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First working service dog graduates from Carroll’s Anthrozoology program

Posted at 11:21 AM, May 08, 2019
and last updated 2019-05-08 13:21:29-04

The first working service dog to graduate Carroll College’s Anthrozoology program has met its veteran.

Not only is it the first time the program has graduated a working service dog, it’s also the first time the Veterans Treatment Court in Great Falls has matched a veteran with a dog.

Fernando Terrones is a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan – and now owner to Major, his service dog.

“Right now I’m just overwhelmed,” said Terrones, not long after being handed Major’s leash. “There’s a lot of information and not only is Major a puppy, but he has all these special skills that I gotta catch up with, as well.  And hopefully he likes me, too.”

For the students who trained Major, the first few moments were emotional.

“Seeing Fernando’s smile the first time he saw Major, I was about to lose it then,” said Ali Hance. “But it’s happy tears. It’s going to be difficult to say good-bye. But for us, knowing he’s going to go make a difference, how could you not say good-bye because of that?”

Major has been trained since last fall by Carroll College Anthrozoology program students Ali Hance and Madie Sanford.

They joined forces with the Montana-based veterans service dog organization Dog Tag Buddies and the Veterans Treatment Court in Cascade County to make the introduction possible.

“Veterans Treatment Court helps justice-involved veterans address the issues that brought them into the justice system in the first place, many of them suffering from the invisible wounds of war, PTSD and traumatic brain injuries,” explained Judge Greg Pinski.

“It’s been very uplifting,” said Terrones of his time in the treatment court. “I’ve just been getting beat up in life, from my service in Afghanistan and Iraq, and I’d regress and really neglect myself.”

Hance and Sanford have worked with Major to teach him skills that will help Terrones.

The introduction was not the end for anyone involved in the process of uniting the veteran with his service dog.

“We keep track of all the veterans who graduate from the program, including Fernando,” said Judge Pinski.  “We’ll monitor how things are going with him and I know Dog Tag Buddies is going to provide ongoing support for him as he continues to train Major.”

“Knowing that we are going to go off into our future careers and seeing Major go off to his future career. I love it, it’s like we’re both graduating at the same time,” said Hance.

The future is on Terrones’ mind, as well.

“We’re all human. We make mistakes. And I think a big important thing in life is how you react to how you ended up somewhere,” said Terrones.

He added, “Especially if it’s a negative situation. How you deal with it and move forward.”

Terrones and Major will now begin regular training sessions with a Dog Tag Buddies trainer while Hance and Sanford graduate this weekend from Carroll College.

-Reported by Melissa Jensen/MTN News