BOYDS, Maryland – Viewers of the Warrior Canine Connection puppy cam on Explore.org will now notice a substantially enhanced viewing experience when they log-on. The site, which launched almost six years ago as the first of its kind, has added five upgraded high-definition cameras and increased perspectives and angles so WCC supporters and fans can follow the development of these service dogs in training.
Warrior Canine Connection is a nonprofit organization that utilizes therapeutic service dog training to help Veterans reconnect with life, their families, their communities and each other. Since its early beginning, Explore.org and the Annenberg Foundation have been strong partners in WCC’s work. This July, WCC will celebrate six years of having its popular puppy cam on the Explore.org platform. The foundation has also provided philanthropic support to fuel WCC’s mission, most recently with a generous gift of $125,000.
“Explore.org has been a tremendous partner to WCC, and we are honored that they’ve made this investment in our Healing Quarters,” said Rick Yount, founder and executive director, Warrior Canine Connection. “We are so appreciative of their commitment and support to raising awareness about the critical role service dogs play in the lives of our Veterans and for their help in delivering the healing power of service dogs to our viewers.”
The upgraded viewing platform includes three cameras inside the WCC Puppy Enrichment Center, including the whelping room, which features new puppies — Laura’s Legacy Litter — comprised of two female and two male Labrador Retrievers who were born on Sunday, April 8. The indoor cameras also feature the puppy petting pen, where volunteers can be seen helping to socialize the pups, and the night room, where puppies spend their evenings. The two outdoor cameras showcase the open-air puppy pen and the corral are where the larger dogs can often be found at play.
When the WCC site first launched on Dog Bless You on Explore.org, the livestream was a novel idea, but since then millions of people have tuned in to watch the development and adorable antics of 14 WCC litters.
The WCC Puppy Cam has been featured on national and local news outlets, as well as technology platforms at Veterans Administration hospitals across the country. The WCC Puppy Cam is even credited with inspiring the development of a devout group of followers called the Extreme Puppy Watchers (also known as the EPWs) who number in the thousands from all over the U.S. and who volunteer their time and services to the organization.
For more information, please contact Beth Bourgeois, WCC, at beth.bourgeois@warriorcanineconnection.org or 719-216-3206.
About Warrior Canine Connection
Warrior Canine Connection is a pioneering organization that utilizes a Mission Based Trauma Recovery model to empower returning combat Veterans who have sustained physical and psychological wounds while in service to our country. Based on the concept of Warriors helping Warriors, WCC’s therapeutic service dog training program is designed to mitigate symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and other challenges, while giving injured combat Veterans a sense of purpose, help in the reintegration back into their families and communities, and promote consideration of a potential career path as a service dog trainer. For more information, visit warriorcanineconnection.org.
About Explore.org
Explore.org is a philanthropic media organization founded by Charles Annenberg Weingarten, Director and Vice President of the Annenberg Foundation and graduate of the USC School of Cinema. Founded in 2004, Explore.org began as a photojournalism and documentary organization, focusing on diverse topics, championing the selfless acts of others, and inspiring lifelong learning.
Explore.org is home to 300 original films, some of which broadcast weekly on KCET/Link TV and have been featured at film festivals around the world. In 2008, Mr. Weingarten created Dog Bless You, a community that hosts nearly 3 million Facebook fans and takes the lead in funding the training of service dogs for U.S. war veterans. Dog Bless you celebrates the role that animals play as guardians of the human spirit, and the community celebrates their pets by participating in monthly photo contests. Dog Bless You partners with other nonprofit organizations to pair service dogs and war veterans who cope with PTSD.
Described by Jane Goodall as the future of zoos, Mr. Weingarten created Pearls of the Planet, a collection of live HD cameras which now comprise the largest live nature network in the world. The cameras utilize technology that allows people to connect up close and personal with nature and participate as citizen science pioneers. All of Mr. Weingarten’s projects are philanthropic and dedicated to improving humanity. Explore.org’s tagline is, “Never Stop Learning.”
Warrior Canine Connection Launches Program in Baltimore City Veterans Treatment Court
Service Dog Training Program to Help Wounded Veterans Avoid Incarceration
BOYDS, Md. – Warrior Canine Connection announces it is offering a new program to support the Veterans Treatment Court in Baltimore. Working with District Court in Baltimore City, the WCC program utilizes service dog training as a community service option for Veterans involved with the criminal justice system.
