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Local resident receives guide dog
By: Courtesy of Guide Dogs for the Blind Inc.
Description: Guide dog proves great service
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Posted by editor
Mon Apr 3, 2006 15:35:39 PDT
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Diane Deutsch of Tehachapi graduated recently with a yellow labrador retriever guide dog named Aki at her side. The duo completed a month of intensive training at Guide Dogs for the Blind, Inc. in San Rafael. Graduation took place on Saturday, March 11, at the 11-acre campus located 20 miles north of San Francisco.
Diane is a retired literacy teacher. She taught reading for many years to inmates at a correctional facility. In her spare time, she enjoys cooking and spending time with her three adult children.
Graduates of Guide Dogs harness the incredible power of the human-animal bond. These remarkable canines offer warm companionship, safe mobility and foster confidence and independence.
During the course of training, skilled guide dogs and their new partners learn to negotiate stairways, elevators, overhead obstacles, crowded sidewalks and busy streets. The dogs are trained to avoid distractions and disobey commands to cross a street if traffic is approaching.
Guide Dogs for the Blind is more than a school. It is a community dedicated to providing people who are blind with the opportunity to experience what a powerful partnership with a guide dog can mean – not only mobility, but quality of life. It is the only school in the country that has built its program around both the functional and personal aspects of a guide dog partnership. The school is committed to matching each person with the right dog, developing a personalized training program matched to each person’s lifestyle and providing unprecedented support services to establish a true lifelong partnership.
Guide Dogs for the Blind has produced more than 10,000 trained guides for graduates across the United states and Canada since 1942. There are currently more than 2,000 people with vision loss enjoying the comfort, companionship and safety of these exceptional dogs.
The school also ensures that every one of its dogs is well cared for during its life, whether or not it becomes a guide. Students are offered air transportation, room and board, training, equipment, financial assistance for veterinary care and support services free of charge. Guide Dogs for the Blind offers extensive post-graduation support, which underlines their lifelong commitment to the continuing success of each graduating team. Upon the retirement of a guide, the graduate is invited to return for training with a new guide dog.
Guide Dogs for the Blind is a non-profit organization supported entirely by private, charitable donations and the time and talents of dedicated staff members, puppy raisers and other volunteers working together toward a common mission.
For more information, contact Guide Dogs for the Blind at their national headquarters at P. O. Box 151200, San Rafael CA 94915 or call (800) 295-4050 or visit www.guidedogs.com/.