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Jim O.
August 7th, 2003, 06:54 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&ncid=519&e=2&u=/ap/20030807/ap_on_re_us/pen_pals_2




By BILL BASKERVILL, Associated Press Writer

STATE FARM, Va. - Ignoring a fire hydrant with steely resolve, four abandoned dogs saved from death and transformed into pillars of the canine community wagged, panted and drooled as they graduated from a prison prep school.


After eight weeks of instruction for five to six hours a day, Alley, Shaggy, Tasha and Terry heeled, sat, lay down and stayed Wednesday to the delight of about 75 people looking on within the razor wire-topped fences of the James River Correctional Center.


Inmates here have turned scores of dogs into lovable, well-mannered pets adopted nationwide.


The Pen Pals program, begun in April 2001, is designed to lower the euthanasia rate at public pounds, provide job skills to inmates and teach prisoners respect for life.


Of the 60 dogs that have started the James River program, all but one have graduated, said Catherine Leach, director of Pen Pals for Save Our Shelters, an animal protection group that funds and operates the program.


"He was nervous, he was barking, maybe a little too high strung for living in prison," said Leach. Like the other dogs, however, he still found a home on the outside.


Tasha, a 2-year-old purebred Siberian husky, was the 10th dog trained by senior inmate trainer Anthony Orange.


"She was a little stubborn the first two or three weeks," said Orange. "She would bolt." On graduation day, Tasha was on her best behavior, complying with all commands and even ignoring two pieces of hot dog placed on the back of her paws until Orange gave her permission to eat.


Steve Marcus of Richmond has adopted Tasha as a companion for his other female husky.


"It's incredible what they've done with them," said Marcus. "I think it's the greatest program I've ever heard of for saving dogs from euthanasia."


Shaggy, of uncertain lineage, wound up in prison after his owner was shot to death, said inmate trainer Jay Earney. The 2-year-old flawlessly performed all the commands — blindfolded.


"It takes a special dog to do it. It takes a confident dog to do it," explained Earney.


Participating inmates receive no compensation but provide training that could cost as much as $1,000, Leach said. The inmates must be on honor status to get into the program, which is led by professional trainer Pat Lacy.


A fire hydrant served as an unintended centerpiece for the graduation ceremony on the prison lawn, but the dogs showed no interest in it.


Roger Walz, the prison operations officer, insisted it was only a coincidence that the dogs were lined up behind the hydrant, part of the prison fire safety system. "This is the best place we have to do this," he said.


The ceremony was filmed by the "Animal Planet" cable channel, which plans to air a 1-hour program on Pen Pals early next year.


The program was expanded this summer to the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women and the Botetourt Correctional Unit. Later this month, a Pen Pals program will start at Buckingham Correctional Center, Leach said.


The program has a down side for the inmate trainers, however.

"They live with you. They sleep at the foot of your bed," said trainer Wes Adkins. "It's difficult to see them leave."

___

On the Web: Save Our Shelters: www.saveourshelters.com

James River Correctional Center: www.vadoc.state.va.us/facilities/institutions/jamesriver.htm%und_o ff(%)

muppetcow
August 7th, 2003, 07:54 PM
That's cool. The humane society where I live had a program like that, but ran out of funding. It was good for the dogs, good for the inmates, and good for the people who adopted the well-trained dogs.

Ours was with juveniles who had done some really terrible things--like burn down houses, etc. One of the first juveniles to train a dog said it was an incredible experience b/c no one had ever loved him "just because" before.

mouse
August 7th, 2003, 09:15 PM
I've also read about a similar program where inmates socialize and train dogs who will live with and assist people with disabilities. I think it's a win/win situation, and probably does a great deal towards helping rehabilitate inmates.

lucycat
August 7th, 2003, 10:24 PM
There was a show about this on Animal Planet already. I can't remember what it was called.

sandiemac
August 10th, 2003, 01:18 PM
WTG! i've read of these programs before. they do wonders to raise the esteem of inmates and the dogs benefit too...

carnelian
August 10th, 2003, 01:23 PM
Great program - thanks for sharing, Jim!