“The Veterans Treatment Court Program has had a positive impact on those involved in our program at our California sites, and we are honored to provide the same service to Veterans involved in the District Court in Baltimore City in hopes that we will see similar outcomes,” said Rick Yount, founder and executive director, Warrior Canine Connection. “The VTC program offers a productive and rewarding community service option for Veterans involved in the legal system and is, at the same time, helping to produce much-needed service dogs for their fellow Veterans.”
The Baltimore-based program is in addition to WCC’s current VTC programs in Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties in California. Many Veterans have received value from the mental health benefits associated with the canine-focused community service program. The VTC program utilizes WCC’s Mission Based Trauma Recovery (MBTR) model in which Veterans work to overcome the stress of combat by training service dogs for their fellow Veterans.
As an extension of WCC’s programming, partner organization Assistance Dogs of the West has offered WCC’s training model in the Veterans Court Program, Second Judicial District, Santa Fe, New Mexico since 2014. Judges Stan Whitaker and Christina Argyres of the SJDC Veterans Court Program have enthusiastically embraced the dogs as part of their program and the tremendously positive effects they have on the lives of Veteran participants.
Veterans involved in the courts are often required to complete a set number of community service hours. The dog training — offered through WCC — is one of the options on the docket. Training takes place on a weekly basis at the courthouse and Veterans can participate within the WCC program for the duration of their VTC commitment.
“The service dog training opportunity brought to our Veterans Treatment Court by Warrior Canine Connection has been something our Veterans can really relate to,” said Judge Halee Weinstein, Baltimore City Veterans Treatment Court. “One of the most important aspects of our VTC program is re-instilling the sense of duty to the community, and training dogs that will go on to assist other Veterans helps rebuild their connection with the entire community of Veterans.”
The program teaches Veterans how to work with service dogs in training which helps not only to meet their legal community service obligations but also fulfills a time-honored military tradition of Warriors helping Warriors. In doing so, the Veteran can also benefit from skills development in communication, confidence building, accountability, emotional regulation and patience to promote an act of service while receiving a therapeutic benefit.
Starting in 2008, states and counties in collaboration with the Department of Veterans Affairs created a system of Veterans Treatment Courts throughout the nation. To date, these VTCs have used treatment to help rehabilitate more than 10,000 Veterans with mental health and/or substance dependence and legal issues. Despite these efforts, tens of thousands of Veterans continue to need similar assistance.
For some post-9/11 Veterans, symptoms of post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury can contribute to their misconduct, such as increased risk-taking, self-medication and other behavioral issues that result in their subsequent, and sometimes repeated, involvement in the criminal justice system.
The WCC VTC Program was developed and implemented thanks in part to a 2017 grant provided by the Bob Woodruff Foundation. The Foundation had provided a previous 2016 grant to WCC to oversee a feasibility plan to use service dogs as a community service option.
For more information, please contact Beth Bourgeois, Warrior Canine Connection, at beth.bourgeois@warriorcanineconnection.org or 719-216-3206.
Warrior Canine Connection to offer Service Dog Training at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health in Denver Area
New Partnership to Help Expand Breadth of Program Interventions for Veteran Patients
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 31, 2018
AURORA, Colorado – Today, Warrior Canine Connection announced that it is partnering with the Marcus Institute for Brain Health at the Anschutz Medical Campus to offer service dog training as part of its roster of MIBH’s interventions available to its patients.
This new Aurora-based location marks 10 program sites where WCC administers its Mission Based Trauma Recovery model, whereby Warriors recovering from post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries help train service dogs for their fellow Veterans.
“We are proud to partner with the Marcus Institute for Brain Health and thrilled to expand our programming to the Colorado Front Range area,” said Rick Yount, founder and executive director, Warrior Canine Connection. “MIBH is a premier service provider for our nation’s Veterans, and we consider it a privilege to offer service dog training as part of its extensive program offerings to help our Warriors heal and grow.”
