I am going to prison -with Paws in Stripes
Shortly before the Buxton puppy mill seizure, I was contacted by Susan Britt at the Animal Refuge League to help out with the Paws in Stripes program at the Windham Correctional Facility.
The program has been in existence for just over 1 year and it has been a success for both the shelter dogs and the inmates. At this time they are expanding the training portion of the program and the inmates will be working with me 1x a week with the goal of the shelter dogs passing the AKC Canine Good Citizen test. This will help to make the dogs more adoptable while better utilizing the inmates training time.
Our plans were put on hold for the last six months or so, while the shelter worked tirelessly taking care of the Buxton dogs as well as two other puppy mills that were shut down.
We are now back on track and today was my second official meeting, and the first with a prison representative. My next step, is a four hour orientation at the prison, and then we will be good to go. I have been given permission to blog it. It should be noted that no tax dollars fund this program.
Paws in Stipes was featured on 207. Click here to watch the great clip! Just give it a minute to get to the prison segment.
You can read more about the Paws in Stripes program here on the Portland Press Herald and here on the ARL web site.
As the official tester dog, Finney will get to come to.
This blog wishes Susan Britt, former director of the ARL, the very best in her new job. We were all lucky to have you here! Paws in Stripes was one of the many programs that Susan directed, and she is already sorely missed.
I am with the organization, NEADS.ORG and am the weekend puppy raiser (WPR) for Frannie, a 6 month old black lab puppy. During the week Frannie resides and is trained at MCI Framingham, the MA women's correction institution. About every other weekend I pick up Frannie and bring her to Maine with me and my own dog, Benji.For training for example we walk along streets with light traffic, visit other people, visit parking lots, etc. An independent film maker did a documentary entitled Prison Pups with the NEADS group. It's worth viewing from both the puppy point of view and the inmate point of view.
Posted by
Lynne YeamansFebruary 26, 2008 06:37 PM