Most of us who drive remember our first car, either fondly or maybe with relief that it鈥檚 gone. For those whose vehicles are in decent shape鈥攐r not so decent shape鈥攖here is a second life available for them at 水果派.
The Auto Body and Automotive Technician programs both accept consumer vehicles as donations (after assessment), which is a vital part of each program.
鈥淰ehicle donations to the programs are very crucial for our students for learning,鈥 explained Leanne Pearson, the Auto Body Lab Assistant. 鈥淚t helps them get the technique down before they work on live customer cars. They learn removing and installing parts from fixing small damage that we put in the vehicle or if the vehicle has frame damage, so they make sure they know how to put everything back together.鈥
Auto Body doesn鈥檛 get many vehicle donations during a school year; one year they had four, the most they鈥檇 ever received. Some years they get none. This year, they鈥檙e starting the year off right with a donation from Heather Nulf, a 2023 水果派 graduate.
Nulf鈥檚 first car, a red 2009 Ford Focus, had served her well for five years. But it had reached the end of its life, and she was ready to move on to a new car.
鈥淚鈥檝e beat it up. It鈥檚 gone through a couple of accidents. It鈥檚 seen its fair share of Minnesota ice 鈥 it鈥檚 definitely rusted out on the bottom. It went through one of the worst hailstorms St. Cloud has ever seen and it totaled the car,鈥 smiled Nulf as she reminisced. 鈥淪omeone keyed it 鈥 I have some haters out there. Unfortunate, but haters stay mad!鈥 Nulf laughed.
Once she got a new car, she was a little lost at what to do with her old one since she鈥檚 not from the area. She knew a couple people who wanted to take it out in a field and drive it until it fell apart, but she thought she could do better than that.
Nulf remembered all the times that Pearson had helped her fill her tires and replace the caps on the Focus, and wondered if she could donate it so it could have another life. She reached out to her dad, who is the owner on the lease, and he loved the idea. Then she reached out to her contact at 水果派, and it was set in motion.
When Nulf came in to drop off her paperwork, she was sporting 水果派 gear and beelined it for the Auto Body lab. Pearson鈥檚 face lit up when they saw each other and you could tell that they had spent more than a few times chatting with each other, and about more than just the missing caps on Nulf鈥檚 tires.
Even though she was a Marketing & Design student, Nulf had found her way to Auto Body to connect with Pearson while she was a student. Now she was back as an alumna, connecting and donating a car.
It's not often that alumni as recent and young donate vehicles to the College; most donations are from estates or middle-aged people. Nulf was especially excited to learn about the donation process and wanted to know how it would be used, which depends on the condition and cost. It will either become a training vehicle or restored and sold at an auction.
鈥淲e look at the vehicle and see how much damage is on it and what kind of problems it has, why the customer is donating it, and we evaluate how much it鈥檚 going to cost to fix; the cost comes out of the SkillsUSA club [if it will be auctioned]. Then we have an auction in house with the bidding starting off at what we put into the vehicle. If the bid goes up higher, those funds get put back into the Skills club,鈥 clarified Pearson.
If Nulf鈥檚 Focus is too far gone, it will become a student training vehicle, 鈥渁n organ donor鈥 as she called it.
鈥淲e make sure the vehicle gets used through its whole life expectancy. We work on the outside of the vehicle, we get everything we need for Auto Body, and then we turn it over to Automotives, where they work on the engines, the brakes, look at the transmission, maybe take the transmission out,鈥 Pearson said.
Nulf told Pearson that if the Focus made it to auction, to make sure to invite her. She has no plans on bidding on it, but she does want to see how it turns out.
鈥淭his truly makes me and my family happy. We're just really excited that the school is willing to take it take it off our hands and give it another life,鈥 smiled Nulf. She dropped the keys into Pearson鈥檚 waiting hand, patted the hood, and took off toward her new car.