Thursday, September 27, 2012

disabled vets get hot wheels despite their wheelchairs – usa today article


disabled vets get hot wheels despite their wheelchairs – usa today article


Left a paraplegic by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan two years ago, retired Marine Jack Pierce vows not to let his disability leave him in life’s slow lane.
Pierce applies that attitude to pretty much everything, including. right now, his summer vacation. Pierce plans to drive his wife and two-year-old son a tour of national parks and monuments in their 2012 Ford F-350 Super Duty pickup, towing a fifth-wheel RV trailer specially outfitted for his needs. And tethered to the trailer will be a three-wheel motorcycle that lets him drive in his wheelchair.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
They are using innovation and design savvy to create vehicles for a new group of customers, veterans, mostly men in their 20s and 30s, determined to live life as much as they can without concession to their disability — including in their choice of vehicles.
“Independence is the key, being able to function as normally as possible,” says Dave Hubbard, CEO of the National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association trade group.
Younger buyers “are looking for alternatives,” he says, driven in large part by a desire not to be seen as disabled. They want vehicles that look like those typically driven by others their age, without obvious signs of modification to handle disabilities.
To meet those demands, a Phoenix-based minivan outfitter, for instance, has dressed up a ramp-equipped Honda Odyssey with smoked glass, custom wheels and a body kit to make it look hipper, more urban and more like a sport utility vehicle.
The disabled transportation industry also is looking beyond vans and minivans for new ways to modify any vet’s vehicle of choice with equipment needed for wheelchairs.
“The industry has been slow to respond, to tell you the truth,” says Bill Lawson of Woodward, Okla., president of Paralyzed Veterans of America. “This stuff should have been done years ago.”
Vets who like pickup trucks now can get a system with a lift chair to get them into the cab and a crane that stows their wheelchair in truck’s bed. One company even modifies a pickup with a sliding driver door and lift that lets quadriplegics drive in their wheelchairs, rather than having to shift into a truck seat.
There even are modified motorcycles: 
A British inventor created a three-wheel BMW bike with a ramp and platform between rear wheels for riders in wheelchairs.
While aging Boomers and their parents are the largest market for the estimated 10,000 to 15,000 converted vehicles sold each year, veterans have become a sizable group of customers. For instance, Winamac, Ind.-based Braun, which makes special vans especially for handicapped persons and sells mobility equipment for people in wheelchairs, says about 25% of its business comes from disabled veterans.
The Veterans Administration gives disabled vets purchase allowance of $18,900 (raised last year from $11,000) for a vehicle and pays most of the costs involved in outfitting it to accommodate a disability, typically about another $15,000 to $25,000 for a paraplegic driver in a wheelchair, according to conversion companies. 
Minivans still dominate market:The majority of conversions remain minivans — not sexy, but the most practical for creating wheelchair access. They offer space, low floors readily modified for ramps and load capacity for the extra up to 300-pound weight of a motorized wheelchair.
And they don’t have to look dowdy. VPG Autos, a Miami-based converter of vans for the disabled, says some buyers are customizing its MV-1 van for a more macho look. VPG Chairman Fred Drasner says that what a focus group of younger wheelchair users liked about the vehicle is that “it looked like an SUV.”
Phoenix-based Vantage Mobility International has gone a step further to offer a Honda Odyssey minivan already customized with black paint and a more sinister look to see if it would appeal to younger customers.
VMI 25th Anniversary Limited Edition Honda Odyssey
After installing the ramp and other accessibility features, Vantage sent the van to Designer Auto Accessories in Mission Viejo, Calif. The $12,000 makeover that included 20-inch custom wheels, a blacked-out grille, darkened windows, two-toned inserts in the seats and other touches that would be “what younger guys would like,” says Gary Disney, owner of the customizer.
The black van is being displayed at trade shows, where it’s “creating quite a stir,” says Vantage CEO Doug Eaton. He plans to build 25. “I don’t think it’s going to create a tipping point for volume, but it’s going to bring people in the market.”
Sleek custom sheds van stigma:
One fan of the black van is Stephen Willoby, an Air Force bomb disposal specialist left quadriplegic by a 2007 shallow-water diving accident. “The sleek look of the Odyssey is very appealing,” says Willoby, 29, who lives near Phoenix. “There is not the stigma of the minivan.”
But as much as he wanted one, he recently chose one of Vantage’s Dodge Grand Caravan conversions. He needed its hydraulic power steering, rather than Honda’s electric, for a device that makes steering even easier. Still, the black Odyssey shows the company is “one the right track,” Willoby says.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
They are using innovation and design savvy to create vehicles for a new group of customers, veterans, mostly men in their 20s and 30s, determined to live life as much as they can without concession to their disability — including in their choice of vehicles.
Pierce plans to drive his wife and two-year-old son a tour of national parks and monuments in their 2012 Ford F-350 Super Duty pickup, towing a fifth-wheel RV trailer specially outfitted for his needs. And tethered to the trailer will be a three-wheel motorcycle that lets him drive in his wheelchair.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
Read full USA Today article – click here

