Client 147: Adored, and an Urgent Need

OnRamp gifted a minivan to our 147th client last week, a woman whose identity we need to keep private. This single mom is raising five kids ages 7 months to 8 years, and these kids absolutely adore her. I got to spend a half hour inside the tax office with her kids (and even hold her 7-month-old, which is very fun for this gray haired dad-of-teens!) and watched how well they responded to their mom. They were a delight. Project Unity sponsored her after watching her overcome significant adversity while remaining positive and hopeful. She inspired all of us who met her. We could not have gifted her this minivan without the support of Christian Brothers Corporate who donated it to OnRamp. Their local franchises here in BCS, every other franchise we’ve worked with, and their corporate staff have continually partnered in OnRamp’s efforts to share Jesus’ love with families in need.

But now I need to ask for help.

While we rejoice for client 147, we are struggling to raise funds for the ten additional fully-approved clients waiting on our list for a vehicle. We’ve got multiple single moms raising young kids, trying desperately to hold down jobs and make doctor appointments without a vehicle. We have a grandmother trying to get to her very sick grandson at Texas Children’s in Houston. We’ve got a single dad who is a veteran trying his best to care for his young kids. We’ve got three Afghan female refugees fleeing Taliban violence who’ve found a home here in BCS but can’t get around without a vehicle. They send much of their discretionary income home to parents in Afghanistan who are just trying to stay alive. They desperately need our help to create a new life here in Texas.

These ten worthy individuals and the families they are supporting have completed all the action steps we’ve required of them, been through applications and interviews and follow-ups, and are now just waiting for us to receive the funds needed to purchase reliable cars and SUV’s, vehicles that will mean freedom and opportunity for each of them. At approximately $8,000 to buy each vehicle and $2,000 to fully repair, prep, and maintain for a year (a core part of our ongoing ministry to clients), we need to raise $100,000 to serve these ten hard-working clients.

Can you help us with a one-time special gift or by becoming a monthly donor (what we call our Drivers of Hope)? Please click this link to donate electronically or by check or stock. Do you know anyone who might want to donate to OnRamp or learn more about partnering with us? Please direct them to our website and feel free to give them my contact information (blakej@onramptx.org). I would love to talk with them and share our ministry and our vision.

One final note: I want to especially thank the Bryan Rotary Club for partnering with OnRamp by donating $3,000 towards this need. Thank you all for your generosity and heart for service!

Kingdom and Cars

Guest post by board member Austin Rogers

What if I told you that OnRamp was as much about a kingdom as it was about cars?

As a child, one of the fuzziest concepts in the Bible to me was the “Kingdom of God.” I assumed it was perhaps another term for “the Heavens” where God lives. Or maybe it is some future perfect state of existence when all of creation has been redeemed by God. Or maybe it’s just another word for the Church.

The Kingdom of God is a mysterious concept, but it’s one Jesus spoke often about. He wanted us to lean in and seek out the deep truths of God’s Kingdom.

Let me briefly share a few of those deep truths.

The Kingdom of God = believers leading and serving in multiple charities partnering together to serve foster kids and recovering addicts.

First, every Kingdom needs a king. Who is the king in the Kingdom of God? Both the Old and New Testaments seem to specify that Jesus, the Messiah, is the king of God’s Kingdom. In Peter’s sermon after Pentecost in Acts 2:30, Peter explains that God has fulfilled His promise from Jeremiah 23 and elsewhere to “set one of [David’s] descendants on his throne,” referring of course to Jesus. And in Revelation 17, John describes the “Lamb” (Jesus) as the “Lord of lords and King of kings.”

Second, why call it a “kingdom”? Is this just a historical leftover from an age when kings and kingdoms were common? Actually, there’s a crucial reality to the Kingdom of God that transcends time or culture. I love the way George Eldon Ladd describes it in his classic book, The Gospel of the Kingdom. Rather than referring to a certain territory, government, or people group, the Bible primarily uses “kingdom” to describe “the authority to rule” or “the sovereignty of the king.” “The Kingdom of God is His kingship, His rule, His authority,” Ladd writes. So, when Jesus says we must “receive the Kingdom of God” like little children in Mark 10:15, He is teaching us to enter into God’s Kingdom by accepting His authority over our lives. This is also why Jesus taught His followers to pray, “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” It is a request for God’s good and perfect desires for His creation to happen here and now, and in praying this prayer, it also aligns our hearts with God’s.

Third, Jesus speaks about the kingdom both as being something coming in the future and something we enter into and live out now. Understanding God’s Kingdom as His authority expressed in our lives helps to make sense of this paradox. In Matthew 13, Jesus compares the Kingdom to crops growing amid the weeds, symbolizing the way in which God’s will is carried out by His people in the world even amidst the evil and brokenness that we see all around us.

“Kingdom of God” = one church family sponsoring a believing widow’s family for a vehicle donation = Christians sacrificing to meet one another’s physical needs.

Today, the Kingdom of God is limited to the degree to which His will is done and His authority recognized “on earth as it is in heaven,” but someday God will destroy all sin, brokenness, and death and redeem the world so that His Kingdom extends across all of creation.

Fourth, what exactly does life look like in God’s Kingdom? This is perhaps the most exciting part of all! In the Old Testament, we find a beautiful vision of prosperity and peace between humans as well as between humans and creation. It’s a state of existence where nations no longer go to war and people no longer inflict pain on each other (see, for example, Isaiah 2:2-4 and Micah 4:3). It’s a world where all of creation is at peace with itself, where “the wolf will lie down with the lamb” and the “child will put his hand on the viper’s den” (Isaiah 11:1-9).

In the New Testament, Jesus, who is often called the “prince of peace,” taught his followers to be peacemakers who “will be called sons of God” (Matthew 5:9).

What about prosperity? In the Old Testament, we find a vision of God’s Kingdom as an abundant feast and a state of plenty. “You will still be eating last year’s harvest when you have to move it out to make room for the new,” describes Leviticus 26:10.

In the New Testament, we find Jesus proclaiming that the good news of the Kingdom is, among other things, “good news to the poor” (Luke 4:18). The “abundant life” that Jesus said he came to bring us in John 10:10 is both spiritual and material – not that God wants His people to enjoy riches that others don’t have, but rather that He wants His people to participate in bringing about this abundance through providing for the needs of others.

