OUR MISSION is to enable people with disabilities to gain greater independence and mobility through the use of specially educated dogs.

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ECADemy™ Therapeutic Findings

During the summer of 2011, one of the agencies that contract ECAD’s services conducted an independent survey of their at-risk youth involved in ECAD’s Service Dog Education Program. 

Below are the some of the results:                               

Because of my participation in the program…

Agree/Strongly Agree

I gained confidence in my ability to perform tasks successfully

93%

I learned how to better cooperate with others

96.5%

My ability to be patient with others has increased

83%

I learned to work in a team atmosphere

95%

I learned to take accountability for my actions

95%

My grades have improved

85.5%

I am less likely to get into fights with others

75%

I think it is important to help others

96.5%

Compiled by Chloe Goldstein, CV Volunteer and Adelphi University, Gordon F. Derner, Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Ph.D. Candidate.

By The Week Staff | June 30, 2011 Publication The Week

A golden retriever named Rose has gone where no dog in New York has gone before: The courthouse witness stand. Last week, the 11-year-old service pooch took to the stand to comfort a sexual abuse victim during her testimony. Rose is just one of a number of dogs being used for such purposes around the country. 

Meet Milano, Hyde Park's first four-legged school staff member

Nina Schutzman, Poughkeepsie Journal Published 7:25 a.m. ET July 9, 2018 | Updated 11:22 a.m. ET July 9, 2018

An elementary school in the Hyde Park Central School District will welcome its first four-legged "staff member"
this year.

Milano, a two-year-old golden retriever/Labrador mix, is a certified facility dog through Educated Canines
Assisting with Disabilities (ECAD).

Milano will use his skills to help Violet Avenue Elementary School students struggling with a multitude of issues.
"He's so smart and still has a touch of playful, and so kind and calm," said Deanna Gonzalez, principal of Violet
Avenue. "We're really excited to introduce him to the kids." READ THE FULL ARTICLE


CANINE SERVICE

Story and photographs by Mary Sue Iarocci

For disabled veteran Nicholas Montijil, going out in public used to be a nightmare.
It was hard for the 26-year-old Marine Corps veteran from Milwaukee, whose military service included a combat tour in Afghanistan, to predict what would trigger symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). READ MORE


Two companions share tenacity, affection, a busy life

By Kevin Riordan November 13, 2014 3:01 AM

I'm smitten with Doc. Instantly. Utterly. "It's hard not to love her," says Sydney Kershner, who understands. Doc is a service dog, although calling her that seems a bit like describing Kershner solely as "a paraplegic." Even accurate labels can't do justice to the nuances of individuals, human or canine. READ MORE


By Helping a Girl Testify at a Rape Trial, a Dog Ignites a Legal Debate

By  Published: August 8, 2011 Publication: NY Times 

POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — Rosie, the first judicially approved courtroom dog in New York, was in the witness box here nuzzling a 15-year-old girl who was testifying that her father had raped and impregnated her. Rosie sat by the teenager’s feet. At particularly bad moments, she leaned in.  READ MORE


Dog in New York Court Takes the Witness Stand

By  June 19, 2011 Publishication ABC News via GOOD MORNING AMERICA

It was a tense moment in a Poughkeepsie courtroom when a 15-year-old girl who had been the victim of sexual abuse for four years was asked to point out the man who had violated her. The girl seemed to freeze. Then a furry snout and wet brown nose came up over the stand and nudged her arm. READ MORE


The moment I read the words JUST DO SOMETHING, I knew this was the perfect space in which to write about ECAD – Educated Canines Assisting with Disabilities – and its co-founders, Dale and Lu Picard. If ever there were two people who personify these three words, it is this husband and wife team who began ECAD twenty years ago this year in their two-car garage with a $15,000.00 grant from the Hartford CT Jaycees. With passion and total commitment they have developed an organization that is one of the most respected in its field, one that is known for placing expertly educated canines with the most difficult of cases, and for establishing Project HEAL™, a program designed specifically to meet the needs of Veterans.

‘Just do something’ is the thought Lu had when, in 1994, her dad suffered a stroke. and, unable to stand up much less walk by himself, he sank into a deep depression. Lu, who had always had a way with dogs, put the leash of the family dog, Juliet, into her dad’s hands. “Pull” she commanded Juliet. Within a short time, Juliet did just that and pulled Lu’s dad onto his feet. “Brace” came next. Lu’s dad and Juliet became a team, making it on their own, and his depression vanished. This is it, Lu thought: this is what I am here for. Dale’s background as a small business owner gave them the foundation they needed to start a company.

Their early success, and their reputation for the excellent education their Service Dogs received, brought them into contact with educators who were in the forefront of animal-human therapy. Again, the Picards thought, lets just do something that helps kids too. So, in 1997, with contracts from two alternative schools in Westchester County, they created the ECADemy Program. This program, part of the curriculum at participating schools, educates at-risk teens to educate the dogs in the eighty-nine commands they must know to be certified as Service or Assistance Dogs.

Dale, born and raised on a farm, knows how to use his hands and in quick order he turned his two-car garage into a kennel that could house a good many dogs. Thus was born the ECAD campus in Torrington CT and it is here that puppies still begin their “socialization” and basic training. It is also here that a well -attended annual Summer Camp takes place. The Picards began to purpose-breed their Golden Retrievers and Labradors in 1997 to insure that all the dogs placed would have the ideal temperament and work ethic necessary for a long career as a Service Dog. In 1997, they moved their main office to a facility on the campus in Children’s Village in Dobbs Ferry, NY. In 2009, ECAD inaugurated the Project HEAL™ Program, specifically for Veterans of the Armed Services, many who have, in addition to physical injuries and amputations, the invisible disabilities of PTSD and TBI.

Each year, ECAD places a minimum of seventeen Service Dogs, as well as Facility Dogs in Hospitals, and Courtroom Dogs, such as the famous Rosie, who work with DAs in sensitive cases involving minors. With a goal to place more Service Dogs each year, ECAD has embarked on a Capital Campaign and is actively seeking property with an existing structure that will enable ECAD’s instructors to educate many more SDiT than is possible now. It is anticipated that the ECADemy Program will continue.

With care, and an eye toward fiscal responsibility necessary for a non -profit organization, the Picards have seen to it that ECAD could expand successfully. Dale is the CEO and Lu Director of Programs.  The company has a staff of sixteen including instructors, kennel managers, marketing and fundraising personnel.  There is a roster of volunteers and home handlers. Two major fundraising events are held each year, one in Westchester, and one in Greenwich CT, with smaller events taking place throughout the year. ECAD has received a four star rating from Charity Navigator for the past four consecutive years. ECAD applies for and receives significant grants each year.

ECAD is indeed a dream come true for the Picards. What is most important is that through their work, their determination to just do something, their dream became a reality for the many people with disabilities who lead better lives because they have an ECAD Service Dog by their side.

It has been my privilege to be part of the ECAD team as a contributing writer to the quarterly newsletter for almost five years. Frankly, I’ve had a lot of fun.  But I also admit that I never fail to shed tears at every single graduation ceremony when I see the newly paired client and Service Dog, going home, together.  In this, I am joined by Dale and Lu Picard.

Just-Do-Something.org

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