disabled vets get hot wheels despite their wheelchairs – usa today article

Left a paraplegic by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan two years ago, retired Marine Jack Pierce vows not to let his disability leave him in life’s slow lane.
Pierce applies that attitude to pretty much everything, including. right now, his summer vacation. Pierce plans to drive his wife and two-year-old son a tour of national parks and monuments in their 2012 Ford F-350 Super Duty pickup, towing a fifth-wheel RV trailer specially outfitted for his needs. And tethered to the trailer will be a three-wheel motorcycle that lets him drive in his wheelchair.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
They are using innovation and design savvy to create vehicles for a new group of customers, veterans, mostly men in their 20s and 30s, determined to live life as much as they can without concession to their disability — including in their choice of vehicles.
“Independence is the key, being able to function as normally as possible,” says Dave Hubbard, CEO of the National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association trade group.
Younger buyers “are looking for alternatives,” he says, driven in large part by a desire not to be seen as disabled. They want vehicles that look like those typically driven by others their age, without obvious signs of modification to handle disabilities.
To meet those demands, a Phoenix-based minivan outfitter, for instance, has dressed up a ramp-equipped Honda Odyssey with smoked glass, custom wheels and a body kit to make it look hipper, more urban and more like a sport utility vehicle.
The disabled transportation industry also is looking beyond vans and minivans for new ways to modify any vet’s vehicle of choice with equipment needed for wheelchairs.
“The industry has been slow to respond, to tell you the truth,” says Bill Lawson of Woodward, Okla., president of Paralyzed Veterans of America. “This stuff should have been done years ago.”
Vets who like pickup trucks now can get a system with a lift chair to get them into the cab and a crane that stows their wheelchair in truck’s bed. One company even modifies a pickup with a sliding driver door and lift that lets quadriplegics drive in their wheelchairs, rather than having to shift into a truck seat.
There even are modified motorcycles: 
A British inventor created a three-wheel BMW bike with a ramp and platform between rear wheels for riders in wheelchairs.
While aging Boomers and their parents are the largest market for the estimated 10,000 to 15,000 converted vehicles sold each year, veterans have become a sizable group of customers. For instance, Winamac, Ind.-based Braun, which makes special vans especially for handicapped persons and sells mobility equipment for people in wheelchairs, says about 25% of its business comes from disabled veterans.
The Veterans Administration gives disabled vets purchase allowance of $18,900 (raised last year from $11,000) for a vehicle and pays most of the costs involved in outfitting it to accommodate a disability, typically about another $15,000 to $25,000 for a paraplegic driver in a wheelchair, according to conversion companies. 
Minivans still dominate market:The majority of conversions remain minivans — not sexy, but the most practical for creating wheelchair access. They offer space, low floors readily modified for ramps and load capacity for the extra up to 300-pound weight of a motorized wheelchair.
And they don’t have to look dowdy. VPG Autos, a Miami-based converter of vans for the disabled, says some buyers are customizing its MV-1 van for a more macho look. VPG Chairman Fred Drasner says that what a focus group of younger wheelchair users liked about the vehicle is that “it looked like an SUV.”
Phoenix-based Vantage Mobility International has gone a step further to offer a Honda Odyssey minivan already customized with black paint and a more sinister look to see if it would appeal to younger customers.
VMI 25th Anniversary Limited Edition Honda Odyssey
After installing the ramp and other accessibility features, Vantage sent the van to Designer Auto Accessories in Mission Viejo, Calif. The $12,000 makeover that included 20-inch custom wheels, a blacked-out grille, darkened windows, two-toned inserts in the seats and other touches that would be “what younger guys would like,” says Gary Disney, owner of the customizer.
The black van is being displayed at trade shows, where it’s “creating quite a stir,” says Vantage CEO Doug Eaton. He plans to build 25. “I don’t think it’s going to create a tipping point for volume, but it’s going to bring people in the market.”
Sleek custom sheds van stigma:
One fan of the black van is Stephen Willoby, an Air Force bomb disposal specialist left quadriplegic by a 2007 shallow-water diving accident. “The sleek look of the Odyssey is very appealing,” says Willoby, 29, who lives near Phoenix. “There is not the stigma of the minivan.”
But as much as he wanted one, he recently chose one of Vantage’s Dodge Grand Caravan conversions. He needed its hydraulic power steering, rather than Honda’s electric, for a device that makes steering even easier. Still, the black Odyssey shows the company is “one the right track,” Willoby says.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
They are using innovation and design savvy to create vehicles for a new group of customers, veterans, mostly men in their 20s and 30s, determined to live life as much as they can without concession to their disability — including in their choice of vehicles.
Pierce plans to drive his wife and two-year-old son a tour of national parks and monuments in their 2012 Ford F-350 Super Duty pickup, towing a fifth-wheel RV trailer specially outfitted for his needs. And tethered to the trailer will be a three-wheel motorcycle that lets him drive in his wheelchair.
“You can get out on the road and feel the wind in your hair,” says Pierce, 38, of Belton, Texas. “You’re not stuck in your house. You can get out in your RV and take your medical supplies with you.”
Wounded vets such as Pierce are a challenge for the industry that converts vehicles to accommodate people in wheelchairs or with other disabilities. After seeing sales grow for ramp-outfitted minivans to serve an aging population, converters now are having to think young.
Read full USA Today article – click here
Our goal for the past 25 and next 25+ years here at Automotive Innovations Bridgewater, MA, Massachusetts, is to provide our customers with access to the best sales, service and repair for all the leading wheelchair accessible mobility vehicles, hand controls and devices that can offer you greater freedom and independence. We are your New England adaptive dealer and offer a full line of VMI wheelchair accessible vans, or Vantage Mobility International products, and we have a team of Certified Mobility Consultants who are always ready to help you learn about the benefits and features of full sized handicap vans, new and used wheelchair vehicles, Ricon lifts, adaptive mobility equipment, and more.
Automotive Innovations
Bridgewater, MA 
508-697-6006