This vision of shared prosperity is illustrated beautifully in the Old Testament (Deuteronomy 15), where God says “there will be no poor among you.” It is not that God himself will supernaturally provide for everyone’s physical needs, but rather His people would do so themselves. When someone in the community had need, God gave this instruction: “you shall not harden your heart or shut your hand against your poor brother, but you shall open your hand to him and lend him sufficient for his need, whatever it may be.” And we know from elsewhere in the Bible that when God tells His people to lend, they are to do so out of love, “expecting nothing in return” (Luke 6:35-36).

OnRamp’s volunteer Vehicle Repair Director, Jeremy Smith, winning Christian Brother’s Corporate “Lighthouse” award for being a light to the community through his service to OnRamp.

There’s a real-life example of this beautiful vision found in the New Testament. Right after Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit came upon believers for the first time, the gathered Christians suddenly realized the profound need that existed among them and were driven to radical generosity, even selling their property and possessions to provide for anyone who had need. (See Acts 2 and 4.) When the Spirit of God came upon the believers, so also did His Kingdom – His reign, His authority, His will being carried out on earth as it is in heaven. And a characteristic trait of God’s Kingdom is that everyone’s physical needs are met, often by God’s own people. God has a huge heart for the poor, and so should we.

And now we see the connection from a kingdom to cars! We see the work that we do at OnRamp not just as a “good deed” or a nice thing to do, but in a very real way as participation in the Kingdom of God. We get to partner with God in bringing the good news of the Kingdom to those who have need. OnRamp’s assistance in meeting those needs has a profoundly positive impact on the lives of our clients, and is our way of advancing God’s kingdom on earth so that His will is done a bit more on earth as it is in heaven. That makes OnRamp’s mission one of the most strategic and exciting activities we can imagine!

Drivers of Hope

Introducing our DRIVERS OF HOPE campaign. Monthly giving to our ministry has an outsized impact because it provides the stability and predictability that allow us to provide consistent care for our clients. We are so grateful for our monthly donors that we’ve decided to give them a name that reflects the difference they’re making in this community. They are our Drivers of Hope! They keep this ministry driving forward. They help us build the kingdom of God here in the Brazos Valley. We’ve donated vehicles and a full year of support to 145 clients and families so far, but with the help of monthly donors, that’s just the start!

If you would like to become a Driver of Hope, simply set up a monthly donation for any amount by clicking HERE. You’ll begin to receive new correspondence meant just for this group. We plan to send our Drivers of Hope quarterly updates on our ministry that will give more in-depth information on our long-term plans and strategies than what we typically share in our public blog posts. We also plan to gather our Drivers of Hope every year to meet with our staff and board and celebrate the impact God is making through this ministry. We would love to have you become part of this group of partners making an eternal impact in the Brazos Valley by sharing the love of God through the tangible gift of reliable transportation.

Please SHARE this opportunity with anyone in your life who might want to partner with OnRamp. Blake or Stephanie would love the chance to meet with them in person or talk on the phone or by email if they would like any additional information, or simply to meet and share the impact of this ministry. We can be reached at blakej@onramptx.org or stephaniem@onramptx.org. Please help us build our family of donors so we can continue to grow our impact on this community for the Lord.

Client 146: A single dad of FIVE

OnRamp serves single parents more than any other demographic, and while most are single moms, we are delighted to bless single dads as well. Our 146th client, John, is a loving and devoted dad to his FIVE kids, ages 5-14, who all live with him. He works full-time for the city of College Station plus part-time for a local funeral home to pay all the bills, and spends the rest of his time caring for these children. But that got much harder when the engine in his truck died. It was too old to repair, and left the family stranded. John was able to borrow a relative’s car on occasion, but it could only fit a few of his children at any given time. So every day, John would wake early to drive the 3 younger children along with his nephew to their school in Bryan, then come home and pick up the older two to take to their charter school in College Station, and then head to work. In the afternoon, he’d do everything in reverse. And that was on good days when he could borrow a vehicle. This meant family trips to church, the grocery store, or the movie theater were impossible.

Fortunately, our great friends at Methodist Children’s Home nominated John to OnRamp for a vehicle donation. We gladly accepted him into the OnRamp family and donated this Honda Odyssey to him last week. Not only does John once again have a vehicle of his own, but he can now transport his whole family in one go! They can do and see all of the things families should be able to do and see. We are so grateful to help this single dad continue to love and provide for his kids.

As usual, we want to thank our Client Care volunteers for leading this case, especially Tiffany Thompson and Mary Johnson, Joe Dewolf for finding this van, Christian Brothers Automotive for doing all the needed maintenance and repair at a huge discount, and our volunteer Brent Hairston for cleaning and prepping this vehicle for donation. As always, name, story, and pictures are shared with client permission.

In case you missed it, OnRamp wrote a book to help you find and purchase a reliable used car without getting taken advantage of. It includes our list of best and worst used vehicles for reliability, tips for avoiding scams, and many more helpful tricks to make your car buying and ownership process as painless as possible. Download for $20 here, with all proceeds going to OnRamp to help us afford more vehicles for clients like John.

Client 145: From Foster Care to Robotics

People are sometimes shocked when they first find out what we do. “You give away cars for free?!” But when you meet the men and women we serve, such as Kirsten, our 145th client, you begin to realize that the better question is, “How can we NOT gift a car to a person like her!?”

Kirsten is one of the more than 1,200 young adults who age out of the foster care system every year in Texas without being adopted. Sadly, across America, only 3% of these kids will graduate with a bachelor’s degree, only half will obtain employment by age 24, and 1 in 4 will end up homeless within four years of leaving foster care. This is simply unacceptable, and is why a loving family launched Our Daughters House in Brenham. This nonprofit houses young women such as Kirsten who’ve aged out of foster care, providing not only shelter, but also coaching, support, and love to help each woman grow and succeed.

Kirsten with Kris Williams and Crissy Abbey of Our Daughters House

That path to success almost always requires a vehicle since mass transit is not an option. With rides from ODF volunteers, Kirsten got a great job at Bluebell and diligently saved $2000. But that’s not enough to afford a reliable vehicle. So ODH nominated her to OnRamp and we accepted her without reservations. How could we not when her advocate told us, “Kirsten is a daughter of Our Daughters House and currently works a full-time job as a robot operator for Bluebell. She is saving for a car as well as school in the spring, she plans to major in mechanical engineering. Kirsten has really impressed me with the amount of hours she works on top of volunteering, helping around the house, keeping up with her steady budget, and studying as well as passing the GED… She is kind, caring, and above all else driven to succeed.”

