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K9s for Warriors to expand facility, service dog program to all-era veterans

A hard-working K9s for Warriors service dog-in-training gets a good ear scratch from a new friend during National Make a Friend Day. (K9s for Warriors/Florida Times-Union/TNS)

Since 2011, K9s for Warriors has paired companion dogs with post-9/11 veterans to help with post-traumatic stress disorder and other issues.

To date, the Ponte Vedra-based nonprofit has placed trained therapy canines with more than 700 vets.

But studies show that suicide disproportionately affects older veterans, former military members who previously had not been eligible for K9s for Warriors’ services.

On Wednesday, the organization announced that will soon change.

K9s for Warriors will begin accepting service dog applications from any veteran experiencing service-connected symptoms of PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and/or military sexual trauma.

According to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ 2020 National Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report, veterans aged 55-74 accounted for virtually as many suicides (2,587) in 2018 as those aged 18-34 (874) and 35-54 (1,730) combined.

“The Campus for K9 Operations will fundamentally change both the volume and demographic of the veteran population we’re able to pair with a service dog,” Rory Diamond, CEO of K9s for Warriors, said in a news release. “This facility also will reduce the time our future Warriors have to wait between being accepted into the program and receiving their service dog, which can be life-altering to veterans experiencing severe symptoms of PTSD, including suicidal ideations.”

The facility’s expansion will be made possible through a new “mega kennel” that broke ground this week not far from the current training facility in Nocatee. It will be able to house more than 150 service dogs-in-training.

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(c) 2021 The St. Augustine Record

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