advice for veterans who are in the market for wheelchair vans


advice for veterans who are in the market for wheelchair vans


 As we have all learned in dealing with the VA, patience is key. This can be especially true when applying for and navigating the process of purchasing a wheelchair accessible van. In the beginning the task can seem daunting, but with the right help and a bit of understanding it is very doable.
The first step for a service-connected veteran is to apply for your Auto-Adaptive Grant, or 21-4502. This is a simple form that can be obtained at your local prosthetics department or through a National Service Officer of a veteran’s organization, such as the PVA.  This is the most time consuming part of the process; waiting for the grant to be approved. If you are not service-connected you can still be eligible for a van for safe transportation. The form for this is the 10-1394. Your doctor will need to write prescriptions for your individual needs in both cases. Once approval is granted in both situations you will be able to start actively working with your local mobility dealer to get you in the right van for you.
Having a knowledgeable mobility dealer is key to making things run smoothly at this point. There is a lot of paperwork exchanged at this point between the dealer and the VA Prosthetics Department, which was handled skillfully by AMP. Your dealer usually has a good working relationship with the VA and will be able to do the same for you.
A quick word of advice about working with your Prosthetics Department, don’t be a stranger. It doesn’t hurt for them to have a face to go along with the name on all the forms. An occasional visit to say thanks for all they do is always appreciated and honestly well deserved. Although time consuming and occasionally frustrating the process and waiting is well worth the price when you get your freedom back and are cruising the streets in your new VMI accessible van. That freedom is invaluable, speaking from personal experience.

Our goal for the past 25 and next 25+ years here at Automotive Innovations Bridgewater, MA, Massachusetts, is to provide our customers with access to the best sales, service and repair for all the leading wheelchair accessible mobility vehicles, hand controls and devices that can offer you greater freedom and independence. We are your New England adaptive dealer and offer a full line of VMI wheelchair accessible vans, or Vantage Mobility International products, and we have a team of Certified Mobility Consultants who are always ready to help you learn about the benefits and features of full sized handicap vans, new and used wheelchair vehicles, Ricon lifts, adaptive mobility equipment, and more.
Automotive Innovations
292 Bedford St
Bridgewater, MA 02324
508-697-6006

stay active with a disability: quick tips


Regular physical activity provides important health benefits for everyone, including people with disabilities. Getting active can help you:
  • Strengthen your heart
  • Build strong muscles and bones
  • Improve coordination
  • Relieve stress, improve your mood, and help you feel better about yourself

before you begin…

  • Talk to your doctor about starting an exercise program. If you are taking medicine, be sure to find out how it will affect your physical activity.
  • It’s also a good idea to talk to a trained exercise professional. Find a fitness center near you that is comfortable and accessible. Ask if they have experience working with people with similar disabilities.

aim for 2 hours and 30 minutes a week of moderate aerobic activity.

  • This includes walking fast or pushing yourself in a wheelchair, raking leaves, or other activities that make your heart beat faster.
  • Start slowly. Be active for at least 10 minutes at a time.

do strengthening activities 2 days a week.