Operates robots at an ice-cream factory and hopes to become a Mechanical Engineer?!?!? If you know my backstory (M.E. in automotive engineering, TAMU class of ’98), you can imagine how much I enjoyed getting to partner with Kirsten on her journey. Yesterday we gifted her a Toyota Rav4 that we pray will serve her well for years to come.

And now the best part. Kirsten is a giver. She wants to help others, not just receive. So that $2000 she had saved for a car… yeah, she donated that in cash to OnRamp to get a car for the next person in line. How awesome is that?! And so yet again I ask you, “How could we NOT gift a car to a person like Kirsten?!”

Your generosity enables this partnership with people just like her. I’m writing this blog post while staring at a board of awaiting clients who are fully approved for vehicles, but we don’t have the funds required. I need two minivans for single parent homes and an SUV for a medically challenged client ASAP. Can you help us continue this essential ministry by donating just as Kirsten did to help these next clients in line?

Finally, in case you missed it, we just published an ebook on how to buy a used car and not get scammed. It’s built on all the data we’ve collected over the last 5 years buying and maintaining over 140 vehicles for our clients. We’ll tell you what used vehicles you should buy, and which you should avoid, as well as teach you how to navigate the used car market without falling prey to crooks and scammers. You can download it by clicking the image below. It’s offered for a suggested donation of $20… but just grab it for free if your funds are tight. We want to make sure you know how to protect yourself and your family when buying a used car.

BIG NEWS: We Wrote a Book!

After seeing so many people fall prey to scammers and crooks in the used car market, or end up with lemons they couldn’t afford to repair, I decided it was time to write an ebook to educate people on the ins-and-outs of buying reliable used cars without getting scammed. So without further ado, here it is for purchase and download:

RELIABLE RIDES: OnRamp’s Used Car Buying Guide

Introducing "Reliable Rides," your go-to guide for navigating the used car market with ease and confidence! This comprehensive 34-page eBook is packed with expert advice on how to buy a used car without getting scammed. Our charity, OnRamp, gifts reliable vehicles to local families in need, so we've been through this purchasing process hundreds of times. We've done the research, learned the lessons, crunched the numbers, and now we're sharing our knowledge with you.

In this valuable guide, you'll discover:

  • Data-driven lists of the most reliable and least reliable used cars and SUVs on the market

  • Top picks for used vehicles for new drivers

  • Details on how to spot scammers and lemons

  • Step-by-step instructions on how to inspect and test-drive a vehicle

  • The ins-and-outs of auto insurance

  • Tips and tricks for keeping your vehicle running smoothly for as long as possible

  • And more!

EVERY DOLLAR MADE BY THIS EBOOK GOES DIRECTLY TO ONRAMP TO HELP US BUY AND GIFT MORE VEHICLES TO FAMILIES IN NEED. As of May 2023, OnRamp has gifted reliable cars and SUV's plus a full year of maintenance support to over 140 local clients, empowering them on their journey to self-sufficiency. By investing in your own automotive knowledge, you're also making a difference in someone else's life!

We're offering "Reliable Rides" on a "Pay What You Want" basis with a suggested retail price / donation of $20 (again, 100% of the proceeds go to charity). But if money is tight and you can't afford that amount, please buy it for less, or even just take it for free. Our greatest desire is that no one gets scammed or hurt in the used car market again (we've seen it happen so, so often)! We trust that you'll find our guide incredibly useful, and we hope it empowers you to make informed decisions when purchasing a used car.

Make a positive impact on your automotive future and support a life-changing cause with "Reliable Rides" today!


I'm very proud of this book and grateful to get to share it with you. Please, please share this resource far and wide. There are so many people who badly need this information. And again, every purchase directly helps OnRamp buy vehicles for awaiting clients, of which we have many (like multiple dozens!)

Huge thanks to Steve Tinkle for this idea, and Jason Pulliam, Jeremy Smith, Rami Cerone, Stephanie Mason, Taylor Carlson, Chip Jennings, and Diane Jennings for helping edit and prep.

Finally, let me know if you have edits or questions. This is just version 1.0, so there's definitely room for improvement.

Client 142: A hard-working single dad

We’re keeping this single dad’s name and picture private. He was nominated by Tanisha who runs Salvation Army’s awesome Pathway of Hope program. According to her, this dad “is determined and a hard worker and doesn’t mind putting in the work to reach his goals.” With Tanisha’s help he found a job, then found an even better job with better pay and made such excellent progress that he graduated from their program in April. Unfortunately, the car he depended on to get to work and get his preschool son to daycare blew a head gasket and wasn’t worth repairing. His employment was suddenly in jeopardy. And even if he could catch a bus, “traveling with a toddler without a vehicle is a daunting and exhausting task” as he stated in his application. As a father who never had to bear that burden, I can only imagine!

So many of you have given so generously to enable OnRamp to help single parents like this dad who just need a hand-up on their journey to self-sufficiency. I want to spotlight one of you, The Bock Realty Group’s Gabe and Megan Bock whose business has steadfastly supported OnRamp over the years. They were most recently the title sponsors for our BigShots event and helped raise the money for this dad’s vehicle. We actually raised enough that night for three vehicles! So thank you so much Bock Realty for helping us help local families striving to make a better life for their kids. This is what grace looks like.

With the help of so many of you, OnRamp was honored to gift this dad and his toddler son a Toyota Corolla with only 52,000 miles on the clock! It should serve them well. Among many goals that this client set for himself, one was, “to be able to take my son on trips to national parks so he can see the beautiful landscape which God has created.” That admirable goal is practically impossible without a vehicle. Now he’s got the tools to share God’s world with his son.

Pictured is advocate Tanisha with the Corolla for client 142. Shared with permission.

