STORIES FROM OUR FIRST FREE WHEELCHAIR REPAIR & CLEANING CLINIC
It was a bright, sunny Saturday morning when the SOS team popped up a tent in the VOCAL-KY parking lot and prepared for our first-ever wheelchair repair and cleaning clinic for unhoused members of the Louisville community. We had spread the word with help of several nonprofits who serve the homeless including VOCAL, Pushing Forward and Arthur Street, Salvation Army, but we weren't sure what to expect. These pop-up clinics are a new initiative supported by a Quality of Life grant from The Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation and the goal expressed in our grant proposal was to serve 12 to 20 members of the disability community who are experiencing homelessness at each of our proposed 8 clinics The team didn't have much time to wonder how the first clinic would go; our first client appeared before set-up was finished. Richard, a retired marine, had a motorized chair that had never been serviced and the wheels were sluggish and slowing him down.
While 2024 Health & Hero Award winner Chris Maddox took the wheels off the chair, Richard shared stories of his life on the road as the owner of a small fleet of car transport trucks. "I've been in every state," he said. His favorite? Washington, where he and friends fished and cooked out on one long haul road trip. Juanita, who came in with a rickety rollator shared her struggles on the street: "I was sitting and crying on the curb one time because my back just hurt and someone walked out of their apartment and threatened to call the police." She was beaming when one of our technicians gave her a new, sturdy rollator with a comfortable seat, remarking, "I'll always have a place to stop and rest." She can also now take the bus for a rare visit with her cousin.
It was like that for the full three hours around the tent-- people were sharing their stories while our team of technicians including Chris, Local Program Manager Brian Jointer, Dennis Loeser, Amy Verst and Jocelyn Warren (who brought the grant opportunity to SOS) and Kiera James from Pushing Forward refurbished or replaced mobility aids and restored their owners' independence and access to services. Adam, who rolled in with his little dog, Roxy, on his lap, was tearing up as he said, "No one has ever done this before. It's just nice to know that somebody cares. All we ever see is people who have stopped caring."
After the success of this first event, we can't wait to plan the next one in June. Stay tuned for details and our next location-- to be announced soon. "I want to go where the need is and where people can get to us," says Jointer who was deeply touched by the first clinic. "Being able to help people who have waited so long for repairs was beautiful. This is why we do the work we do."
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