  • This includes sit-ups, push-ups, or lifting weights.
  • Try working on the muscles that you use less often because of your disability.

find support and stick with it.

  • Bring along a friend, especially if you are trying out a new activity.
  • If you don’t meet your exercise goal, don’t give up. Start again tomorrow.
For more information on physical activity and disabilities, visit:
Our goal for the past 25 and next 25+ years here at Automotive Innovations Bridgewater, MA, Massachusetts, is to provide our customers with access to the best sales, service and repair for all the leading wheelchair accessible mobility vehicles, hand controls and devices that can offer you greater freedom and independence. We are your New England adaptive dealer and offer a full line of VMI wheelchair accessible vans, or Vantage Mobility International products, and we have a team of Certified Mobility Consultants who are always ready to help you learn about the benefits and features of full sized handicap vans, new and used wheelchair vehicles, Ricon lifts, adaptive mobility equipment, and more.
Automotive Innovations
292 Bedford St
Bridgewater, MA 02324
508-697-8324

Exceptional Customer Satisfaction Award


Automotive Innovations of Bridgewater, MA Recognized for Exceptional Customer Satisfaction

Automotive Innovations Bridgewater, MA has been awarded the coveted  Customer 1st Award again

 

Automotive Innovations Bridgewater MA, the best provider of wheelchair vans in New England, has been delivering freedom to individuals with disabilities for more than 25 years. Automotive Innovations employees come to work each day dedicated, not only to providing the best wheelchair accessible vehicles, but are also committed to enriching the quality of life in their communities. Whether it’s getting involved with a local families that can't afford a mobility van or joining in a wide range of community activities, that dedication to serve has always been the benchmark for us.
“Improving the lives of others and taking an active role in the community is vitally important,” says Automotive Innovations President/CEO Jim Sanders. “The employees at our Bridgewater, MA facility know that providing the highest quality mobility products and customer service to our clients is what we have consistently been known for, and they don’t just preach it; they live it day in, day out, and I am exceptionally proud that they have received this prestigious award.”
Providing excellent customer service not only requires our Mobility Consultants to meet the needs of our clients, but it also requires them to provide their clients with the most options for mobility products as well. Automotive Innovations of Bridgewater has introduced many new and innovative mobility products over the past 25 years, including some of the very first lowered floor mini vans in New England like the VMI Honda Northstar and some of the most revolutionary driving control products built by us right here in Bridgewater, MA. These ground-breaking products have given our clients more options, and more freedom to go where they want to go, when they want to. As the leader in providing the finest adaptive mobility equipment options in New England, Automotive Innovations knows that in order to remain at the forefront in the mobility industry, they must continue to offer innovative and ground-breaking products to their clients.
“We believe that our commitment to provide our clients with exceptional service is what separates us from our competition,” says Jim Sanders Automotive Innovations President/CEO. “Our Bridgewater location has received many unsolicited customer testimonials over the past 25+ years, and this customer feedback is truly what we live for! The commitment and dedication to our customers that our team in Bridgewater has shown is truly remarkable, and it proves that they all are very deserving of this award.”
Bridgewater AII is staffed with mobility experts who are trained to evaluate the individual needs of customers. Automotive Innovations Bridgewater has been known for its outstanding customer service throughout the decades, providing round-the-clock support for their customers with their 24/7 Roadside Assistance Program and a email 24/7 Sales Support Program to better serve the needs of their customers.
We have for more than 25 years been going above and beyond in meeting our customers needs and building life-long relationships with them and look forward to another 25.
To learn more about the innovative products and services that we have to offer, please visit http://bridgewatermobility.com
ABOUT AUTOMOTIVE INNOVATIONS:
Automotive Innovations is New England's Best provider of wheelchair vans and adaptive equipment for people with disabilities. Our products are used by individuals with minor to profound disabilities requiring additional assistance while traveling and range from hand controls and lifts to raised door and lowered floor vehicle modifications. Founded in 1987, Automotive Innovations locations are committed to offering a broad selection of specialized vehicles and services to meet the needs of every customer. We were the first QAP (Quality Assurance Program) certified through the National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association (NMEDA) in MA. 
Automotive Innovations, standards are and will aways strive to be higher than anyone else's. 
For more information, call 508-697-6006 or visit our website

about vmi

From the very beginning, VMI has been driven by one simple philosophy: Innovation and dedication will ultimately lead to a better quality wheelchair accessible van, and a better quality of life for our customers. Since opening our doors more than 18 years ago, we've continued to explore new ways to create handicap vehicles that enable our customers to live fuller lives. Our efforts have produced the most reliable, highest quality and most easily accessible wheelchair vans in the world.