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Return to Virginia Business - September 2002

Boating for those impaired

What do you do if you love the water, but are paralyzed and can’t enjoy boating? Gary Melton may have the answer.

Wanting to help the mobility impaired, Melton began to design wheelchair-accessible yachts. Last year, Melton helped found Intracoastal Yachts in Virginia Beach with Paul A. Galloway to custom-make boats for those with special requirements. “Many of the boats that you see on the market aren’t close to accessible,” he says. “They’re multi-level floor plans and the doors aren’t wide enough.”

Melton ought to know. In 1981, Melton, then 21, was in a car accident that left him paralyzed and in a wheelchair. He had his own auto-detailing business and was in a quandary of what to do next. At that time, his only knowledge of someone in a wheelchair was Raymond Burr of “Ironside” fame. “I had this vision of someone always driving me around in a bread truck,” Melton recalls.

After his accident, doctors predicted that he would spend between six and nine months in the hospital rehabilitating. But a determined Melton was home in five and a half weeks. Not one to wallow in self-pity, Melton decided he could parlay his current business into an opportunity to help other people who were mobility impaired. “I felt I had to do something,” he says.

He converted his business into Paradept Services Inc. of Virginia Beach. His experience in van conversions and automobile restoration led him to design and build transportation for individuals with mobility impairments. Since Melton already had an auto shop, the transition was easy.

Still, Melton thought there was more to be done and he started thinking of moving beyond land vehicles to the sea.
So, in 1994, he founded Paradocks Inc., a nonprofit organization that offers complimentary rides on his boats to those with mobility impairments. Paradocks is funded by Melton and his other businesses, including Paradept Services and Intracoastal Yachts.

Melton’s boats offer a flat floor throughout, an accessible head with a five-foot turning radius, a modified galley and an elevator to the top deck. While designed for full mobility, Melton observes that his boats are “not just the handicap boat.” Paradocks works closely with retirement communities and nursing homes to add boating to the lives of the elderly. All passengers coming aboard are asked to bring friends, family and caregivers. “Imagine the dignity it gives back to say, ‘I’m taking you boating this weekend,’” says Melton.

- Nicole McMullin

Return to Virginia Business - September 2002


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