Horses, inmates find care, comfort
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| Tue, 05-19-2009 - 12:48pm |
COLLINSVILLE, Ill. – Pete Luce was a bundle of nerves the first time he stood next to a towering former racehorse, knowing he could be seriously injured or killed with one kick.
Months later, Luce moves easily among the one-ton animals at a Virginia prison in a program that allows inmates to care for retired racehorses. And he hopes to parlay newfound skills into a job at a racetrack after he is released from prison, where he is finishing a 23-month term for drug possession.
"I go out in the pasture and I just call my horse's name, and he'll come right up to me," Luce, 35, said during a recent telephone interview from the James River Correctional Center.
Proponents say such programs, already operating in several states, give animals and inmates alike second chances.
The horses, many facing possible slaughter at a foreign rendering plant if they aren't retired to breed, are carefully tended and sometimes rehabilitated until an adoptive home is found. Inmates who volunteer learn marketable job skills they can use once they're freed.
Across the country, "there's no limit to the number of correctional facilities with land," said Diana Pikulski, executive director of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, a 27-year-old equine-rescue group eager to expand the programs. And "we're not running out of inmates to teach or racehorses to offer."
Pikulski's group has made great strides connecting horses with inmates since it began its first "Second Chances" farm 25 years ago at New York's Wallkill Correctional Facility. Similar programs have since expanded to Kentucky, Florida, South Carolina, Indiana, Virginia and Maryland.
Massachusetts and Illinois are considering them.
Illinois state Rep. Ron Stephens, a Republican, is encouraging the state Department of Corrections to adopt a Thoroughbred horse groomer training program.
"There's something about an animal, particularly a horse, that gives these guys a chance, maybe for the first time in their life, to have empathy," Stephens said.
Lanny Brooks, a 62-year-old horse trainer and owner who heads the Illinois Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, is trying to find good homes for five thoroughbreds that once made their living at Fairmount Park, outside St. Louis. He says Illinois' Vandalia Correctional Center is a logical choice.
The prison has about 1,500 inmates and more than 1,300 acres of former dairy farm, complete with barns and fences that could accommodate horses with only modest alterations.
"The public thinks we just race these horses, use them up and then they go down to La-La Land," said Brooks. "We're gonna make it known to the public as much as we can and as often as we can that we continue to take care of these racehorses that ran so well for us and made us money during their career."
Similar programs have operated elsewhere for years.
At some prisons in Kansas and Colorado, inmates work with hundreds of horses that once roamed free in the West, tending to them before they are adopted. They do everything from cleaning stalls and trimming hooves, and some can learn to become trainers.
Brian Hardin, who supervises the program for the Colorado Department of Corrections, said the recidivism rate for inmate trainers is half the national rate of 68 percent.
"The animals take the place of the family unit while they're locked up," he said.
In Virginia, James River warden Layton Lester says the program forces an inmates once preoccupied with himself to understand "there is another life that depends on him."
"There's a lot of personal growth and cognitive growth because of that," Lester said. "That's probably the most important part." http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090519/ap_on_re_us/us_racehorses_in_prison;_ylt=Anl5tPEO_.kan_PvqczJwNJvzwcF
I wish more correctional programs would look into retraining non-violent inmates. Many of these people need job skills in order to survive and avoid re-arrest once they are released. Also, many of them have come from backgrounds where they cared little about themselves or others. Pairing them with animals gives them an opportunity to care about another living creature and to learn about the responsibility that comes from caring.
A show I watched once showed inmates raising and training dogs for the handicapped. Many of these men were hard-core criminals who would never be released, but they took the job of dog training seriously and they loved the dogs they worked with. Another segment of the show demonstrated inmates being taught skills in horticulture. While they grew a lot of their own food, they were also working to develop better strains of tomatoes and peppers.
It is wrong to allow incarcerated people to languish in prison only to become even more bitter and angry than they were when they entered the system. They should come out better people; with skills to survive. The recividism rate in America is the highest in the world because we fail to rehabilitate while we have criminals jailed. As a captured audience (no pun intended) these people make excellent students and strive to succeed. For many of them, it's the first time they've ever known the feeling of success. And to carry that with upon release is much better than walking out with a chip on their shoulder and a feeling that have no reason to try to stay out of trouble.


We have programs in the prisons out here where inmates train service dogs.
These programs are wonderful both for the animals & the convicts. Awhile back 60 Mins did a segment on the dogs being trained.
A co-worker of my DH's trains dogs. She's on her second. She brings them into work to get accustomed to being around people. The one she has now really likes my DH. When he comes home our dogs sniff his pant legs they can tell he's been around another animal.