A high-caliber gift for struggling reservation police officer

A Sycuan Tribal Reservation police service officer, Patrick Lauifi and his family have seen troubled times during the COVID-19 pandemic. He was furloughed for nearly eight months, his wife was cut down to part time employment, and his car to get to work broke down one too many times, making him take the trolley and buses to his job at the reservation from his home in Lemon Grove.

Caliber Collision and Allstate insurance se­lected Lauifi for an early Christmas present by presenting him with a completely refurbished 2015 Toyota 4Runner at Caliber’s Spring Valley location on Dec. 17, part of Calibers “Restoring You” community initiative.

Lauifi, a U.S. Army veteran, said his trouble began while living in El Cajon, and did not see a solution to his problem, but after spending thou­sands of dollars on his old car with no positive results, he is grateful that he was chosen. He shared this vehicle with his wife and teenage son. Back at work, Lauifi works 60-80 hours per week and makes around $32,000 gross annually. He said with the furlough, this gift gives his entire family the boost that was needed to continue to work and provide for his family.

“I am so excited. It is a great blessing for me, and it is going to make my life so much easier,” said Lauifi. “I had to walk to the trolley and then take a bus to work. There are thousands of people in my situation. It was a stressful situation for me, so I am just so grateful. The transit was horrible.”

David Adams, Caliber Collision regional direc­tor said especially during these times, this gift to Lauifi felt more impactful. He said Caliber started the program over four years ago looking for peo­ple in need of help, in particularly veterans and people that served in some form of service.

“Sometimes when they get out of the reserves, military, police department, sometimes it is not always the prettiest picture,” said Adams. “They end up struggling through their time back into the other world. It is a completely different life when they are being deployed and many times it is a big culture shock and change when they come back. They have had struggles and that is where Caliber has stepped in and recognized it.”

Adams said it goes through a screening process finding veterans that are struggling and in need and have either no transportation, walking miles and miles to work, or struggling financially.

“All they need sometimes is a care to get to work, so they can go to interviews, apply for a job and get something,” said Adams. “Many times, they have family, and it is heartbreaking because they can not take their family. No car, no car seats at all to do anything.”

He said Lauifi went through the process, ap­plied describing his situation. Lauifi was hand-picked by members of Caliber’s team. Adams said the gift would not be possible without the dona­tion of the car by Allstate.

“Allstate is a wonderful partner and really stepped up with this car,” he said. “This is a beau­ ty. Giving us the opportunity to fix up this beautiful car, I am so excited to share this with him. I think he is going to love it.”

Adams said they presented Lauifi with the car at its Spring Valley location because it was the nearest location to his home. He said the team that prepared the vehicle works at the Caliber Collision in Mira Mesa.

“They volunteered their time and expertise with no pay and just wanted to be a part of some­thing and give back to the com­munity,” he said.

Adams said that living in San Diego he knows the route Lauifi had to take every day to get to work.

“It can get a little scary,” he said. “Sometimes his family gets really scared by him hav­ing to take it back from work. I am just really excited to give this back to him, knowing that he is safe in a reliable vehicle. I am really happy for him.”

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