Vote Now for the 2016 AHA Hero Dog Award Winner

They all deserve it, right? You can vote now through Aug. 24 for your favorite pup to win the grand prize in the 2016 American Humane Association (AHA) Hero Dog Awards, presented by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation.

The awards “celebrate the important role dogs play in our lives,” said Dr. Robin Ganzert, AHA president and CEO. “The American public and our special judging panel now have an extraordinarily tough task ahead of them in determining who our top dog will be because all are worthy winners.”

That’s for sure. Over the past five years, millions of votes have been cast for nearly a thousand dogs competing for the award. The program reaches more than 1 billion people each year.

You can vote online once every day for your favorite finalist until noon Pacific Time on Aug. 24, as long as you’re a U.S. citizen and at least 18 years old.

The Hero Dog Awards ceremony will be held in Los Angeles on Sept. 10. The 2016 grand prize winner will be announced during the ceremony, which will be dedicated to Harley, the winner of the 2015 Hero Dog Award. Harley, a 15-year-old Chihuahua who spent the first 10 years of his life in a puppy-mill cage before becoming a “spokesdog” against these cruel facilities, died in March.

To help hero dogs everywhere, AHA will donate $2,500 to each finalist’s charity partner, and an additional $5,000 to the grand prize winner’s charity partner.

Founded in 1877, AHA was the first national humane organization in the U.S. and is the only one dedicated to protecting both children and animals.

It’s still a bit early to mark your calendar, but the 2016 Hero Dog Awards will be televised on the Hallmark Channel in late October.

2016 AHA Hero Dog Awards Finalists

Arson Dogs: Judge

As an arson K-9 with the Allentown Fire Department in Pennsylvania, 7-year-old Judge, a Labrador Retriever, has worked 275 fire scenes over the past five years. The evidence Judge discovered has led to many arrests and civil penalties for insurance fraud cases, and the number of arson fires in the city has dropped nearly 53 percent. Judge is currently participating in a pilot program to provide autistic children with lifesaving information.

Click here to vote for Judge.

Emerging Hero Dogs: Hooch

This category honors ordinary dogs who do extraordinary things. Hooch, a French Mastiff, has badly cropped ears, a broken tail — and no tongue. It was probably removed so he could be a bait dog. Zach Skow, of Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue in Tehachapi, Calif., adopted Hooch from a shelter where the skittish dog had refused to eat or drink. Skow nursed Hooch back to health by hand-feeding him. Hooch is now a therapy dog with Marley’s Mutts’ Miracle Mutts, helping autistic, abused and special-needs kids realize they can overcome any obstacle.

Click here to vote for Hooch.

Guide/Hearing Dogs: Hook

Ten-year-old, 12-pound Hook is a hearing dog for his handler. As the two walked across train tracks in Sacramento, Calif., the woman couldn’t hear an oncoming train. Hook began jumping on her, alerting her to the train and saving her life. He is always by the side of his handler, who’s a family therapist. Whenever her patients are upset, Hook will jump into their laps to comfort them. Hook also chased off an intruder who broke into the office.

Click here to vote for Hook.

Law Enforcement Dogs: Roo

K9 Roo is a ballistics/bomb dog with the Boston Police Department. After the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, Roo searched for secondary devices and was the only police dog there for the capture of Dzokhar Tsarnaev. During his career — Roo is retiring this year — he recovered 12 firearms (three had been used in homicides) and more than 300 shell casings involved in shootings. Roo answered at least 200 calls to investigate suspicious packages. When he’s not working, Roo visits children in hospitals and performs demonstrations at community events.

Click here to vote for Roo.

Military Dogs: Layka

In 2012, as Layka’s team fired on an enemy compound in Afghanistan, rifle fire was returned from the compound. Layka was sent inside to look for combatants and explosives. She was hit with four rounds from an AK-47 in her right shoulder. Layka was rushed to a location where medics worked on her, and then flown to a base where her right front leg was amputated. After additional surgeries, Layka was medically retired from service three months later.

Click here to vote for Layka.

Search-and-Rescue Dogs: Kobuk

Kobuk, a trained and certified member of the non-profit Maine Search and Rescue Dogs team, found a 77-year-old woman suffering from diabetes and dementia who had been lost in the woods for over two days without food, water or her medications. Running almost a quarter mile into the woods, Kobuk spotted the woman and then ran back to alert his handler, and ran back with him into the woods to rescue the woman in time to save her life.

