the torch Fall 2015, Issue 3 | Page 6

FEATURE FEATURE Brierley Foundation helps bring assistance to people with disabilities Th e C a n i n e C o m pa n i o n s fo r Independence Baylor Scott & White Health – Kinkeade Campus has been made possible by several generous gifts, including a recent $2 million pledge from The Hal and Diane Brierley Foundation. The impact of these gifts is far-reaching. In an East Texas classroom last fall, a 5-year-old student began singing his “ABC’s” with his class. When his mother, who happened to be in the classroom observing that day, heard her son’s voice, she started crying. It was the first time she’d ever heard him vocalize anything other than a cry or scream. The little boy is one of Stacey Odom’s special-needs students. He has autism and had never said any words. Stacey said he began talking at about the same time that Fuchsia, a black lab, joined her classroom at Bullard Elementary, near Tyler, Texas. Fuchsia is an assistance dog that has special skills to help people with developmental and cognitive disabilities. Her training took place through a new joint program between Baylor Scott & White Health and Canine Companions for Independence®, the largest assistance-dog training organization in the world. “It was almost to the day that Fuchsia came into the classroom and this child started saying words,” Stacey said. “It gives me chills still. In recognition of the Brierley Foundation’s gift, as well as previous gifts to the facility, Baylor Health Care System Foundation will provide recognition on the two canine 6 “When I started the process of researching how assistance dogs can be used in special education classrooms, I thought, oh that’s really neat,” she said. “Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought that it could be this amazing.” – Stacey Odom, special education teacher kennel facilities located on the Kinkeade Campus. The campus will also include a Canine Center, which will house areas for grooming, a radiology lab, food-prep room and veterinary clinic. It will also have cabins where clients like Stacey will be able to stay while they’re going through a required 10-day class with their new assistance dog. Construction on the campus is nearing completion. It is expected to fully open in November. Plans for an opening ceremony are in the works. This is CCI’s first site in Texas and the first one to be affiliated with a health care system. This extension of care will allow Baylor and CCI to improve the quality of life for many people in the North Texas area who have a developmental or physical disability. Stacey said her experience with Fuchsia has been life changing. “When I started the process of researching how assistance dogs can be used in special education classrooms, I thought, oh that’s really neat,” she said. “Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought that it could be this amazing.” The average cost to breed and train each assistance dog is $50,000, and assistance dogs are provided free of charge to individuals. In order to provide this service to the community, the Foundation is seeking community support to cover capital and operating costs for the construction and maintenance of the Kinkeade Campus. To date, more than $5.7 million has been raised in support of this program. For more information on Canine Companions for Independence at Baylor Scott & White Health – Kinkeade Campus, please contact Sarah Burdi at 214.820.4721 or Sarah. [email protected].