The Marcus Institute for Brain Health (MIBH) provides specialty care for military Veterans and retired athletes struggling with mild to moderate traumatic brain injuries (including concussion) and co-morbid psychological health issues. MIBH offers comprehensive care for the physical, emotional and cognitive changes that can accompany trauma to the head. Emphasis is placed on detailed evaluation and treatment; each patient is treated as an individual with a personalized treatment plan.
“The Marcus Institute for Brain Health is delighted to have Warrior Canine Connection join us in partnership here on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus in caring for military Veterans with TBI and psychological health conditions,” said Dr. James Kelly, executive director, MIBH. “WCC’s Ann Spader and one-year-old Labrador Retriever “Joseph” have brought unique opportunities for health and wellness to our interdisciplinary treatment program. We are certain that involving our patients in service dog training adds a dimension of holistic well-being and social engagement that WCC has become renown for introducing to the care of those with the invisible wounds of war.”
Each service dog training session runs for a total of four weeks. “Joseph,” the resident service dog in training, will soon be accompanied by a second dog that will be added to the program in the coming weeks.
For more information, please contact Beth Bourgeois, Warrior Canine Connection, at beth.bourgeois@warriorcanineconnection.org or 719-216-3206.
About Warrior Canine Connection
Warrior Canine Connection is a pioneering organization that utilizes a Mission Based Trauma Recovery model to empower returning combat Veterans who have sustained physical and psychological wounds while in service to our country. Based on the concept of Warriors helping Warriors, WCC’s therapeutic service dog training program is designed to mitigate symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and other challenges, while giving injured combat Veterans a sense of purpose, help in the reintegration back into their families and communities, and promote consideration of a potential career path as a service dog trainer. For more information, visit warriorcanineconnection.org.
About Marcus Institute for Brain Health
At the MIBH, our complete focus is to help you get better. People struggling with the persistent effects of mild to moderate brain injuries see changes in emotions, physical functioning, and thinking. These changes directly affect everyday life and impact how we see ourselves as well as relationships with family, friends, and co-workers. At the MIBH, we believe in wellness for you and for your loved ones. We encourage your family to participate in your care. Health and wellness extend to all parts of your life, and we believe that with the right tools we can help make this your reality.
For many years, people struggled alone with mild to moderate brain injuries. Concussions have been misunderstood as “just a bump on the head.” Today we know differently. There are clear changes in brain functioning after injury and for many people there are long-term changes. This is the reality for military Veterans who may also struggle with PTS, depression, and anxiety. Our retired athletes are faced with the possibility of sport-related brain changes. We know that treatment for TBIs and changes in psychological health requires a sophisticated healthcare team. The MIBH exists to fill this critical need for comprehensive, customized care.
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Warrior Canine Connection Receives Grant from Veterans United Foundation for Service Dog Training Program
BOYDS, Md. – Warrior Canine Connection (WCC) is pleased to announce it has received a $20,000 grant from Veterans United Foundation. The grant will support WCC’s mission of helping Veterans who suffer from post-traumatic stress by pairing them with service dogs in training.
WCC uses a Mission Based Trauma Recovery (MBTR) therapy model designed as an intervention for combat Veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress. The MBTR model provides Veterans with a sense of purpose while they are receiving treatment at Department of Defense and Department of Veterans Affairs medical facilities. It is designed to remediate their symptoms of combat stress, such as isolation, emotional numbness and re-experiencing events from their combat days. MBTR also harnesses the healing power of the Warrior Ethos in which Warriors train service dogs for fellow Veterans; through the process, they learn to focus on the dogs and their mission to help another Veteran.
“We are honored to have been selected to receive the support of the Veterans United Foundation,” said Rick Yount, founder and executive director, Warrior Canine Connection. “Veterans United Foundation is a first-class organization and its support of Veterans is tried and true; Warrior Canine Connection is privileged to have their commitment to help us fulfill our mission of serving our heroes.”
Veterans United Foundation is the philanthropic division of Veterans United Home Loans. Incepted in November 2011, the foundation is funded from employee contributions that are matched dollar-for-dollar by the company. More than 90 percent of Veterans United employees contribute at least one-percent of their paychecks to the foundation. Since its founding, the foundation has raised more than $40 million. Employees also take an active role in referring possible needs to the foundation and showing the community support through volunteer work.