Client 141: a Widow from New Orleans

Yesterday, we rejoiced to hand the keys of this beautiful Honda Pilot to our 141st client, Tammy. She, her disabled husband, their kids, and their grandkids were refugees from New Orleans who settled in College Station years ago to make a new life for themselves. Tammy found a job at Walmart five years ago and has faithfully worked there ever since. Thanks to her hard work, the family was able to soldier on until her husband’s health began to decline, putting him in and out of the hospital and eventually confining him to a wheelchair. With bills piling up, their vehicle was eventually repossessed, and then tragically, Tammy’s husband of thirty years passed away this last October. This hard-working widow now struggled to get to work without a car, and was in danger of losing her apartment. She needed a friend and advocate.

Tammy in her new Pilot with her loving advocate, Renee.

Fortunately, God provided a loving friend in Renee Alsandor at New Victory Temple Church. This congregation helped Tammy and her family however they could. When Tammy needed a vehicle, they nominated her to OnRamp. We are grateful that God allows us to partner with churches to bless widows, whom the Bible so clearly advocates for. With this Pilot, Tammy can transport herself to work and her grandkids wherever they need to go. We’ll continue to service the vehicle for a full year, as we do with all our clients, to help Tammy on her journey forward.

We want to give a huge thanks to the anonymous family who donated this pristine vehicle to OnRamp, as well as Christian Brothers Automotive and Discount Tire for helping us prepare it for donation.

If you’d like to help us bless more women like Tammy, please consider donating by visiting HERE. Also, we still have a few items left from our Silent Auction that you can buy directly by visiting HERE.

Our team rejoicing with Tammy, including staff members Blake (left), Cassidy (middle with Peyton in her arms!), and Stephanie (right), Client Care team members David and Mary (next to Blake), and Prayer Team lead, Diane, next to Renee.

THANK YOU from OnRamp

Last Saturday, in conjunction with our first ever Silent Auction, OnRamp hosted our first fundraiser with local business partners at BigShots. These businesses donated money to sponsor bays for their families and employees to enjoy. Through this event combined with the auction, we raised $29,844, enough to provide reliable vehicles to three new client families! We are so grateful for this generosity. Please help us thank these generous sponsors:

 

Title Sponsor: The Bock Realty Group

 

Bronze Sponsors: Pilgrim Mortgage, RoseRock Capital, WestWebb Law, Thompson Derrig and Craig, Extraco Bank, Stylecraft, Sign Source, Gladney Automotive, Brazos Valley Dermatology

Thank you, also, to the generous donors who gave silent auction and raffle items, including David Gardner, BigShots, Aggieland Scuba, Chef Tai Restaurants, Galleria Day Spa, Fish Window Cleaning, Arrow Pest Control, Mathnasium, Program Insurance Group, The Remnant of Nawlins, College Station Fit Body Boot Camp, Dwight Groves, Lindsey Thomson, Susan Breedlove, and Patti Meyerdirk.

We also want to thank our team of dedicated volunteers, especially our team leaders, Sara Agold, Janine Ford, Jean Marie Rich, and Ryan Mason.

One Auction Day Left... and new items added!

There’s ONE DAY left in OnRamp’s 2023 Silent Auction and we’ve added incredible new items… including a one-owner 1988 Chevy Suburban that is absolutely RAD! This is a running, driving, air-conditioned time machine to the 80’s! Bidding starts at $4,000. Details, pictures, and VIN are in item description, and the clear TX title is in OnRamp’s name. The vehicle was donated by the very kind 89 year old. What a guy!

Also added: a 3-month membership at Fit Body Boot Camp in College Station, a $600 value starting at $300. This program delivers unrivaled fat loss results through their three pillars: Unlimited Workouts, Coaching Accountability, and Nutrition Guidance.

 

Final addition: 8 tickets to next weekend’s PBR's Pendleton Whisky Velocity Tour (PWVT) at Reed Arena. PBR began in 2014 as the sport's premier expansion series, featuring young, emerging bull riding talent alongside some of the superstars of the sport. These are 4 tickets for Friday night, April 28 at 8pm and 4 tickets for Saturday night, April 29 at Reed Arena. Section 105, row D seats 1-4.

 

EVERY DOLLAR from this auction goes to helping us buy more Corollas to gift to hard-working local clients in need to help them on their journey to self-sufficiency.

PLEASE SHARE with anyone who might be interested in bidding.

OnRamp's Silent Auction is LIVE!

OnRamp’s 2023 Silent Auction is LIVE as of this morning! Click HERE to bid on great items including sports memorabilia, restaurant and spa gift cards, AirBNB packages, homemade crafts, spirits, and more. We are so grateful to all our generous donors who provided the items for this auction. Bidding closes at 8pm THIS SATURDAY, April 22. Please share this with anyone you know who might be interested in these items. Note that EVERY DOLLAR goes to OnRamp’s mission of gifting reliable vehicles to hard-working families in need.

We want to give special thanks to the amazing Sara Agold and Eric Newman who have helped our Operations Director, Stephanie Mason, pull of this auction, our first ever. We couldn’t have done it without this stellar team!

A New, Old Mission

It is no minor thing to modify an organization’s mission statement. This single sentence summary of our mandate shows up everywhere from our homepage to our IRS filing! But the time has come to refresh how we communicate the mission God has given to our organization. And while there are no major changes (we’re not jumping from cars to houses!), the changes we’ve made represent major growth in our understanding of this work, and we’re excited to share them with you.

The new mission statement seems, at first glance, very similar to the old. It reads,

OnRamp shares God’s grace by gifting reliable vehicles to hard-working people in need to partner with them on the road to self-sufficiency.

There are three crucial changes. First, we have moved God’s grace to the beginning to reflect our growing belief that this is what matters more than anything else. It was an appendage at the end in the old statement, not by choice but by inelegant word-smithing. It gave the impression that grace was an afterthought. But it is the most important thing we have to offer the world. Cars don’t last forever, but God’s grace does. Cars empower people, but grace transforms people. Grace is what helps our clients believe that they are loved by God more than they can imagine, and that belief can change everything. So we put that first.

Second, we realized that we were wrong in how we talked about our clients. In the previous statement, they were simply, “people in need.” That focuses only on what they lack. It completely misses what they bring to the table. They are HARD-WORKING men and women! They’ve already impressed their advocate enough to be nominated to our program. Then they impressed our interviewers and completed all their action steps before receiving a vehicle from us. They work hard to make it in this world, often with far fewer resources than most of us enjoy. Many work full-time jobs, or even multiple jobs at a time. Many raise young kids as a single parent. Some endure countless hours of dialysis or multiple miles of walking to get to a job or grocery store. They are, above all, hard-working people. So now we dignify our clients by leading with what they bring to the table. They are first “hard-working” and only then “in need.”

