• How Justice Facility Dogs Support our CASA Facility

  • Feb 10 2023
  • Length: 55 mins
  • Podcast

How Justice Facility Dogs Support our CASA Facility  By  cover art

How Justice Facility Dogs Support our CASA Facility

  • Summary

  • Chaves County CASA has a long-standing relationship with Assistance Dogs of The West. This non-profit organization builds successful working partnerships between facilities, handlers, and justice facility dogs at CASA and many other justice facilities. Linda Milanese, the CEO, and President, alongside Jill Felice, Founder, and Executive VP, join the team at CASA to share the process of selecting justice facility dogs and handlers. They also provide several examples of places ADW dogs create positive outcomes for those that interact with them. 

    Learn more about Assistance Dogs Of The West on their wesbite here: https://assistancedogsofthewest.org/

    Episode Highlights 

    1:00 - Meet Linda and Jill from Assistance Dogs Of The West 

    4:00 - Focusing on placing facility and peer support dogs

    5:30 - The mission and purpose of putting dogs in facilities

    7:30 - Determining temperament of justice facility dogs

    10:30 - Identifying and placing dogs in the best jobs 

    12:15 - Linda shares a bit about the scientists and science behind breeding and training

    14:00 - Finding the right temperament 

     15:00 - The role genetics and history play in breeding dogs

    18:00 - Jill gives an example of mannerisms in a family line

    19:45 - What happens to a justice facility dog when the handler or agency needs to change

    22:00 - Pairing the person and the dog together

    24:00 - Training handlers to meet the justice facility dogs' needs

    27:30 - What happens when a handler and dog are not an ideal team

     30:00 - Owner self-training for training companion and service dogs

    32:00 - The difference between a justice facility dog and a therapy dog

    34:00 - How a variety of dogs supported the Uvalde school shooting families

    35:00 - Using aberrant conditioning vs. punishment 

    38:00 - Pulse Night Club shooting victims supported by facility dogs 

    42:15 - Assistance Dogs of the West stance on punishment training

    44:45 - Why it hurts people experiencing trauma to interact with punishment training

    50:00 - Cute dog stories Jill and Linda have seen in the field 

    54:00 - Kevin's hope for receiving a justice facility dog in the future

     

    Learn more about our guests: 

    LINDA MILANESI - President/CEO, Assistance Dogs of the West

    In 2006, Linda Milanesi began her career with Assistance Dogs of the West when she apprenticed to become an instructor/trainer in the school programs. She served as Vice President of the ADW board until 2011, when she was named ADW’s Executive Director. Linda oversees a whole-systems team approach for ADW. She supervises and manages policy and procedure, advocacy, board relations, finance, development and grant-writing. She is responsible for creating and nurturing donor and foundation relations and earned income projects. She is a lead in developing the Facility Dog programs including Courthouse, Crisis Response and Peer Support canines. She regularly presents nationally, and statewide on the benefits of utilizing highly-skilled canines in partnership with professionals in the
    investigation and prosecution of crime and the mitigation of the trauma associated with the
    process—both for victims and first responders. She produces the annual graduation ceremony
    celebrating the dogs that have been successfully trained for client placements and facility placements.  Prior to Santa Fe, she lived in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and worked in Philadelphia and New York City.

     

    JILL FELICE - Founder/Senior Vice President, Assistance Dogs of the West

    Assistance Dogs of the West (ADW) Founder and Senior Vice President Jill Felice
    graduated from Bergen University in 1994 and founded ADW in 1995 placing dogs for
    people with mobility disabilities and medical conditions. In 2006, Jill began breeding and
    training dogs specifically for work with victims of crime. In 2014, she placed the first
    Crisis Response Canines in the Office of Special Victims Assistance at FBI headquarters,
    where the dogs are part of a rapid deployment team for mass causality incidents. Very
    specialized breeding for health and temperament is at the forefront of the ADW canines
    in training, ensuring the qualities necessary for Courthouse Facility, Peer Support and
    Crisis Response Canines. Jill is a proponent of relationship-based training techniques,
    which utilize positive reinforcement, to build positive working partnerships between
    handlers and their working dogs. Jill oversees the trainers, puppy whelping, client
    interviews and final client-dog matches.

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