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The non-profit
organization, started by the heart of a caring German Shepherd, LADY
AMBER, and her protégé, RENEGADE. An organization
that is working to overcome the plight of the abandoned and homeless
companion animal by retraining them as Service and Therapy Animals for
the Disabled Community; plus Medical Care and Treatment for these
hard-working Canines and Felines. (Funded By Private Donations
Only) |
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Laws and policies
governing the rights of Service, Assistance, and
Therapy Animals throughout the world. Included are the laws and
policies of the various State in the United States; the ADA Law from
the Department of Justice; Airline Transportation Policies; Bus &
Railroad Policies; the policies of other forms of transportation;
public accommodations, etc. It is our intention to inform and
enlightened the Disabled and Senior Community.
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The Website that is dedicated to
educating the minds of the future. We encourage you to explore its
every facet, and to utilize the material for educational and
advocacy purposes. The only thing we ask in return is that this
website is given credit for all the information and photos contained
within. Further, we ask that you participate with your Communities
and Schools to help support the vision, mission, and values of this
non-profit organization. Help Support Service Animals! |
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| To create a grassroots,
non-profit, multi-service, community organization, with the intent
to develop positive alternatives that promote the educational,
psychological, and physiological changes and benefits of the
human-animal-environmental interaction and thus create a more
equitable and healthy environment for both humans and animals to
live in and share. It further intends to cultivate the needs
and services of the entire community, both human and animal in a
humane and benevolent manner. |
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The
Following Social Networks |
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Even though registration and certification are not required by
the ADA, there is a high demand for a professional service that
serves as a third-party validation for assistance animals and their
handlers. This is especially true for handlers of Service
Animals who are specifically trained to help with deafness,
epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, and other conditions that may not be
immediately visible to others. Thus, the United States Service
Dog Registry (USSDR) represents the most democratic realization of
an assistance animal registry to-date. |
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Service Animals means any dog that is individually trained to
do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a
disability, including physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual,
or other mental disability. Other species species of animals,
whether wild or domestic, trained or un trained, are not service
animals for the purposes of this definition. The work or tasks
performed by a service animal must be directly related to the
handler's disability. Examples of work or tasks include, but
are not limited to, assisting individuals who are blind or have low
vision with navigation and other tasks, alerting individuals who are
deaf or hard of hearing to the presence of people or sounds,
providing non-violent protection or rescue work, pulling a
wheelchair, assisting an individual during a seizure, alerting
individuals to the presence of allergens, retrieving items such as
medicine or the telephone, providing physical support and assistance
with balance and stability to individuals with mobility
disabilities, and helping persons with psychiatric and neurological
disabilities by preventing or interrupting impulsive or destructive
behaviors. The crime deterrent effects of an animal's presence
and the provision of emotional support, well-being, comfort, or
companionship do not constitute work or tasks for the purposes of
this definition. |
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Service and Assistance Animals can be trained through
specialized programs, independent or private trainers, and/or THE PERSON WITH THE DISABILITY WHO OWNS THE SERVICE and
ASSISTANCE
ANIMAL. It is against the ADA
Law to require or demand that a person show proof that their companion
animal is a Service Animal. |
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The ADA
Law says that these special service and/or
assistance animals can be any, breed, or size; and they may
or may not wear specialized equipment. |
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Under HUD Regulations,
both Service Dogs and Alternative Service and/or Assistance
Animals are still protected. A Service or Assistance Animal used
indoors may not be the same Service Animal utilized outdoors based
on the new ADA Service Dog Laws |
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A former homeless canine from the Bronx Zoo Area in New York
City and found tied to a tree, he was brought to Animal Care &
Control by Zacharias Morales II (Board Member) -- Approximately one
week later, Renegade's Foundation picked him up as a possible
Service Dog Trainee -- He underwent training in Rosedale
(Rossville), Maryland. He is presently with The Fordell Family
(Vincent, Mary, and Brian). |
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We
Desperately Need Donations To Continue To Provide Veterinary Care To
The Service Animals |
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To All The People Who Have Donated The Funds So That We May Continue To
Educate, Inform, and Outreach To The Public About Service and Therapy
Animals--To All The Individuals Who Have Donated The Funds So That We
May Continue To Rescue, Train, Provide Medical Care, and Love To The
Companion Animals That Are Abandoned and Homeless---WE THANK YOU !! |
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His name was RENEGADE, and this website is about him and all his
many friends. At one time they were all homeless and
abandoned. Thanks to the Organization that is now named after
him, their lives and the lives of many Disabled people changed.
They were taken off the streets, given lots of love and attention,
and trained for their new jobs of helping their human neighbors. |
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On Halloween, October 31, 2007, RENEGADE was dressed for his all day
festivities, when suddenly he became ill and unable to move.
He was immediately rushed to the vet, where we were told that he had
a massive tumor in his abdomen that had ruptured his spleen.
They were told to remove the tumor and the spleen, as there is
medication that does the job of the spleen. However, we were
told that it was too late, he was not going to survive. |
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Renegade's Foundation covered the
initial medical expenses on these cute little babies.
Joanna
Toms
Waynesboro, PA
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Every
Page Will Have Its Own Individual Photos |
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