Click here to vote for Kobuk.

Service Dogs: Gander

Gander, saved from a Colorado shelter and trained by a women’s prison program, is now a service dog and was the first mixed breed to win the  American Kennel Club’s Award for Canine Excellence (ACE). He and his handler travel the country to raise awareness of  PTSD, veteran suicide, service dogs, and people with visible and invisible disabilities. They have helped raise a million dollars for veterans’ groups, veterans, service dog charities and people in need.

Click here to vote for Gander.

Therapy Dogs: Mango

As a stray, Mango was hit by a car, paralyzing her rear legs. She was going to be euthanized by a shelter when Emma’s Cleft Palate Chihuahua Rescue stepped in. Mango is now a therapy dog for her dog mom, a veteran. They participate in the Emma’s Rescue Reserve program, in which paralyzed dogs work with disabled veterans, showing them that if a small dog in a wheelchair can overcome her handicap, then so can they. Mango’s Freedom Wheels, named in her honor, has donated over 150 custom-built wheelchairs to help other animals become mobile.

Click here to vote for Mango.

Photo via Facebook

After Saving Life of Freeway Frida, Police Officer Adopts Her

Back in April, a German Shepherd fell off a pickup truck and onto busy Highway 99 in Northern California. For over a month afterward, drivers spotting the injured dog near the highway’s center median would call 911, but she would run away whenever anyone tried to save her.

The phone calls stopped in early May.

“I thought something happened — she, you know, died,” Galt Police Officer Silvia Coelho told KCRA.

Then, early in the morning on May 14, a 911 caller reported seeing the dog alive in the median.

“We are getting her today, that’s it,” Coelho told KCRA. “It’s Saturday morning (and) traffic is light. We are getting this dog.”

The California Highway Patrol shut down Highway 99 while Coelho and some other police officers approached the scared dog, who had been nicknamed “Freeway Frida.”

At first Frida resisted, but she quickly surrendered.

“She just laid down and looked at us with those big, brown eyes, and was like, ‘Oh thank you,’ and like, ‘Please help me,’” Coelho told KCRA.

They brought Frida to VCA Bradshaw Animal Hospital in Elk Grove, where she was treated for a broken leg and severe dehydration. While the average weight for a healthy German Shepherd about 65 pounds, Frida weighed only 44 pounds.

After a month of rehabilitation, Frida left the hospital yesterday with her new dog mom — Officer Coelho.

“When we first found her, we were hoping we’d find the owner,” Coelho told FOX40. But no one ever claimed Frida, who did not have a microchip or ID tag.

“As the days went by, I kept coming [to the hospital] to see how she was doing,” Coelho said. “Every time she would see me, she would get all excited. I didn’t want to get emotionally attached, but it’s something you can’t help. She just won my heart over.”

As you can see from this video of their reunion, both Frida and Coelho were delighted to be reunited yesterday. “Can’t tell which one is happier!” said the Galt Police Department on its Facebook page.

Photo via Facebook

Pit Bull Service Dog Dies While Saving Owner from Alligator Attack

Robert Lineburger is alive today thanks to his seizure-detection dog, a Pit Bull named Precious.

But it wasn’t her detection of a seizure that saved Lineburger.

Two months ago, as Lineburger and Precious were walking to a restroom at the Port LaBelle Marina in Florida, where they live on a boat, an alligator suddenly lunged out of the water and onto the dock.

Because there are no lights around the marina, Lineburger didn’t see the alligator until it was too late.

Precious “jumped in front of me,” Lineburger told WPTV. “She was roughly 2 to 3 feet away from me when the gator attacked.”

The alligator killed Precious, but Lineburger was unharmed. His hero dog would be alive today if the marina had proper lighting, Lineburger said.

“We have no lighting, which is mandatory code enforcement,” he told WPTV. “Fire extinguishers are mandated by the fire marshal, we have cluttered docks, and at night with no light, you can’t see the clutter. You trip over them, and now you put the alligator problem on top of it, it’s a place for a disaster to happen.”

A neighbor told WPTV he’s seen alligators all around the marina, and has no doubt they’ve been on the dock.

