View Full Version : Have a tissue handy


Daveswife
06-30-2002, 02:50 PM
This information is forwarded by Virginia CURE

P.O. Box 19453, Alexandria, VA 22320-0453
http://www.vacure.org

(Please send email to Virginia CURE if you wish to be removed from this list.)



SAM DEAN/THE ROANOKE TIMES

"We've been looking forward to this since we first heard about it," John Bumgarner said as he played with Buddy, a golden retriever brought to him by Saint Francis of Assisi Service Dog Foundation.

Friday, June 28, 2002

'I'm supposed to be one of those hard, tough guys, but ... I was touched by this'

Pups give prisoners a renewed purpose Program pairs prisoners and pups

For a year, inmates will raise the puppies, which will then be professionally trained to serve people with disabilities. THE ROANOKE TIMES

By LAURENCE HAMMACK
THE ROANOKE TIMES



BLAND - Six inmates stood at the edge of the prison yard, waiting like expectant fathers.

A white van pulled up to the gate of Bland Correctional Center. Karen Hough stepped out. "I'm so excited I could cry," she said.

Hough swung open the van doors and unloaded her cargo - four puppies, still sleepy-eyed from the two-hour drive from Roanoke.

She handed Buddy, an 8-week-old golden retriever, to prison counselor Emma Eaton.

After the dogs cleared security (even cute puppies are searched behind the collar for drugs at Bland), Eaton approached the group of inmates and handed squirming puppy to John Bumgarner.

"Here's your baby," Eaton said.

Bumgarner cradled the puppy in his tattooed arms. Buddy licked him on the mouth, not the least concerned that his new master was serving 51 years for multiple counts of burglary and grand larceny.

"Bless his little heart," Bumgarner said.

Thus began the Prison Pup Program. The program, the first of its kind in Virginia, matches carefully selected inmates with puppies that are later used as service dogs for people with disabilities, performing tasks such as opening doors and turning on a light switch.

Buddy, Jazz, Sky and Magic arrived at Bland Tuesday afternoon. They will spend the next year at the medium-security prison getting trained by Bumgarner and five other inmates before they are placed with professional trainers from the Saint Francis of Assisi Service Dog Foundation in Roanoke.

Hough, who is training director at Saint Francis, said puppies raised by inmates in other states seem to learn faster. Not only do the inmates have lots of spare time, but they also crave the companionship a dog can provide behind bars.

"I'm supposed to be one of those hard, tough guys, but I'm telling you, I was touched by this," said Steve Martin, a barrel-chested man from Norfolk who is in for burglary and grand larceny.

"It's just like a little baby that's been given to you to care for," he said as he got acquainted with Magic, Buddy's sister. "You know you're going to have to wake up at night and take care of it."

The dogs will live with the inmates in their cells, which look more like dormitory rooms in the Honor Building, which is reserved for Bland's most well-behaved inmates.

Under the supervision of Hough, the inmates will house train - actually, cell train - the dogs and teach them basic commands such as come, sit, lie and stay. Hough, who has been planning the program for more than a year, met with the inmates some time ago and gave them dog training manuals.

The following week, she returned to Bland and asked if the inmates had looked at the book. They had all read it cover to cover. Twice. "This is a good sign," Hough said to herself.

A study in New York found that inmates who are given dogs showed improved self-esteem and better behavior behind bars, according to Marie Suthers-McCabe, a veterinary professor at Virginia Tech who specializes in human-animal interaction.

"It's really a good character-building exercise because it's an opportunity to give back to society," she said.

Suthers-McCabe plans to conduct a similar study at Bland, where James Dorton was so excited about having a dog for the first time in 18 years that he made a sign and hung it on his cell door. "Welcome Home Sky," it read.

Dorton, a 56-year-old convicted murderer from Wise County, was as excited as a schoolboy as he led the puppy into his tiny room.

"It's not much, but it's home," he told the dog. He then dropped his large frame to the floor and stroked Sky's back. "Isn't he beautiful?"

Larry Jarvis, the warden at Bland, hasn't heard any complaints from people upset about puppies being sent to prison. The prison screened more than a dozen inmates who applied to find the most ardent dog lovers while eliminating anyone with an animal cruelty conviction.

"They will probably get treated better in here than they will in some settings," Jarvis said of the dogs.

The way Dorton sees it, what he did 18 years ago is not important. "It's not about me, really," he said. "It's about the dogs and the program and the handicapped people. ... You feel like you're doing something productive instead of just wasting away."

The inmates know it will be hard to say goodbye to their pets next summer.

"We're going to get attached to them, we understand that," said Bumgarner, who grew up around dogs on a farm before recording 19 convictions in Washington County. "But we know we've got to cut them loose, because they've got a better purpose to go to."

The program, funded by a grant from the Carilion Foundation, may have a new batch of puppies for the inmates next year, Hough said. Volunteer dog trainers are hard to find, she said, which is why the Saint Francis foundation approached the Department of Corrections last year with the prison pups proposal.

