We are excited to announce that our project, Keep the Wheels Rolling Wheelchair and Scooter Repair Fund, was chosen as one of the top ten finalists in the CDFI Challenge to receive a $10,000 donation!
Our Repair Fund is an extremely 
important and unique program benefiting low-income Californians with 
disabilities that reduces unnecessary waste by repairing and reusing 
valuable equipment. Most importantly, it gives individuals a chance to 
be independent, to live, learn, earn and remain active in their community.
 The Repair Fund was able to assist centers throughout California 
repair over 55 wheelchairs and scooters to get them into the hands of 
people that desperately needed them. People like Faustino and 
Maria.
Maria is a mother and co-founder of a Low-Income Self-Help Center and 
Community for Change in the Bay Area. She is described by her 
colleagues as having an indomitable spirit and truly epitomizing the 
heart and soul of their group. Many community members depend on her in 
many ways—she is the building maven, she shops and cooks for all of the 
Center’s events and does outreach, organizing and fundraising. She did 
all of this while living with terrible leg pain and she eventually used a
 scooter to help her get around the city. One day Maria was hit 
in a crosswalk and her scooter was completely demolished. Luckily, the 
Center for Independent Living (CIL) took advantage of our 
Repair Fund and was able to give Maria another scooter for free. Maria’s
 group wrote a note of thanks to the Repair Fund and CIL, stating: 
“We are all thankful for this gift of a scooter for Maria because it 
allows her to still get around. You have given her back her legs. It is 
so important that we all care for one another in this world. The work 
you do is very important.”
| Faustino from Riverside County with his power wheelchair | 
Faustino has Multiple Sclerosis and was losing his ability to walk on 
his own or to stay steady on two feet. He was trying to find a power 
wheelchair to assist him in completing numerous daily tasks that were 
increasingly becoming more difficult for him. Luckily, the Community 
Access Center (CAC) in Riverside County had just recently refurbished a 
power wheelchair using the Repair Fund grant that they were able to give
 to Faustino. He was grateful for the Repair Fund and CAC. With his 
disability, even walking a short distance made him feel tired. Now, with
 his reused wheelchair, he is not dependent on others to get out and be 
active in his community.
The need for the Repair Fund is acute. 
Every month the AT Network receives between 80-100 inquiries from 
Californians with disabilities searching for AT funding assistance. Without the Repair Fund, our partner 
organizations have no money to purchase parts needed to repair items 
that have been donated for reuse. California has an enormous unmet need for AT repair and reuse, 
particularly for durable medical equipment like wheelchairs and scooters
 that can cost $20,000 or more. Help us win $10,000 by voting for our project today and every day until August 11, 2013!
 

 
 
![[In a large parking lot, people use their bodies to spell out ADA. Most people appear to use wheelchairs.]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRRxfMcAtuZh0rGqdRM610W8r4ufs40qPdE9CEull4L2zDuzrNQ_O-NC6lds7G20BhWYSnxckX7nFhNYODsnScRfJ1yWn8yF9tCaH-6zphjyD-utIJkPANZHvHKSu2d0YNvcfSRvP-pA/s640/ada.jpg)


