Long Beach, Calif., Superintendent of Maintenance Retires
LONG BEACH, CA - After 30 years the City of Long Beach's Superintendent of Maintenance Vern Helbig is retiring. Helbig spent time specializing in police motorcycle repair and was an advocate for motorcycle safety.
by Staff
September 22, 2011
Vern Helbig
1 min to read
Vern Helbig
LONG BEACH, CA – The Superintendent of Maintenance Vern Helbig is retiring from this position after nearly 30 years with the City of Long Beach, Calif.
After working as an auto mechanic, Helbig started his career with the City as a Gas Department customer service representative. After three years in that department, he moved to the City’s fleet services department as an equipment mechanic. He moved up to the position of Equipment Mechanic II in 2001, and in 2004 received a promotion to Heavy Line Supervisor. Prior to his promotion to that position, and later to superintendent, Helbig specialized in police motorcycle repair.
Ad Loading...
When Government Fleet asked Helbig’s co-worker Frank McIlvenny, supervisor of stores and property for the City, about Helbig’s accomplishments, McIlvenny described his role as a motorcycle safety advocate.
“As a result of Vern's expertise in motorcycle repair, he became an advocate for motorcycle safety. This was demonstrated by addressing the City Council and providing education regarding motorcycle ABS systems and how these systems could save patrolmen lives, reduce and/or prevent injury and reduce possible litigation costs. Vern's council address was a significant additional determining factor for the City to purchase ABS-equipped motorcycles for the fleet.”
In total, Helbig spent 32 years working in the fleet industry.
Government fleets carry extra weight, and routes, schedules, and public trust depend on reliability. A systematic spring checklist keeps vehicles in service when agencies need them most.
Safety and productivity go hand-in-hand on today’s vocational jobsites. The Freightliner 114SD Plus combines advanced driver-assist technologies with proven reliability to keep crews moving constantly from start to finish. Learn how safety by design can protect your team, reduce risk, and maximize uptime.
Fleetio launched an open beta of its AI-powered Service Advisor tool, designed to help fleet managers streamline repair approvals and reduce vehicle downtime.
Mike Cleary shares what government fleets need to know about today’s technician workforce, EV and hybrid service demands, recruiting skilled talent, and making training dollars go further.
Managing a state or local fleet comes with levels of accountability private companies don’t have. Read how modern fleet technology helps elevate visibility and safety to strengthen community trust.
Still managing your motor pool with spreadsheets and manual approvals? Loyola University replaced outdated processes with automated fleet management, eliminating overtime and saving up to $50,000 annually. See how they did it.
Fleet managers are done with the debate—and focused on execution. Learn how to build a practical electrification strategy that aligns infrastructure, operations, and financing while keeping costs controlled and deployment scalable with support from Blink Charging. Discover how smart planning today positions fleets for long-term performance and ROI.