Behavior Job-Alike Meeting: Keeping Pets in Homes by Providing Behavior Support to the Community

When:  Feb 24, 2022 from 09:00 AM to 10:00 AM (PT)
Associated with  Animal Welfare Professionals

During this meeting, learn from successful organizations about innovative and effective ways to provide behavior support and keep dogs and cats in homes and out of shelters. You’ll learn about Marin Humane and Paws for Life K9 Rescue’s programs and things like tips for getting started, building demand for service among the people you’re trying to reach, and how their programs operate. We’ll also talk about providing humane outcomes for situations where people can’t keep their pet and shelter intake clearly won’t help. 

Virginia Grainger found her way to positive reinforcement dog training like many people, because she had a challenging dog.  A consultation with Dawn Kovell quickly led to Virginia becoming a volunteer with Marin Humane in 2001.  Shortly thereafter she was training all the volunteers in the Behavior Department.  As time went on Virginia joined the staff and became an Instructor, Volunteer Coordinator, Evaluator, Consultant and a few more positions. Some of the many initials Virginia can put after her name include, B.A, J.D., CPDT-KA, CBA I & II. Virginia is the Marin Humane Shelter Behavior Manager and oversees canine evaluations, adoption dog consultations and is also teaching classes and doing private consultations. Virginia currently shares her home with her husband Jason and her 100% Marin Humane dog pack, which currently is made up of one Old English Sheepdog/German Shepherd mix, two Australian Shepherds and one 7 pound Chihuahua, who really runs the show. 

@Alex Tonner adopted a baby pit bull in 2009. She named him “Ziggy” because his tail zig-zagged; it was bent out of shape as the result of the abuse and neglect he had endured in a backyard before being rescued. Ziggy’s brother was missing part of his nose. As Alex watched Ziggy transform into a loyal and loving family member, she knew she could help other dogs like him find the homes they deserved. Alex spent many years volunteering for dog rescues, and along the way, she learned that the dogs could help people just as much as the people could help the dogs. She helped implement the “Paws For Life” prison program in 2014 at the California State Prison in Lancaster. The program was originally designed to be a simple dog-training program for incarcerated men in a federal penitentiary–the first of its kind at a maximum-security prison. Tonner and other volunteers would drive groups of dogs from overpopulated shelters in Los Angeles to the prison to get trained for 10 weeks at a time. The program transformed the lives of both the incarcerated dog-trainers and the dogs: the men prepared the dogs for adoption, and the dogs made life inside the prison a bit better. As the program’s reputation grew, “Paws for Life” became its own non-profit and its trainers became certified to train shelter dogs to serve as service animals for war veterans suffering from PTSD. Among her many accomplishments, Alex prides herself on the fact that so many men who have been through the Paws for Life prison program now have been released on account of their work with the shelter dogs. Paws For Life continues to grow apace, with six programs running in three different prisons. Through Paws For Life, she has also coordinated large animal rescue efforts following national disasters such as Hurricane Harvey. Through the organization, she hopes to change the ways animals are treated throughout the world. Ziggy has no idea, but many dogs and humans have better lives thanks to him and the love he inspired in Alex.


Jon Grobman
is the director of programs for Paws For Life K9 Rescue. In his role as director, Jon oversees the training programs inside 3 California state prisons and the People and Pet Innovation Center . Jon brings with him, 8 years of dog training experience, including training service dogs for military veterans with PTSD. Jon is an experienced teacher who has taught hundreds of group classes for all levels, many workshops and seminars. Jon is passionate about strengthening the human-animal bond and focuses heavily on observation to create enriching training programs for individual dogs. Jon studied Dog Emotion and Cognition at Duke University, and is an AKC Certified Evaluator. Jon’s hands-on experience overseeing the training of hundreds of dogs has played a valuable role in him gaining the necessary skills to oversee such a large program. In his spare time, Jon trains his Belgian Malinois who is fluent in more than 60 commands, and is often by Jon’s side and seminars and speaking engagements.

About HASS Behavior Job-Alike Groups:

Human Animal Support Services (HASS) facilitates Job-Alike Groups to provide colleagues with similar roles and responsibilities the opportunity to discuss common issues, ask questions, determine best practices, and share program ideas among their peers. These groups include collaborative sessions that enable participants to share resources and develop relationships across multiple districts and settings.

This meeting is for behavior support and collaboration and occurs once a month to discuss successful innovations, collaborate with others in the field, answer questions, and talk through complex behavior-related issues.

Register for the Zoom meeting here: https://maddies.fund/3np1A0t

You can catch up on previous Behavior Job-Alike Meetings on this thread and follow for more information on upcoming events: https://maddies.fund/behaviorjobalike

We encourage you to follow the discussion or ask questions to the group using this thread on Maddie's Pet Forum. Click the "Follow" button at the top right of the thread to be notified of new comments, recordings and to continue collaborating outside of our monthly meetings. 



#Behavior,TrainingandEnrichment​​​
Event Image
When:  Feb 24, 2022 from 09:00 AM to 10:00 AM (PT)
Associated with  Animal Welfare Professionals

Location

Online Instructions:
Url: http://maddies.fund/3np1A0t
Login: Use the link above to register and follow the same link at the time of the meeting to join the Zoom call.