheel spotting dish kit as standard on its two-post lifts, designed to improve vehicle positioning accuracy and reduce setup time in service bays.
Read More →
Pico Technology Introduces NVH Diagnostic Probes and Kits
Pico Technology introduced new NVH diagnostic probes and kits designed to streamline noise and vibration testing, enabling multi-axis data capture in a single test while reducing setup time and configuration errors.
Read More →
Tenhold Debuts Next-Generation Vehicle Systems for Law Enforcement and Public Safety
Tenhold launches a new line of vehicle mounting systems for first responders, including a firearm lock designed for durability and in-field security, with deployment across more than 25 states.
Read More →
Pierce Manufacturing Updates & Resource Introduction
Pierce delivers its 1,000th Paccar MX-13-powered fire apparatus, a 107-foot aerial ladder truck built for the Broussard Fire Department with a 510-hp engine and integrated pump system.
Read More →
2027 Ram 2500 Emergency Response Vehicle Debuts as Pursuit-Capable Heavy-Duty Truck
Ram introduces a pursuit-capable 3/4-ton emergency response truck, with V-8 power, 400-amp electrical capacity, and performance validated in Michigan State Police testing.
Read More →