Finally, we added the phrase “to partner” towards the end. Previously, we said that we “help them on the road to self-sufficiency.” But “help” is too weak and too one-sided. It makes OnRamp the primary actor. But we are not. A car is only one small part of a family growing towards self-sufficiency. It’s an important part, but not nearly as important as the person’s own determination, growth, sacrifice, and, again, hard-work. We are merely partnering with them on their journey. We are a supporting actor at best; we are not the lead. And so our language now reflects that our clients are the heroes in their stories. We’re just there to partner with them along the way.

Words matter. We pray that the words we choose convey love and dignity to all of our clients and glory to our God.

Client 140 and an Urgent Need

Yesterday, we partnered with yet another hard-working single mom on her journey towards self-sufficiency. While she’s asked us to keep her name and picture private, we can tell you that she has three children, one of whom has special needs. She works in food services for a local school district and dreams of going back to school to become a dietitian. Her greatest goal is to help her disabled son become more self-sufficient so he can live his life to the fullest. She is a loving mom whose greatest strength is her patient faith that God will provide in HIs timing. She proved that faith by waiting seven long months between being nominated to OnRamp and finally receiving her vehicle, a Ford Edge SUV, yesterday (tip: 2010+ Fords with the 3.5L V6 are a good buy for reliability). Thank you to the generous donor who gifted OnRamp this vehicle, as well as Christian Brothers for helping us get it ready. Now this inspiring mom can continue to provide for her kids and pursue her goals.

But now to share the NEED. Doing this ministry is EXPENSIVE. There’s no way around that. For context, every time we say “yes” to a client, it costs us at least $10,000. We said ‘yes’ to twelve in the first 3 months of 2023. In addition to gifting vehicles to new clients, we’re also repairing vehicles for the ~40 clients we have in their first year of new car ownership. That’s a vital part of our ministry that allows us to stay engaged with them and help them make significant progress towards long term self-sufficiency. But in just the first three months of this year, we spent an average of $18,598 PER MONTH on repairs and tires for all these vehicles. Costs to purchase and repair, and even costs of parts and tires have skyrocketed the last two years.

So here is the NEED: donations and grants have been slow while costs have been high. As a result, our bank account has fallen to a point where we can no longer buy vehicles for waiting clients. We need to raise $25,000 ASAP to be able to start buying again, and need to bring in a consistent $69,000 per month to continue to say ‘yes’ to new clients at the rate we did in Q1 of this year. This is a powerful way to show Jesus’ love to local families in need. If you can help, please reach out to us or check out our “Give” page. Monthly donations are especially helpful for planning purposes and we are able to accept gifts via check, credit card, PayPal, or stock transfer.

How to Train Your Teenage Driver

Guest post by Matt Morton, pastor at Grace Bible Church and father of 3 teenagers.

Unlike when I was 15 and took drivers ed through my high school, Texas now allows parents to serve as their kids’ primary driving instructors. If you’re one of those parents teaching your kids to drive, may God bless you and keep you! I’m right there with you. We taught our now-18-year-old daughter to drive, and we’re currently going through it again with our 15-year-old.

While it is rewarding to help your kid take this step toward independence, let’s face facts: It’s deeply frightening to sit in the passenger seat of a moving vehicle with a completely inexperienced and overly emotional 15-year-old behind the wheel. It’s anybody’s guess who will cry first, you or the child. 

Unfortunately, the data also shows that most of us parents aren’t doing as good a job as the professional instructors at helping our kids become safe and confident drivers. A study from Texas A&M showed that parent-taught drivers are nearly 3 times as likely to get in a fatal crash than those taught by the professionals (https://tti.tamu.edu/news/parent-taught-drivers-at-greater-risk-for-crashesinjuries/).

Most of those severe accidents happen within the first three months after new drivers get their licenses, while they’re still adjusting to the freedom and responsibility of driving on their own without a parent in the car (https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/teen-crash-risk-highest-during-first-three-months-after-getting-drivers-license)

What that suggests is that we parents aren’t preparing our kids for the challenging task of making split-second, life-and-death decisions in high-speed, high-traffic environments.

I suspect there are a couple of reasons for this:

First, we’re afraid to let them drive in truly dangerous situations while we are in the car. As a result, we tend to avoid letting them drive on the highway during rush hour, for example. Or we never let them practice making an unprotected left turn onto a 4-lane road in busy traffic conditions. As a result, the first time they experience those conditions is after they get their license, when there’s no parent in the car to coach them.

Second, we tend to focus more on the aspects of driving that we found most challenging when it came to passing our driving tests. For example, we spend a lot of time teaching kids parallel parking. But the reality is that people don’t die parallel parking. They might scuff a bumper. On the other hand, if they miss the timing while trying to turn left onto a 4-lane road, the consequences could be catastrophic. And we often spend little to no time coaching them through those harrowing and dangerous moments on the road.

So for those of us teaching our own kids to drive, how can we expose them to more difficult driving environments before they get their licenses, without putting them in situations they aren’t prepared for? Let me offer some suggestions:  

1.     Give them LOTS of driving time. There is no substitute for practice. I know it can take longer to get where you’re going if the teenager is driving. And it’s more stressful. But the more they drive, the more competent and confident they will be. The State of Texas requires at least 30 hours of practice, in addition to 14 hours of behind-the-wheel instruction. In my opinion, aim for at least 50 hours of practice, roughly an hour each week.

2.     Start with safe and easy situations and slowly work toward more challenging ones. With both of our daughters, we started out in an empty parking lot. This is exactly what the professional instructors do. We made sure that they knew how to do basic tasks like start the car, adjust the seat and mirrors, use the blinkers, and turn left and right. We practiced pulling into parking spaces and backing out. We spent about 3-4 hours in parking lots and then we graduated to quiet residential streets. On a recent Saturday, for example, I took our 15-year-old daughter driving in a nearby neighborhood where the traffic is thin and pedestrians are few. We simply drove around and around through the neighborhood for an hour. I made sure she understood how to approach and to handle stop signs, when to signal for a turn, how to maneuver around parked cars, and so on. Once she was confident in that environment, we moved to busier streets. Only recently has she begun to learn how to merge on and off of the highway, after about 10-12 hours of driving time under her belt.

