Donation gives girl best seat in the house
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Luis Pena
Leilani Gutierrez knew about the anniversary picnic being thrown for
her by friends, but she didn’t know about the $42,500 surprise.
Mother’s Day marked the second anniversary of the car accident
that left Leilani, now 6, paralyzed from the neck down. She received
the anniversary gift of a state-of-the-art wheelchair that left her
all smiles.
“It’s great,” Leilani said. “[I’m] just happy to think about
chasing Cindy,” who’s a friend of hers.
While Kim Miller, a parent of one of Leilani’s kindergarten
classmates at Newport Heights Elementary, delivered a speech, friends
and family members gathered around, almost forming a wall that
blocked Leilani’s view of the street. That’s when Jim Moore of Redman
Power Chair, based in Tucson, Ariz., took the high-tech chair out of
his SUV and delivered it to Leilani.
“My children have become so empathetic to people, and caring, and
realizing that not everyone is perfect,” Miller said.
Miller and other parents and community members got together to
raise funds for the brand new, high-tech wheelchair, known as a
sip-n-puff. The chair works by the number of puffs or sips that are
taken through the chair’s straw, Moore said.
Moore did something that he normally doesn’t do -- he made a
personal delivery. He drove 500 miles from Tucson so the chair could
be presented to Leilani on the anniversary.
“That wheelchair will is going to change her life 100%,” said
Annette Price, Leilani’s night nurse. “She will be in more control of
her own destiny, where she wants to go.”
The chair can recline, which will allow her to lay down without
being taken out of the chair. The chair also has plenty of backup
power for her ventilator, which she needs to breathe. The chair is
adjustable for growth, so it will last her at least five years, Moore
said.
Corona del Mar resident Steve Weber was a big part of the chair
presentation coming to fruition. Weber told Jack Croul about the
fundraising effort for the chair, which prompted the Croul Foundation
to step in, donating the funds necessary to buy it. The foundation
normally gives funds to educational institutions.
“[Croul] wanted it to benefit someone where it would have a direct
impact,” Weber said.
Rodney Sellers, Leilani’s father, who was already surprised by the
picnic, was even more amazed by the wheelchair gift.
“It just seems so right that something like this happens to
somebody that people give so much to try to make Leilani’s life
better,” Sellers said.
June Gutierrez, Leilani’s mother, had tears running down her face
when the chair was presented to her daughter.
“It will give her the independence to go where she wants to go,”
June Gutierrez said. “If she gets angry, she can take herself out of
the room -- you know, those little things that a normal 6-year-old
would do.”
* LUIS PENA is the news assistant and may be reached at (949)
574-4298.
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