From The PET Cart Dream:

The dream of a Personal Energy Transportation (PET) cart began in 1995 with Larry Hills, a missionary in Zaire, Africa. It’s said that Larry knew of 5,000 people in his region who could not walk. Each one weighed on his heart. Yet the person who spurred Larry to action was a mother he encountered just off a beaten foot path. The women was pulling herself along on her belly with a baby strapped securely to her back. This sight broke Larry’s heart and the next time the missionary returned home, he shared with the Church the sobering scene he had witnessed. After hearing the need, a minister contacted a friend gifted in engineering and asked if he might be able to help. Together, the three men designed the first PET cart and launched what would become known as Mobility Worldwide. “That’s how it got started. A missionary asking, a minister responding, and an engineer helping. From there, affiliates were added one by one,” Peter Verhey of the IA-Leighton affiliate says.
Mr. Verhey began his own journey with Mobility Worldwide in 2011 by helping out the nearest affiliate located in Columbus, MO. At the time, Pete was looking forward to retirement and keeping busy by cutting the boards used on the cart frame and sending them to Columbus. When a friend heard of Mobility Worldwide and approached Pete about registering a full-fledged affiliate near their hometown, Pete wasn’t excited about the idea. He thought, “No, I don’t wanna do that. I’ll give God some of my time but I’m not going to give Him that much.” Yet by the end of the day, both men felt that God was leading them to start an affiliate of the organization in Leighton, Iowa.

The 100th PET cart made in Leighton, IA
In 1991, the Verhey’s bought an old schoolhouse built in the 1960’s with dreams of what the site might one day become. Time passed and the couple laid those dreams to rest in deciding to sell the schoolhouse. Much to their chagrin, a property sale never finalized but the building fell into disrepair – a reminder of wasted time and resources. Two decades after the original purchase, the schoolhouse was redeemed to accommodate a PET cart assembly line and the needs of a growing organization.
Volunteers from the community stirred themselves to support the “PET Cart Project” both physically and financially. Mrs. Verhey fondly shares, “Pete was known in the community so people trusted his judgment about things. [People of the community] trusted Pete with their money so they were willing to trust him with this project.”
As a three-wheeled hand-cranked wheelchair, the unadorned design of the PET boasts functionality as its greatest strength. It is powered manually by the recipient with easy-to-use hand-cranks, breaking systems, and unpoppable tires. The PET cart, called a “little machine” in Haitian Creole, is bringing mobility and dignity to the disabled and often forgotten members of society. Carol closes with this, “What I see PET carts doing for Haiti, aside from giving people mobility, hope, and confidence, is giving us the opportunity to share Jesus with them. It’s not about mobility – it’s about eternity.”