3.     Think of the most difficult driving situations you encounter around town, and make sure to let your kid try those a few times before they strike off on their own. Yes, you don’t want to move too fast (see above). Wait until they’re truly ready. But don’t avoid tough situations out of fear. Is there a spot where a lot of major accidents happen? Give your kid a few chances to navigate it while you’re in the car to coach them through it. It is scary, and you need nerves of steel. But again, you want them to try it while you’re with them to provide instruction.

4.     As they become more confident and skilled, resist the urge to coach them constantly. They need to learn how to make decisions without us in the car. Sometimes that means we have to keep our mouths shut if they’re approaching a stop sign slightly too fast, or if they are clearly going to end up crooked in a parking space. As long as their mistakes aren’t going to result in a crash, give them some freedom to make small errors. With both of our daughters, I reached a point in their training where I had to resist the urge to tell them exactly when to hit the gas after stopping at an intersection. They had to learn how to gauge the distance and speed of oncoming traffic without my assistance.

5.     Forbid them to have their phone nearby while they’re driving. I take the phone away every time our daughter gets behind the wheel to practice. I want her to learn that she shouldn’t ever be looking at a screen while driving. Roughly a quarter of all accidents on the road are a result of distracted driving. When our oldest daughter turned 16, we made it clear that she was expected to put her phone in the glove compartment while she was driving. (By the way, that’s not bad advice for anybody; I’m astounded by the number of drivers I see staring at their phones while going 75 miles per hour on a busy highway).

6.     Last but not least, keep your cool if (when) they make a mistake. If you scream or freak out, they will lose confidence and be even more nervous and jittery the next time they get behind the wheel. Help them learn from their mistakes and near-misses, and then get them right back on the road. Even after they get their license, they will make mistakes that cost you time and money. It’s a virtual guarantee that your teenager will eventually get into a fender bender. That’s exactly why their insurance premiums are so high. One of our kids backed my car into one of our other cars. When I was a teenager, I ran my dad’s car under the back of a semi-truck. It happens. If a dinged bumper or a broken headlight is the worst that happens, count yourself blessed.

The goal of all driver training is to help teens become safe, proficient, and confident drivers. Hopefully the tips above will help you with that if you are a parent instructor. It is a great joy to know that your child has the freedom and ability to get where they need to go, and the confidence and proficiency to do so safely.

Client 138: You are Loved

If we could give only one thing to our clients besides a reliable car, it would be the belief that they are infinitely loved, not just by us, but far more importantly by their Father in Heaven. I have become convinced over 17 years of pastoral ministry and 5 years of leading OnRamp that the single most powerful belief to which we can cling is that our Creator genuinely loves us, not just as a group, but as individuals. He loves YOU. He favors YOU. He likes YOU. Not a little, but more than you can imagine. In a world full of pain and disappointment, this one truth changes everything.

Tasha (left) with her wonderful advocate JoAnn (middle).

We can see this in the life of our 138th client, a local single mom named Tasha. She used to be an addict, but has completely turned her life around through a faith-based treatment program that grounded her in the faithful love of God. She is now able to work, attend church and Bible study, care for her kids and grandkids, and even volunteer with her advocate agency, The Nest. They are the local addiction recovery ministry to whom OnRamp donated a Tahoe a year ago. As their director, JoAnn, proves, the love of God can transform a former addict into someone who saves addicts! JoAnn helped Tasha recover from addiction and, when she saw how lack of a vehicle hamstrung Tasha’s employment and volunteer opportunities, brought her to us. We are so grateful for the opportunity to bless Tasha with a great car of her own!

The board and staff of OnRamp believe so deeply in the transformative power of God’s love that we recently created this short video for all of our clients to watch, and hope it will be a blessing to you, too!

One quick reminder: we are still collecting items for our upcoming silent auction fund raiser next month. Ideas that come to mind are gift certificates to fun restaurants, places and experiences, athletic-signed paraphernalia, fun household items, jewelry type stuff, credits/certificates for services, AirBNB stays, etc. Please reach out to me at blakej@onramptx.org if your business or family would be interested in donating to this cause to help us serve many more families in need of transportation in our community!

Create a Legacy

Our ability to share God’s grace through the gift of reliable transportation largely depends on the funds in our bank account. The love of God we share is free to all; but cars are not. Every time we say “yes” to a new, hard-working client, it costs OnRamp at least $10,000 to purchase, repair, and maintain their vehicle for the upcoming year. Therefore, we are constantly in need of additional funds to partner with more local families on their road to long-term self-sufficiency.

To this end, we wanted to share a few ideas that may be of interest to some of you as you consider how to use your resources to build a legacy of support for this ministry. If any of these ideas interest you, please contact our Operations Director, Stephanie Mason, at stephaniem@onramptx.org.

First, did you know that you can gift stock or mutual funds directly to OnRamp?  This is a great way to help us afford vehicles for upcoming clients.

Second, if you are 73 years of age or older and receive mandatory distributions from your Individual Retirement Account (IRA) which you do not need, you can donate a portion of these required minimum distributions (RMD) directly to OnRamp. Charitable gifts made directly from your IRA to a qualified charity will count towards your RMD for the year and will not count as income in regards to taxes. We recommend that you consult with your personal legal, tax and/or financial advisors before funding your gift.

Third, you can create an endowment for OnRamp so that your giving continues indefinitely. As an example, if you currently donate $1,000 per year to OnRamp, you can make provisions in your estate plans to leave a gift of $25,000 to OnRamp in an interest bearing account as an endowment. At a 4% annual distribution, that equals $1,000 of support to OnRamp every year! The endowment will continue to grow and bless this ministry in perpetuity. This endowment from your estate plans can be in the form of a bequest under a will or could be a beneficiary designation of a retirement account or life insurance policy. You should be sure to consult with your tax and legal advisors to give you guidance unique to your personal circumstances.

Fourth, if you would rather leave a simple one-time gift from your estate to OnRamp, here is sample language that you are welcome to share with your attorney or estate planner:

"After taking care of all expenses, debts and other provisions, I give, devise and bequeath _____ percent of the rest and residue [or $______] to OnRamp, Inc., a Texas-based charitable organization, Tax ID# 81-5240446, P.O. Box 9897, College Station, TX 77842. This gift shall be unrestricted as to its use, unless directed by a separate gift agreement."