Lineburger wants Glades County code compliance officers to inspect the marina. Nothing will bring back Precious, but Lineburger hopes the tragedy will help others be safe.

“I do not want her death to be in vain,” he told WPTV. “At least let it accomplish something and get some of these violations taken care of.”

Photo via Twitter

UPS Driver Rescues Puppy Dumped on Road

In a cloud of dust, a 3-month-old Cairn Terrier frantically chased after an old blue pickup truck whose driver dumped him on a Northern California road.

“I’m rolling up and I see it pull away in the dirt, going pretty fast, and the little dog is chasing it down the yellow line,” Jason Harcrow, who’s been a United Parcel Service (UPS) driver for 16 years, told the Modesto Bee.

As Harcrow pulled over to the side of the road, the puppy, startled by an oncoming car, darted under his UPS truck.

It took a while for Harcrow to coax the pup out from under the truck.

“I tried to grab him and he was kind of playing with me,” he told the Bee. “I didn’t want to get down on all fours, so I was just kind of swiping for him. I was getting a little frustrated.”

He was finally able to grab the puppy and put him in his truck. He called Stanislaus County Animal Services and was told an animal control officer would come and take the pup, but Harcrow had deliveries to make.

So he brought the abandoned puppy along with him on his route. “He’s an awesome little pup,” Harcrow, who has a dog and cat, told the Bee.

Harcrow dropped his furry passenger off at a police substation. An animal control officer later took the pup to the Stanislaus County Animal Services shelter.

‘He’s Very Playful, Very Cute’

Not surprisingly, the puppy had no ID tag or microchip. In the highly probable case that his owner doesn’t show up to claim him, the pup will be available for a new forever home — emphasis on forever — Tuesday, June 21.

“He’s very playful, very cute,” Annette Patton, executive director of Stanislaus County Animal Services, told KCRA. The shelter has been flooded with calls about adopting the puppy, who they named “Biscuit.” Patton is certain Biscuit will find a loving home soon.

Jessica Lafferty, supervisor at the local UPS hub, told the Modesto Bee the company is very proud of Harcrow.

“He’s a very good guy,” she said. I couldn’t agree more.

Photos via Facebook

Watch a Tethered Dog Rescued During Texas Floods

AUGUST 2017 UPDATE: Here’s how to help animal shelters and rescues affected by Hurricane Harvey.

JUNE 8, 2016 UPDATE: Sheriff Troy E. Nehls, who helped in the rescue, has officially adopted Archer. The dog’s owner, Mario Gallardo, told KPRC he didn’t realize how high the water would rise when he tied Archer to the porch and left him there — and he didn’t bother to tell authorities then that he’d left his dog behind.

“I am happy to say the only water this girl will be in now is the swimming pool in my backyard!” Nehls wrote on his Facebook page June 5. “We picked her up today from the Houston Humane Society. Welcome to the family!”

“They chained him to the front of the [expletive] house?” said someone in an airboat Tuesday as it made its way down a street in Rosenberg, Texas, which had been flooded by the historic rising of the Brazos River.

He was referring to a dog who’d been tied to the front porch of a house. The dog was struggling to keep her head above the rising floodwater.

In the airboat were KPRC reporter Phil Archer, photographer Jeovany Luna, Sheriff Troy E. Nehls, and volunteers Richard Allen and Jeff Shimek.

With a camera rolling, Archer and Shimek jumped out of the boat and rescued the dog, minutes before she would have drowned.

“This is infuriating,” wrote Nehls on his Facebook page. “These residents will get a visit from me when they return.”

Later that day, the Houston Humane Society wrote on its Facebook page that it would get the dog “cleaned up, fed (although I hear the sheriff shared a ham sandwich with her earlier), vaccinated and settled in for the night.” Anyone interested in adopting her (she’s appropriately been named “Archer” by shelter staff) is asked to email adoptions@houstonhumane.org.

Phil Archer has been reporting for KPRC for 40 years, according to his Facebook page. After taking the dog to the Houston Humane Society, he and the other heroes went back and rescued more dogs.



How to Help Pets Affected by the Texas Floods

May was the rainiest month in Texas history, and the storms keep on coming. More than half of Texas is under flood watches or warnings, overwhelming animal shelters and rescues. Here are links to the donation pages for some shelters in the Houston area:

Photo via YouTube

Exit mobile version