Florida, Miami Beach, Surfside, Champlain Towers South Condominium Building Collapse, FEMA Florida Task Force Urban Search & Rescue briefing members.
(Picture Credit: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Dogs On Duty: Dogs Search For Victims & Bring Comfort After The Tragic Surfside Condo Collapse

Advertisements

On June 24, 2021, tragedy struck the town for Surfside, Florida after the residential condo, Champlain Towers, collapsed leaving several people dead and more than 150 people unaccounted for at the time of this writing. Now, one of the largest search and rescue missions in the state’s history has begun. And dogs are working to locate trapped victims and serving as therapy animals to victims’ loved ones.

According to Sinead Imbaro, who trains police and military dogs, the dogs undergo two and half years of training. That’s when they learn to locate survivors under the direst circumstances. And search and rescue teams greatly need those skills in the Surfside disaster.

“It’s really that live breath that they’re looking for,” Imbaro said to WSAV. “For confirmation that there’s somebody hidden in that pile, once they get, or once they locate that breath, or human odor, they will begin to bark for the alert.”

Dogs Also Comfort Families Of The Surfside Condo Collapse

Dogs brought by volunteer Jay Harris are pictured in Surfside, Florida on June 28, 2021. - Blocks away from the wreckage of a Florida apartment tower that suddenly collapsed last week and left scores of people missing, Patrick Williamson sat with his German Shepherd, offering her company to whomever needed it. Five-year-old Gracie has helped him cope with the trauma he experienced serving in the US Army in Iraq, and with 11 people confirmed dead and 150 missing after the oceanfront apartment block collapsed in the middle of the night, he hoped she could do the same for the people of Surfside, Florida. As rescuers comb through the rubble of the 12-story building in hopes of finding survivors, aid workers from across the United States have traveled to the Miami-area town to offer everything from snacks to prayers to therapy. Among them is the United Cajun Navy rescue group, which asked its volunteers to bring therapy dogs to help people cope with the trauma of the collapse. (Photo by Chris STEIN / AFP)
(Picture Credit: CHRIS STEIN/AFP via Getty Images)

There are never enough words of comfort you can say in the aftermath of unspeakable tragedy. So sometimes it’s best to let our four-legged friends do the talking for us.

The non-profits United Hatzalah and Boriquas de Corazon, among others, provided therapy dogs for the families of the Surfside condo collapse. They’re uplifting spirits the way only dogs know how.

A Cavalier King Charles Spaniel named Lucy is currently a big hit with those gathered at the family assistance and reunification center awaiting news.

“They get desperate and have panic attacks and stress, they think everybody is their own family, those are things we are working out to manage,” said one of the volunteers who brought Lucy and other dogs to the premises according to South Florida’s NBC 6.

“Our job and her job was to help soften the conversations with the families” one official told the outlet. The goal is to give search and rescue teams “the maximum amount of information in the minimum amount of pain,”

Knowing where to start helping victims of a tragedy can be tricky. But we can all agree that dogs are a necessity during difficult times such as these. If you wish to donate to Boriquas de Corazon for more therapy dogs for Surfside residents, then please submit your timely contribution here.

If you’d like to know how your dog can become a certified therapy animal, then check out DogTime’s guide here!

Do you have any experience with therapy dogs? Have they ever helped bring you comfort after a tragedy? Then let us know in the comments below.

Trending
No content yet. Check back later!
X
Exit mobile version