Article about the New Leash on Life Program USA. The Pennsylvania Prison Society is one of the organizations partnering with the New Leash on Life staff to help save shelter dogs and teach prisoners skills they can use when they are released from prison.
1. First Class Graduates from New Leash on Life USA
By Mindy Bogue
New Leash on Life USA graduated the first class of its pilot program on
October 24. Four at-risk shelter dogs were saved, and six inmates learned
how to train and care for dogs while gaining other essential job skills. After
the eleven-week session, four of the six inmates paroled were still working
with animals: three interning at animal shelters and the fourth receiving
further instruction from a dog trainer.
The goal is to save shelter dogs by teaching participants to train the them,
enhancing the dogs’ adoptability. They live with their inmate trainers, who
have sessions with professional dog trainers, animal behaviorists, and
veterinary technicians. The Philadelphia Prison System selects the prisoners
who participate; those selected cannot have a record of animal, sex, or child
abuse.
New Leash on Life USA has partnered with The Pennsylvania Prison Society
and JEVS Human Services to provide job readiness and life skills training for
the participants. The prisoners attend workshops that address the challenges
confronting many former offenders — frustration, lack of self-confidence, and
the attraction of old ways of surviving.
New Leash on Life USA founder and director, Marian Marchese, says, “[The
prisoners] got internships because people from shelters were impressed by
how good they were with the dogs after just eleven weeks.” She also praises
Prison Commissioner Louis Giorla and Warden Karen Bryan, who were
instrumental in starting this program in the Philadelphia Prison System on
State Road.
There were many big-name speakers at the graduation —such as former
Governor Ed Rendell — but the dogs were hit of the ceremony. All six inmate
graduates received early parole, and all four dogs were adopted into loving
homes; both inmates and dogs get another chance for survival and
acceptance.