Crew overhauls SUV donated by Lodi vet to another veteran
STOCKTON — This is the story of two humble men. Both served our nation in the United States Army. Both experienced difficult times after their service. One, doing better now, was able to help the other in a big way — with a little help from the community.
In a ceremony Sunday afternoon at Ohana Car Care Center in central Stockton, 50-year-old veteran Harvey Stenson was handed the keys to a completely refurbished, shiny black 1999 Chevrolet Suburban sport utility vehicle — free and clear, registered and insured in his name, and ready to take his four kids — Sydney, 20; Harvey Jr., 10; Dallas, 9; and Lacy, 4 — wherever they need to go.
A single dad of few words, Stenson — who served in Korea’s demilitarized zone in the early 1990s — explained he has been “struggling for a while,” especially because his main mode of transportation is out of commission and he doesn’t have the money to fix it.
“I appreciate this. I appreciate everybody who helped to make this possible. I thank every one of you, and my family appreciates it,” Stenson said in accepting the keys to the SUV.
The transfer of the SUV and the ceremony was made possible through the efforts of Michael Emerson, a veterans’ advocate who is chairman and founder of the Vehicles 4 Veterans charity. Emerson coordinated the towing of the vehicle from Lodi to Stockton by Advanced Towing of Stockton as well as the major repairs and detailing by the crew at Ohana Car Care Center, 1204 Enterprise St. just off West Lane.
Most importantly, he brought Stenson together with a fellow veteran who was in a position to donate his SUV.
Raphael Pazo of Lodi, who spent 16 years in the Army and Reserves assigned to the 18th Airborne Corps as a paratrooper in the medical corps serving in Grenada and Panama, said “why not?” when asked what motivated him to donate his SUV. He didn’t hesitate.
“I bought it brand new in 1998 with 7 miles on it. It gave me a lot of satisfaction,” Pazo said.
“I’m a little melancholy seeing the car go. I took good care of it, hauling four kids and two golden retrievers,” he said.
But he couldn’t ask for a better outcome and next chapter for the SUV.
“I got a lot of help at one point in my life. When you have a chance to pay something forward, don’t hesitate. Pay it forward with a smile. Harvey is a brother veteran, and we really have to be our brother’s keepers,” Pazo said.
When the SUV arrived at Ohana, it had 145,000 miles on it and needed a new transmission, brakes, air conditioning and an oil change. It got a 72-point inspection “from bumper to bumper” and also got completely detailed, no small feat on one of the biggest passenger vehicles on the road.
R.J. and Fairlani Parungao, who have owned Ohana for the past 12 years, donated all the services.
“A lot of my wife’s family are veterans, and we’ve always supported veterans. We were happy to help a veteran out who needed help,” R.J. Parungao said, also thanking his mechanics for their work on the SUV.