| Skid
Row Strays Have Best Friends;
A group helps canines belonging to homeless
people by providing food and services.
The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Dec
31, 2004; Bob Pool;
Full Text:
(Copyright The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2004. Allrights
reserved.)
Lori Weise and Richard Tuttelmondo fight homelessness on skid row
with dogged determination.
Good thing, too. It takes a certain tenacity to prowl the streets
of downtown Los Angeles dispensing kindness to street people --
and kibble to street puppies.
The two are managers of a furniture factory. They are also founders
of Downtown Dog Rescue, a 5-year-old volunteer program that finds
homes for strays roaming alleys and provides veterinary services
to pets kept by the city's two-legged homeless population. Behind
their Modernica Co. manufacturing plant, they have built their own
animal shelter to house dogs in need of immediate care.
Inside the busy factory, they have built a reputation for hiring
homeless dog owners who are willing to work to get themselves and
their pets off skid row. Part of their crusade includes offering
free spaying and neutering of transients' pets in hopes of slowing
downtown's puppy population explosion. "We're not the dog police.
We don't take pets away," said Weise, 37, the factory's general
manager. "We are there to help dogs and their owners."
Weise and 40-year-old plant manager Tuttelmondo are dog lovers who
live a few blocks apart in Altadena. They created the rescue service
after joining the furniture company and experiencing the inner-city
subculture of homelessness for the first time. "Neither one
of us had ever worked downtown before. We had no clue what it was
like. It was depressing. It was overwhelming," Weise said.
"Seeing dogs completely abandoned on the streets was terrible.
You could tell they once had owners," Tuttelmondo said.
They started the rescue service after noticing that one transient
near the factory seemed to always be engulfed in little dogs.
"He had a beautiful male pit bull and a female mix and they
would have puppies every six months," Tuttelmondo said. "We
were always finding homes for them." "We decided something
had to stop," added Weise.
As they launched Downtown Dog Rescue and began checking areas around
their 7th Place plant, they were appalled at what they found. "Businesses
would close and leave junkyard dogs tied up to fences as 'watch
dogs,' " Tuttelmondo said. "Dogs were hit by cars. People
who couldn't take their dogs with them into shelters or Section
8 housing would let them loose on the street."
Maneuvering through the encampments of cardboard boxes and tents
took some getting used to, they found.
"Some of the homeless have mental problems. A lot of times
Richard and I don't talk to the person. We talk to the dog,"
Weise said. "The owner will hear us talking and will poke their
head out of the tent to see what's going on. That's when we ask
them if it's OK to give their dog a treat. Once we get them talking,
we ask if they need food for their dog or if it needs vaccination.
We tell them we can get their dogs licenses and shots."
Although many of the homeless now trust dog rescue volunteers enough
to report injured or abused animals to them, many pet owners were
fearful at first that their street dogs were going to be permanently
confiscated.
"At the end of one alley, we found four generations of dogs
-- 16 of them. A homeless couple had beds and water for all of them.
But they didn't want us to spay and neuter," Tuttelmondo said.
"I brought one of our plant employees who speaks Spanish to
translate, and I drew a diagram on a piece of paper. I told them
if they are not careful, they are going to have 60, 70, 80 dogs
before they know it."
The rescue service has found homes for hundreds of puppies over
the years -- some through a twice-monthly adoption day it holds
Saturdays at a Petco store in Pasadena. It has spayed or neutered
about 100 dogs kept as pets by downtown homeless people.
Downtown Dog Rescue spends about $60,000 a year. It accepts donations
through the nonprofit North Hollywood-based Friends for Animals
group at www.friendsforanimals.org.
Along the way, professionals such as Boyle Heights veterinarian
Dr. Edward Simon and Mount Washington dog trainer Lezle Stein have
joined the crusade.
Simon has offered discounts on treatment and stayed open late for
rescued dogs. Stein does temperament assessment of dogs being put
up for adoption and helps them learn how to behave indoors. "I
teach them how to walk on a leash and house-train them. Most have
never been in a house," she said.
Ten homeless dog owners have been given jobs at Modernica. Those
without skills are hired to sand wood furniture for the company's
line of classic modern reproductions. Others are matched up with
slots elsewhere in the 65-employee plant. Their pay lets them rent
apartments that allow pets.
Dog owner Mark DeCicco, 40, works in the plant's shipping and receiving
department. He said he went on the street after losing his job as
a personal assistant following his conviction for punching a sheriff's
deputy. "I never thought things would go so low for me,"
he said. "I'm getting a second chance here."
Modernica's owners, Jay and Frank Novak, say the changes that Downtown
Dog Rescue have made at their plant are positive. They pay no attention
to Sinbad, an aging rescued dog that meanders through company offices
and often dozes in the corner during client meetings. "It makes
me feel this place is more of a part of the community," Jay
Novak said. "Of course, we lost our liability insurance because
of the dogs out back," said Jay's brother, Frank, grinning.
"But we got other coverage."
Weise said only a few canines at a time are housed in the rescue's
two-cage shelter behind the plant's paint shop.
Most of the rescue group's work is done off
hidden alleyways, like the fenced- in alcove where homeless Benny
Joseph lives with his three dogs, Ironhead, Terry and Lizzie. Over
the years, Weise and Tuttelmondo have helped the 56-year- old Joseph
find permanent homes for 10 dogs and about 40 puppies. "Now
he knows that puppies aren't for entertainment," Tuttelmondo
said. "I just love dogs. They're just attracted to me. And
people bring them to me to keep," said Joseph, who has been
on the streets for 15 years. "Dogs are like my children. They're
like me: I don't like to work in a building, and my dogs don't like
being locked up."
Besides being companions he can relate with and talk to, Joseph
said, his dogs are lifesavers. Ironhead once chased away a transient
who attacked him with a pick handle.
And those from Downtown Dog Rescue are
lifesavers, too, he said.
"Those people are beautiful," he said. "They've helped
my dogs and other dogs. And me."
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