Ford F-150 Lightning pickup saves the day for elderly man stranded in wheelchair

A police department in central California received a call on Monday afternoon about an elderly man stranded in his electric wheelchair in front of the Auto Zone auto parts store, according to the local chief.

“On arrival, it was determined that the chair’s battery needed a charge,” Atwater Police Chief Michael Salvador wrote in a Facebook post.

And that’s where the Ford F-150 Lightning enters the picture.

The police chief titled the news release: “New Electric Pickups Save The Day.”

The police in Atwater, which is about 160 miles east of San Francisco and named for a wheat farmer, have two all-electric pickup trucks because of a grant provided to the city by the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District. The region is known for high rates of asthma and other ailments related to air quality.

“These vehicles, assigned to the Code Enforcement Unit, are equipped with the ability to transfer power from the vehicle’s battery drive chain, using a feature called pro power onboard, to other battery operated or electric devices,” the Facebook post said. “This capability was used in this case to assist the stranded person by charging the electric wheelchair enough to make it operational once he was delivered to his residence.”

The Facebook update received 204 thumbs up and heart emojis.

Larry Farren posted on that Atwater Police Facebook page, “Great service and good rescue.”

The Atwater Police Department, in Merced County, California, used its Ford F-150 Lightning to assist a man in a wheelchair whose battery had died on Monday, Aug. 7, 2023.

Salvador said in a statement: “With temperatures over 100 degrees, it was important to get this wheelchair operational and get the stranded person out of the heat. These new vehicles have provided the department with a host of new capabilities that have yet to be fully explored.”

The chief wrote, “These trucks are the first in what the department hopes is a transformation of our fleet to alternative fuel vehicles that lower emissions, fuel, and maintenance costs.”

‘Really cool’

On Thursday, Salvador told the Detroit Free Press that he writes the news releases himself and he’s just really proud of how his team handled assisting a man in need.

“It was really, really cool,” he said. “I mean, we’re glad we were able to help this guy out. We charged up his wheelchair and then drove the man home. It was so hot,” Salvador said. “We (just) took possession of two brand spankin’ new Ford F-150 Lightning special service vehicles from Ford. We ordered them last year, used an air pollution reduction incentive grant for public agencies to help offset the cost. Then we waited a year for these pickup trucks.”