Again, if any of these ideas interest you, please contact Stephanie Mason at stephaniem@onramptx.org.

Celebrating our Vehicle Team

Whenever we say “Yes” to a new client, here are just a few of the steps our dedicated volunteer Vehicle Team must complete:

  • Assess the client’s vehicle needs, taking into account the number of adults and children in the car, car seats, roads traveled, and annual mileage.

  • Scour online advertisements throughout both Texas and Colorado (a no-salt state, so we love buying from here!) to find a suitable vehicle, sorting through dozens of scams and lemons to find a few good candidates.

  • Research VIN history and personally inspect each suitable candidate - two or three vehicles per client on average to find a good one.

  • Complete paperwork and arrange shipping if not a Brazos Valley car.

  • Arrange with Christian Brothers Automotive to do a full post-purchase inspection and state inspection, and then complete all repairs and overdue maintenance (avg of $1-2000 per vehicle).

  • Transport repaired car to Discount Tire for new tires (most used cars need tires).

  • Transport to George’s glass if windshield broken (very common on used cars).

  • Clean and detail the vehicle inside and out.

  • Perform a final check and test drive.

  • Deliver the vehicle to the client at the tax office.

  • Make sure all receipts and paperwork are properly accounted for.

That is a LOT for volunteers to do… and yet they do it for dozens of clients per year. And at the top of our list is our first car-guy to volunteer, who has been faithfully serving OnRamp for the last four years… Rami Cerone! We are so grateful for Rami’s hard work, dedication, and skill that we awarded him this plaque earlier this year. Rami has his hands in all aspects of the vehicle team, coordinating purchases, donations, and leading the sale process when we need to sell a vehicle that’s not a good fit for an OnRamp client. Through his sales expertise, he has made tens of thousands of dollars for OnRamp that we’ve put back in to buying Corollas and Camrys by the boatload. We are so thankful to him!

We also want to thank his sweet wife Erin and daughter Rossi who frequently help him transport, clean, and deliver vehicles for our clients. They are a family that serves together. Thank you, Cerone’s!

If you’d like to thank Rami in person, you can catch him almost any time his downtown Bryan restaurant, Caffé Capri, is open. Let him know your appreciation for his service to the clients of OnRamp.

Also, we want to give a huge thanks to Joe Dewolf who Rami recruited to our team. Joe is currently our primary used car buyer and single-candidly gets all of the vehicles for us that we purchase out of Colorado. We could not have grown to this level without Joe.

And finally, and as always, we want to give a huge thanks to Jeremy Smith, Darrel Fikes, and everyone at Christian Brothers Automotive who makes this whole system work! We are grateful to partner with you guys.

Four Single Moms Gifted Toyotas

"Motherhood is the ultimate call to sacrifice.” Kenyan artist Wangechi Mutu

Life demands much of single mothers. As the sole parents and breadwinners, these moms shoulder heavy burdens that would stagger many of us. And yet they typically do so with far less resources than the average family.

Look at these sobering statistics from our community. The average median income for all residents of Brazos county grew from $35,407 in 2010 to $49,362 in 2021, which is a 15% increase adjusted for inflation. In contrast, the average median income for single moms in our county only grew from $21,838 in 2010 to $24,962 in 2021, which is actually a 10% DECREASE adjusted for inflation. So not only did they start with far less in 2010, but their average wages have actually decreased in purchasing power over the last eleven years. Their challenges are growing as their income shrinks! Even if these women work doggedly, many still need assistance to thrive, as do their kids.

This is where OnRamp comes in. Over the past ten days, we have been blessed to give reliable cars to four such single moms in our community. We’re protecting their privacy, but here’s a few details we can share with their permission.

Client 134 is a single mom who works two jobs and cares for an adult son suffering from a debilitating illness. His treatments require monthly trips to Temple, Waco, and Houston. She has been a faithful participant in the TAMU Reach Project for the last few years and has availed herself of all the help they offer.

Client 135 is a single mom of a child with special needs. They live in the country far from public transportation or walkable streets. When her previous vehicle broke down, her employment and access to essential services were threatened.

Client 136 is a single mother of 2 children who also takes care of a friend’s 4 children and works overnight in the medical field. She’s hardworking and determined to provide for her kids and improve her trajectory.

Client 137 is a single mom of three who works for our local school district. Her previous vehicle was so unreliable it would simply shut down in the middle of the street, endangering her and her kids. When her cousin, with whom she was very close, died recently, she was unable to attend the funeral because she lacked transportation.

What unites these four women, other than being hard working single moms, is that after paying bills, rent, groceries, and medical bills, there is simply no money left to afford a reliable car, especially in today’s inflated market. These moms need a hand-up to continue providing for their kids!

OnRamp gives thanks today for the privilege of partnering with these four hard-working women in their journey towards generational self-sufficiency. With the help of our generous donors, we were able to donate three Corollas and one Camry to this great group of moms and their children. If you’d like to help us continue serving single moms in the Brazos Valley, please consider donating funds or vehicles to our ministry by visiting www.onramptx.org/give.

International Women's Day: Celebration and Prayer

Today, March 8th, marks International Women’s Day, and OnRamp has incredible women to celebrate! The vast majority of our staff, volunteers, advocates, and clients are women, and all of them have accomplished things that deserve recognition. But there are two that we want to spotlight today.

Jill Butler and her husband David, with her OnRamp plaque for faithful service.

First, we recognize our faithful Client Care Committee volunteer Jill Butler! Jill has served OnRamp’s clients for the last two years. She focuses on relationship building and ongoing care, ensuring that our clients feel loved and valued. When she’s not volunteering with OnRamp, Jill is pursuing her LPC professional counseling license and raising her two children with her husband, David. We are so grateful for Jill’s selfless love to our OnRamp family that we recently awarded her this plaque in recognition of her service.

Second, we want to recognize our fearless leader, Catherine Cole, who has served as a Board Member and now Board Chair. Dr Cole’s area of research is actually on the value of women in leadership roles. As her paper, “Women in International Public Leadership” (here) concluded, “as the number of women increased within governments, levels of perceived corruption decreased, national investment in healthcare increased, and foreign direct investment increased.” Bringing women to the table is not only the moral thing to do, it improves organizational performance, both public and private. Having women speak into OnRamp’s leadership decisions, especially when over half of our constituency are female, is vital to making the best decisions. We are so grateful for Catherine’s wisdom!