Meanwhile, Bumgarner will savor his every moment with Buddy.

"It puts you back in touch with what it means to be a human being," he said. Lying on his cell floor next to his new companion, Bumgarner watched as Buddy's tail thumped the tile floor.

danielle
06-30-2002, 03:55 PM
What a beautiful story and a wonderful program!

Valerie
06-30-2002, 07:41 PM
Ahhhhhhh! I did need a tissue.

Sandy
06-30-2002, 07:57 PM
That's such a wonderful program....:)

BillnDenise
06-30-2002, 08:05 PM
That's so beautiful and touching.

sherri13
06-30-2002, 08:33 PM
THERE NEED TO BE MORE PROGRAMS LIKE THESE-ALL OVER, IN EVERY PRISON, IN EVERY STATE

Daveswife
07-01-2002, 04:43 PM
I agree Sherri!!

Shortie
07-01-2002, 05:45 PM
I am glad to see that this program is spreading I have heard of it once and thought it was such a great idea.. Glad to see it up and running again>>

tek4real
07-13-2002, 07:50 PM
Oh, how sweet..........

and such a humanitarian act by all concerned
Jerry

sherri13
07-15-2002, 07:15 AM
DON'T PEOPLE REALIZE THAT ALLWOING INMATES TO ENGAGE IN PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITIES SUCH AS THIS REDUCES INMATES ENGAGEMENT IN DESTRUCTIVE ACTIVITIES?? DUH! COMMON SENSE.

Shortie
07-15-2002, 08:13 PM
I THINK THEY KNOW IT BUT I THINK THEY GET OFF ON BEING ABLE TO PUNISH THEM.. IT IS JUST SICK..

Budwoman
07-23-2002, 08:07 AM
SHORTIE:

I AM BEGINNING TO BELIEVE YOU ARE ABSSOLUTELY CORRECT.... I FIGHT HARD EACH AND EVERY DAY TO NOT BE BITTER AT THE DOC.... 38 SPECIAL HAS HELPED ME DO THAT, BUT EACH AND EVERY DAY SOMETHING ELSE HAPPENS THAT MAKES ME BITTER AGAIN.

DOGS AND ANIMALS ARE THE ANSWER FOR INMATES..... IT WILL KEEP THEM IN PERSPECTIVE... IT SHOWS THEM THAT THEY CAN STILL LOVE AND CARE.


MAY WE COME TO THAT POINT SOME DAY.

DONNA

Steve&kids
07-23-2002, 09:13 AM
Thats so cool!Steve&kids

Menally-Ill
07-23-2002, 02:26 PM
Here's a thought;

Train inmates WHILE IN PRISON to be veterinary assistants. (They clean cages, hold scared animals, monitor breathing during surgery etc.)

Animals provide unconditional love to inmates, and help them rediscover their onw nurturance capacities.

Then after parole, they can work...

Oh wait, no one asked me for my dumb opinions... (certainly no one in the government!)

Menolly

BillnDenise
07-23-2002, 04:02 PM
I saw a show about inmates raising puppies until they were old enough to be trained for blind people. The inmates were emotional about giving the dogs up. The program worked so well that they received some more puppies. I think that was a good thing because animals do give unconditional love. The inmates also learned responsibility.

B-Ray
07-23-2002, 04:54 PM
Yes, it is true and Maryland is one State that is doing the thing with inmates and animals. At least at a female prison.

BillnDenise
07-23-2002, 06:18 PM
It's wonderful for Maryland to have a program like that. This was a male prison on the show. I think for men to show such strong emotion for an animal is very touching.

Valerie
07-23-2002, 07:31 PM
I saw a movie about this also, and it was a womens prison,probably what B rays talking about. It was supposed to be a true movie. I can't remember the name of it , but it was amovie worth seeing.

38special
07-23-2002, 07:51 PM
Ms. Daveswife-ccc:
Good post and congratulation to the prisoners and their dogs. The Warden is right, the dogs will receive excellent care.
Thank you for posting............38 Special...................

snowdancer
08-09-2002, 04:13 PM
What a fantastic story. Certainly they should initiate this program in more locations. It benefits not only the inmates but the community as well. Thank you for sharing this!

Hugs,
Jodi

lorraine dennis
08-13-2002, 08:37 PM
never give up hope prayer changes things keep your head high. love lorraine los angeles calif

RandomActs
09-25-2002, 07:47 AM
How could we expect anything from life without love? Without love, given and received, we have nothing. Love is God's greatest gift to us.

JacksGirl
10-19-2002, 03:39 AM
Tissue was definately needed here. What an awesome program. More state should look in to it.!

Sharon

Amelia
10-19-2002, 10:28 AM
I think if they had programs like this in every prison in every state the prisons wouldn't be so crowded. The prisoners would learn how to take responsiblity for themselves and someone (or animal) else. TEaches them to love and respect life and also gives them the good feeling that doing something good for someone else gives you-they are training dogs that will help disabled people--they are learning to make positive contributions to society and gaining self-esteem and unconditonal love in the process! What a great program!