TALLAHASSEE — Buses, vans and trucks emblazoned with the Hope Florida logo serve as backdrops to press conferences touting the welfare alternative program championed by First Lady Casey DeSantis.
They also show up in communities hit by natural disasters wherever news cameras are rolling, with food, water and other supplies.
And they are visible in the parking lot of the Florida Department of Children and Families’ state headquarters in Tallahassee.
But they cannot be found in the database, called FleetWave, that is supposed to track all of the estimated 27,000 state-owned vehicles. And state officials either can’t or won’t explain why.
“While no vehicles are assigned to Hope Florida in FleetWave, Hope Florida vehicles play a critical role in assisting Floridians and connecting them with resources, particularly during disaster response and recovery,” said Dan Barrow, a spokesman for the Florida Department of Management Services, which is responsible for the state’s vehicle fleet.
Barrow conceded that the department couldn’t find Hope Florida vehicles in its database even when provided with photos of two of them, each with a yellow Florida Department of Transportation license plate. He would not say whether they might be registered with a different state agency.
DCF, which oversees Hope Florida, also gave no explanation for why the Hope Florida vehicles could not be found in the database.
The phantom vehicles highlight two problems: The ongoing management issues at Hope Florida, which faced a legislative probe in the spring and now is the subject of a grand jury investigation, and Florida’s continuing difficulties tracking its immense motor fleet.
“This is deeply troubling and appears to be yet another example of the lack of transparency and accountability surrounding the Hope Florida initiative,” said Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis, D-Ocoee, in a text message. “Floridians deserve clear answers about how taxpayer-funded resources are being managed, monitored and deployed.”
The inability to find the vehicles in FleetWave means management services still cannot track all the state’s vehicles or Hope Florida may not be doing the work it claims, Bracy Davis said, since there is s no public record of how those vehicles are being used.
“Either scenario is embarrassing and completely unacceptable,” she added.
The Hope Florida grand jury, appointed by Leon County State Attorney Jack Campbell in April, is likely focusing on a range of financial crimes related to the transfer of $10 million from a state Medicaid settlement to the Hope Florida Foundation, which then sent it to two nonprofits fighting the effort to legalize marijuana. Those nonprofits, in turn, sent it to a political action committee set up to defeat Amendment 3, which would have legalized the drug.
Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola, who led the legislative probe, accused Attorney General James Uthmeier of orchestrating the diversion of those funds to the political committee while he was chief of staff for Gov. Ron DeSantis. Andrade said those funds should have gone back into the state’s Medicaid program.
Uthmeier has denied wrongdoing.
The legislative probe also raised numerous questions about Hope Florida’s finances. The charitable foundation formed to support Hope Florida failed to disclose its budget and expenditures, file its tax return on time, or subject itself to a mandatory state audit, which are all required by law.
The financial information the foundation finally released, after threat of legal action, does not show any records of vehicles being donated to or purchased by Hope Florida.

The management department has had problems keeping track of the state’s immense number of vehicles, as lawmakers learned in the spring. An audit report presented to a legislative oversight committee in March noted that the state’s new vehicle tracking system couldn’t account for about 2,300 vehicles, valued at $57 million, that were listed in the state’s overall database.
The vehicles were not lost or stolen, but auditors could not find them listed in the new system, they said.
The audit also found “numerous unmatched, inconsistent, missing, or incomplete records,” including 1,535 inaccurate delivery dates and 1,695 missing delivery dates.
The findings upset lawmakers who noted the department had gone through three different IT systems to try to track the cars and trucks but was still failing. One lawmaker complained he couldn’t even get a straight answer on how many total vehicles Florida owned.
In October, Tom Berger, deputy secretary for DMS, told members of the Senate Committee on Governmental Oversight and Accountability that those vehicles now are all accounted for and that his agency had completed almost all of the recommendations made by the Auditor General to improve oversight.
Bracy Davis, a member of the government oversight committee, said Berger’s statement that all vehicles are accounted for doesn’t align with the current status of the Hope Florida vehicles.
“Floridians deserve an honest explanation for these inconsistencies and immediate corrective action to ensure proper oversight of taxpayer-funded property,” she said.