“Our employees are passionate about enhancing lives,” said Greg Steinhoff, executive director of Veterans United Foundation. “Our foundation is happy to support efforts that have a lasting impact on our Veterans.”
For more information, please contact Beth Bourgeois, Warrior Canine Connection, at beth.bourgeois@warriorcanineconnection.org or 719-216-3206.
About Warrior Canine Connection
Warrior Canine Connection is a pioneering organization that utilizes a Mission Based Trauma Recovery model to empower returning combat Veterans who have sustained physical and psychological wounds while in service to our country. Based on the concept of Warriors helping Warriors, WCC’s therapeutic service dog training program is designed to mitigate symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and other challenges, while giving injured combat Veterans a sense of purpose, help in reintegrating back into their families and communities, and a potential career path as a service dog trainer. For more information, visit www.warriorcanineconnection.org.
About Veterans United Foundation
Veterans United Foundation is supported entirely by the employees of Veterans United Home Loans. The foundation is committed to enhancing the lives of Veterans and military families nationwide, by supporting nonprofit organizations that strengthen local communities and honor the sacrifices of those who served our country. It also provides individual donations to current and former military members in need. More than $40 million has been raised since its founding in 2011. Learn more at EnhanceLives.com.
New Litter of Puppies Make Debut on New & Improved Warrior Canine Connection Puppy Cam on Explore.org
BOYDS, Maryland – Viewers of the Warrior Canine Connection puppy cam on Explore.org will now notice a substantially enhanced viewing experience when they log-on. The site, which launched almost six years ago as the first of its kind, has added five upgraded high-definition cameras and increased perspectives and angles so WCC supporters and fans can follow the development of these service dogs in training.
Warrior Canine Connection is a nonprofit organization that utilizes therapeutic service dog training to help Veterans reconnect with life, their families, their communities and each other. Since its early beginning, Explore.org and the Annenberg Foundation have been strong partners in WCC’s work. This July, WCC will celebrate six years of having its popular puppy cam on the Explore.org platform. The foundation has also provided philanthropic support to fuel WCC’s mission, most recently with a generous gift of $125,000.
“Explore.org has been a tremendous partner to WCC, and we are honored that they’ve made this investment in our Healing Quarters,” said Rick Yount, founder and executive director, Warrior Canine Connection. “We are so appreciative of their commitment and support to raising awareness about the critical role service dogs play in the lives of our Veterans and for their help in delivering the healing power of service dogs to our viewers.”
The upgraded viewing platform includes three cameras inside the WCC Puppy Enrichment Center, including the whelping room, which features new puppies — Laura’s Legacy Litter — comprised of two female and two male Labrador Retrievers who were born on Sunday, April 8. The indoor cameras also feature the puppy petting pen, where volunteers can be seen helping to socialize the pups, and the night room, where puppies spend their evenings. The two outdoor cameras showcase the open-air puppy pen and the corral are where the larger dogs can often be found at play.
When the WCC site first launched on Dog Bless You on Explore.org, the livestream was a novel idea, but since then millions of people have tuned in to watch the development and adorable antics of 14 WCC litters.
The WCC Puppy Cam has been featured on national and local news outlets, as well as technology platforms at Veterans Administration hospitals across the country. The WCC Puppy Cam is even credited with inspiring the development of a devout group of followers called the Extreme Puppy Watchers (also known as the EPWs) who number in the thousands from all over the U.S. and who volunteer their time and services to the organization.
For more information, please contact Beth Bourgeois, WCC, at beth.bourgeois@warriorcanineconnection.org or 719-216-3206.
About Warrior Canine Connection
Warrior Canine Connection is a pioneering organization that utilizes a Mission Based Trauma Recovery model to empower returning combat Veterans who have sustained physical and psychological wounds while in service to our country. Based on the concept of Warriors helping Warriors, WCC’s therapeutic service dog training program is designed to mitigate symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and other challenges, while giving injured combat Veterans a sense of purpose, help in the reintegration back into their families and communities, and promote consideration of a potential career path as a service dog trainer. For more information, visit warriorcanineconnection.org.
