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Posts Tagged ‘car repair’

Photo: Andrew Woolfolk/Louisa County Public Schools.
Students from Louisa County High School’s automotive technology program during a car presentation in February 2025.

As those of you who volunteer already know, giving makes you feel good. In Mineral, Virginia, there are teenagers who are learning how great it can feel when something they are learning in school enables them to give hope to people in need.

Sydney Page reports at the Washington Post, “Jessica Rader knew she was getting a car. Still, when the keys to a 2007 gold Prius were handed to her, she wept.

“ ‘It’s not just about the car,’ said Rader, 40. ‘It’s about community.’

“Students at Louisa County High School in Mineral, Virginia, spent several months repairing and refurbishing the car before they presented it to Rader, a single mother of three children.

“ ‘Kids who never met me cared about me enough to put hard work into a vehicle to make sure myself and my kids were safe,’ Rader said about the Prius she received in 2023. ‘I got to meet all of them; it was breathtaking.’

“For the past eight years, students enrolled in the school’s automotive technology program have been reviving timeworn vehicles and giving them to single mothers for free. They work on about five cars per year. …

“The giveaway program is done in partnership with Giving Words, a local nonprofit that supports single mothers, mainly through car repairs and donations.

” ‘A broken-down car means she can lose her job, miss her appointments,’ said Eddie Brown, who founded Giving Words with his wife in 2018. ‘They’re relying on Ubers, buses and family, and some of those can be unreliable.’

“Brown and his wife were both single parents before they met. ‘The idea came from our own experience being single parents and struggling with transportation issues,’ Brown said. Brown taught himself how to do simple car repairs and soon began fixing other people’s cars in his driveway. …

“Brown said he and his wife wanted to focus on helping single mothers because around 80 percent or more of single parents in the U.S. are mothers. They formed partnerships with local repair shops, as well as Louisa County High School and Charlottesville Area Technical Education Center, to be able to do more repairs and help more women. The cars are donated by individuals or automotive businesses.

“Since its inception, Giving Words has given more than 60 cars to single mothers in need of a vehicle. High school students have worked on about half of those cars, and the rest have been refurbished by repair shops. …

“About 20 students work on each car, handling such tasks as brake and tire repairs to heating and cooling systems, oil and fluid changes, and battery testing.

” ‘They get a real shop experience,’ [Shane Robertson, an automotive teacher at the school] said. ‘You’ve got real life intersecting with education.’ …

” ‘The whole class is very rewarding,’ said Holden Pekary, 16, who is in his second year of the automotive program. … Before winter break last month, he and his classmates presented a repaired vehicle to a woman with a baby.

” ‘We raised the garage doors, and we all clapped for her,’ he said. ‘It was nice. I put the license plate on the car for her, and she had a little baby in her arms.’ …

” ‘It gave me a different perspective on adolescents,’ Rader said. ‘It was nothing in return for them.’ …

“Rader had long struggled with drug addiction, she said, and after becoming sober in March 2022, she lived in a transitional home, where she was told about Giving Words.

“ ‘It wasn’t even three months later, and they gave me a car,’ Rader said. ‘Because I had that vehicle, I was able to go from a part-time job to a full-time job; I was able to start school.’ …

“Giving Words also gave her free oil changes, as well as diapers and clothing for her sons. She said having a vehicle changed her life.”

More at the Post, here. See also a charity I like called Second Chance Cars, a “Massachusetts-based nonprofit that provides affordable used cars to working people in need,” here.

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The world needs more thinkers who are as creative and bold as Patrice Banks of Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. She combined two very different skill sets into one business and made it work.

Bobby Allyn reports at radio WHYY NewsWorks, “Wearing a backwards red ball cap, skinny jeans and high-heel boots, Patrice Banks is doing her thing at the Girls Auto Clinic in Upper Darby.

” ‘That vroom, vroom noise you hear at a shop is called an impact gun,’ said Banks as she worked on a small blue coupe on a car lift in her garage. ‘It’s connected to compressed air, and so what that does is it removes bolts and nuts and stuff.’

“Spreading the mechanical gospel is in Banks’ blood. Her female-focused auto-shop has just opened up with the goal of empowering women to pop their hoods and get under their cars. It’s Banks’ brainchild, and she hopes the business is the start of a movement.

“Banks quit her day job as a materials engineer at DuPont to become an auto mechanic. … She was sick of being taken advantage of at local repair shops, and wanted to do something about it.

” ‘I felt like an auto-airhead. I hated all my experiences going in for an oil change, being upsold all the time for an air filter,’ she said. ‘Any time a dashboard light came on, I panicked.’

“Girls Auto Clinic is a two-in-one business: an auto repair shop and salon. While you get your car fixed by Banks and her other female mechanics, you can also get a mani, pedi or a blowout.

” ‘That’s what I wanted it to be like, a clubhouse for women, where you can just come and hang out and be around some other dope chicks,’ she explained. …

“Banks wants to take her Girls Auto Clinic concept nationwide. And she says some of her mechanics could be the ones opening up new locations.” More here.

Because combining two ideas appeals to me even more than teaching women to fix cars, I hope the new shops will be as creative. Just think of all the things that could be offered women while other women are repairing their cars: classes, baby playgroups, libraries, small business consultations — the sky’s the limit.

(Grateful to Scott for posting the Patrice Banks story on Facebook.)

Photo: Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
The Girls Auto Clinic Repair Center
Patrice Banks stands on the roof of the Girls Auto Clinic and Clutch Beauty Bar. She plans to build a roof deck for customers to enjoy.

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