Catherine handing over keys to a Honda Odyssey to the leaders of Our Daughters’ House in Brenham, a charity that supports young women in need.

Sadly, there are many governments and cultures where women are excluded from leadership and service. Today, we grieve over the loss of freedom women are experiencing in Afghanistan under the Taliban’s resurgent rule. So much progress that was made in women’s education, health, and empowerment has been stripped away. OnRamp has been privileged to serve a half dozen Afghan refugees over the last two years. These are resilient, hard-working, hopeful people. They deserve so much more. So on this International Women’s Day, please join us in praying for freedom and justice for women in Afghanistan and anywhere else in the world where they are oppressed or sidelined.

What Car Would Jesus Drive?

I may actually be one of the few people on earth qualified to answer this absolutely pointless question. Time to put my Automotive Engineering undergrad and Masters of Theology to work! Assuming the Son of God walked the earth today and decided he didn’t feel like walking anymore, what vehicle would he buy based on the characteristics most people would ascribe to this man?

First off, not a Honda Accord despite what the popular meme might claim! I owned an Accord for three years. It was a great transportation appliance, basically a Maytag on wheels. But it was not nearly special enough for a guy like Jesus. We need something a bit less common for him.

He was a carpenter before the Savior-of-the-world thing.

The Bible tells us Jesus’ father was a carpenter. In a world where sons followed fathers professionally, that means Jesus needs a vehicle that can haul stuff. Goodbye Yaris, Smart Car, and Lotus Elise. You’re just not going to fit our woodworking needs.

Comically tiny trunk in otherwise brilliant Lotus Elise. Definitely not fitting 2x4’s and carpenter’s tools in there.

He was a genuinely good guy.

1938: Adolf Hitler laying the foundation stone of the first Volkswagen factory… right in front of Ferdinand Porsche. The Jewish Messiah’s probably going to avoid their showrooms.

I’ve yet to meet someone who would argue with Jesus’ goodness. His divinity, resurrection, miracles… that’s debated. But not that he was a genuinely good person. “Love your enemies.” “Turn the other cheek.” “Do unto others as you’d have them do unto you.” He followed his own advice so well that later scripture calls him “holy, innocent, undefiled” (Hebrews 7:26). How does that influence car buying? Simply put, I can’t imagine Jesus choosing to buy a brand built by Nazis. Goodbye Volkswagen. You were founded by Adolf Hitler, who personally commissioned your ubiquitous “People’s Car,” the Beetle. And speaking of the Beetle, Hitler had Ferdinand Porsche design it. Yes, that Porsche. So, goodbye to my favorite brand as well. Now let’s be clear. I’d happily drive a VW hot hatch and almost anything Porsche has ever built. But I’m not Jesus. He took squeaky clean to a whole new level. I just can’t see him buying from a company whose founders posed for pics with the Fuhrer.

He was humble before it was cool.

Six centuries before Jesus’ birth, Isaiah prophesied of Him, “He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to him, nothing in his appearance that we should desire him” (Isaiah 53:2). Towards the end of His life He told His followers, “the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve” (Matthew 20:28). In other words, the Son of God did not take on human flesh to drive a Bugatti! Time to cross every prestige brand and flashy ride from our list. Aston, McLaren, Bentley, Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar… goodbye.

Gold-wrapped Bugatti Veyron – the antithesis of what Jesus would drive.

He was exciting to be around.

We’re told that thousands of men, women, and children sat for days in the hot sun to listen to Jesus teach and to watch him work miracles. And they did that right next to the Sea of Galilee, where they could have swum, walked the beach, or done whatever else passed for “fun” in the first Century. That tells me Jesus was probably not a Prius man. This guy literally turned the world upside down and launched a revolution that toppled an empire. In my opinion, there would be no boring cars in Jesus’ garage.

So what we need is something practical, Nazi-free, exciting to drive, and yet without an ounce of glitz. Ah… Jesus drove a sleeper! Of course, he did. ‘Power without Prestige’ would have been the plaque hanging on the wall of his garage. But what kind of sleeper for the king of kings?

Here’s my Top 3 Picks for Jesus’ Ride… not that He needs my advice.

1. 2003 Volvo V70R

I bet Jesus would have loved a fast wagon like this one. All-wheel drive to negotiate dusty Judean backroads. Fits five adults comfortably. 73 cubic feet of carpentry cargo. 296 horsepower to clip 60 in under six seconds with the six-speed manual (there’s no way the greatest man who ever lived would drive an automatic, none; of this I am certain). Brembo brakes and Ohlins dampers to apex every corner. And it’s a Volvo. Of course, the savior of the world is going to drive the safest car brand in the world.

2. 1958 Ford F-150

This classic farm truck is not a particularly exciting vehicle to drive. But it is humble, simple, rugged, and you can repair it on the side of the road. The disciples would have to ride in the bed, but it would still beat walking the desert roads of Judea. I don’t know why, but of all the available farm trucks out there, I picture the Son of God piloting this 1958 Ford F-100. It’s just so honest. And maybe He’d swap in a 5-liter Coyote to make it a bit more interesting. That’s what I’d do.

3. Toyota Sienna “Overlander”

For reliability, fuel efficiency, and number of passengers, it’s hard to beat a Toyota Sienna. Yes, they are the height of uncool, but to most of his contemporaries, so was Jesus. Plus, they have those miraculous sliding doors that open at the press of a button when you’re carrying twelve baskets of miracle left-overs. But how will a minivan survive the Judean wilderness? “Overland” it! Take an AWD version, add chassis stiffeners, upgrade and lift the suspension, bolt on off-road wheels and tires and you’ve got a go-anywhere minivan that can haul lumber AND disciples! This one even has a pop-up tent on top since the Son of Man had “has nowhere to lay His head” (Matthew 8:20). If Jesus was minivan-averse, He could get even better performance without sacrificing too much room with a classic Toyota 4-Runner or Land Cruiser.

Thanks for reading. As always, comments, likes, and contrary opinions are welcome and appreciated. But please don’t flame me about the VW and Porsche comments. It’s all meant in jest as I happen to own an old Porsche as my project car! This post is just for fun!