About Explore.org
Explore.org is a philanthropic media organization founded by Charles Annenberg Weingarten, Director and Vice President of the Annenberg Foundation and graduate of the USC School of Cinema. Founded in 2004, Explore.org began as a photojournalism and documentary organization, focusing on diverse topics, championing the selfless acts of others, and inspiring lifelong learning.
Explore.org is home to 300 original films, some of which broadcast weekly on KCET/Link TV and have been featured at film festivals around the world. In 2008, Mr. Weingarten created Dog Bless You, a community that hosts nearly 3 million Facebook fans and takes the lead in funding the training of service dogs for U.S. war veterans. Dog Bless you celebrates the role that animals play as guardians of the human spirit, and the community celebrates their pets by participating in monthly photo contests. Dog Bless You partners with other nonprofit organizations to pair service dogs and war veterans who cope with PTSD.
Described by Jane Goodall as the future of zoos, Mr. Weingarten created Pearls of the Planet, a collection of live HD cameras which now comprise the largest live nature network in the world. The cameras utilize technology that allows people to connect up close and personal with nature and participate as citizen science pioneers. All of Mr. Weingarten’s projects are philanthropic and dedicated to improving humanity. Explore.org’s tagline is, “Never Stop Learning.”
Associated General Contractors of America Undertakes Centennial Project: Renovation of Historic Barn at WCC’s Healing Quarters
January 5, 2018 – The Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) is celebrating 100 years by undertaking an historic project to help our Nation’s wounded Veterans heal from the invisible wounds of war. As its centennial project, AGC is focusing on the renovation of an historic barn at the Warrior Canine Connection’s Healing Quarters in Boyds, Maryland. The project will create much-needed space for WCC’s training programs and provide overnight accommodations for Veterans visiting WCC for advanced training with service dogs. Read all about the project in AGC’s magazine, Constructor.
Wounded warriors receive service dogs in ceremony
October 7, 2017 – Germantown, MD (LocalDVM.com) –For the past five years, the Warrior Canine Connection has worked to prove that sometimes the best medicine has four legs and a wet nose. After six months of waiting, former army infantry officer Dan Berschinski was officially given the leash of his service dog Buntz. Read full article and watch clip here.
From puppies to alums: WCC celebrates recent graduating class of service dogs
October 9, 2017 – Germantown, MD (Meredith Tibbets, Stars and Stripes) — They waited for months, and finally it was time for the veterans to receive the newest addition to their families.
More than twenty therapy and service dogs “graduated” from the Warrior Canine Connection on Saturday at Germantown, near the group’s headquarters in Boyds. After training for more than two years while living with their “puppy parents,” all the dogs are now with the veterans they were trained to specifically help. Read the full article.
Position Description: Managing Director
Managing Director
Reporting to the Founder and Executive Director of WCC, the Managing Director will be responsible for all internal operations and will have the following responsibilities:
Program Operational Leadership:
External Relationship Development:
Strategic Plan Implementation:
Key Qualifications
As a prerequisite, the successful candidate must believe in the core values of WCC and be driven by the mission. The candidate should demonstrate a passion for breaking new ground to lead social change. Beyond that, we are ideally seeking a candidate that has proven experience in scaling a multi-site organization and a demonstrated ability to both lead and build the capabilities of a driven, bright, diverse team.
The successful candidate will most likely have had management experience with a non-profit organization. As noted, this is an organization driven by the values of its people, so experience in managing a “values-driven” organization will be highly prized. Additional requirements are:
To apply for this position, please email a cover letter and resume to: hr@warriorcanineconnection.org
Please put your last name, first name and “Managing Director” in the subject line. This position is currently open and we will accept applications until the position is filled. Serious applicants with the required experience will be contacted for interviews.
Radio Interview: American Heroes Network
December 27, 2016 – Rick Yount, WCC Executive Director, was the guest during the one-hour interview about post-traumatic stress, the effectiveness of animal-assisted therapy, and the Warrior Canine Connection program. Listen to the interview here.
Licking their wounds: Trained dogs assist, comfort wounded Airmen
March 29, 2016 – Brookeville, Md. (AFNS) — Staff Sgt. Ryan Garrison embraces his service dog Luke at their home in Glen Burnie, Md. Read the article.