logo
How a pet rescue is helping federal workers find solace after job loss

How a pet rescue is helping federal workers find solace after job loss

IOL News20-05-2025
Tim, one of the kittens Mollie Kolaitis is fostering, holds onto her right foot.
Image: Mollie Kolaitis
As a 10-year-old, Denise Joseph told everyone she wanted to be Mother Teresa.
While Joseph never became a saint, her passion for public service drew her to the Education Department, where she began working as an analyst in 2015. But when Joseph was placed on administrative leave in January - and learned three months later she would be fired - she turned her attention to something else: dogs.
Joseph began fostering two mixed German shepherd and Labrador retriever puppies, Wren and Wrigley.
'I have a reason to get up in the morning,' Joseph told The Washington Post, 'to walk the dogs and feed them and, you know, to help calm me.'
Joseph is one of a handful of former federal employees who are taking advantage of an animal rescue's recent offer in Arlington, Virginia. Lucky Dog Animal Rescue is providing free supplies, including food, toys, bowls, leashes, collars, treats and crates, to fired federal workers who foster dogs or cats.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Wren, a mixed German shepherd and Labrador retriever puppy, is being fostered by Denise Joseph
Image: Denise Joseph
Mirah Horowitz, Lucky Dog's chief executive, said the program is great for the pets who get a temporary home, and also the foster volunteers, who might find solace in caring for a pet.
'The cost to the former federal employee or contractor would be, you know, their time and their love,' Horowitz said. 'And we will provide the rest.'
When sweeping job cuts in the federal government began in February under President Donald Trump's administration, Horowitz said her already overflowed rescue became more crowded. Some fired federal workers gave up their pets because they were moving or could no longer afford veterinary care, Horowitz said.
In the following weeks, Horowitz said she considered waiving the $200 to $500 adoption fees for fired federal workers. But she realized they might need a more flexible situation while they look for new jobs and possibly new homes, she said.
To make the program feasible financially, Horowitz said Arlington's Dogma Dog Bakery agreed to sell food to the rescue at a reduced cost. She said foster volunteers in the program save between $100 to $200 per month.
Donna Davis of Arlington, Virginia, began fostering 1-year-old King, a mixed Rottweiler and German shepherd, last month.
Image: Donna Davis
One volunteer is Donna Davis, who said she was fired from her contracting position with the Defense Department in February. However, when Davis picked up King, a mixed Rottweiler and German shepherd, last month, she was uncertain if the partnership would work out.
King, who weighs nearly 80 pounds, pulled Davis into streets while she held the leash and barked at other dogs. He ate a David Mamet book Davis borrowed from the library, prompting Davis to spend hours taping the pieces of paper back together.
But a few days later, the 1-year-old pup became attached to Davis. When Davis took King to the Shirlington Dog Park in the evenings, King looked back every few minutes to ensure Davis was still there.
Lucky Dog provided Davis squeaky toys, two beds, a leash, crunchy biscuits and bone broth treats. Davis made her own beef liver treats.
Tabitha and Tiffani, kittens Mollie Kolaitis is fostering, nap together
Image: Mollie Kolaitis
King has become a beloved figure at Davis's church, where she takes him on Wednesday nights and Sunday mornings. A week after Davis began fostering him, King growled when others approached Davis - a sign he was protecting her, Davis said. They ran a five-kilometer race together at Theodore Roosevelt Island.
Davis has struggled to find work, she said, and has considered leaving Arlington.
On April 30, she posted a picture of King on Facebook, seeking his permanent home. But now, Davis said she is considering adopting King - even if she's dreading the librarians' reactions when she tries to return the book King ate.
'I gave up a lot of my life for this dog,' Davis said. 'And that's okay. I feel like that's not necessarily a bad thing.'
While Lucky Dog's program is for fired workers, former federal employees who recently accepted buyout offers have also fostered pets with their spare time.
Mollie Kolaitis, who took a buyout from her job as an attorney adviser in the Department of Health and Human Services in March, has turned her home office into a room for her new foster cats. The nine kittens she began fostering last month have been distracting, running across her desk in Waterford, Virginia, and accidentally opening Microsoft Excel when they step on her laptop. But Kolaitis, 41, said the experience has been rewarding.
Wrigley, a mixed German shepherd and Labrador retriever puppy, is being fostered by Denise Joseph.
Image: Denise Joseph
'It's something nice to pour yourself into and take your focus off of things that are happening right now,' Kolaitis said, 'and just feel like you're doing a little bit of good for the world when it doesn't feel like there is a lot.'
Since taking the buyout, Kolaitis has also fostered a Chihuahua mix and her four babies. She mixed dog food with formula and fed the puppies through a syringe in her sunroom. She house-trained them before they were adopted a few weeks later.
'People who go into federal service, they have an interest in the public, and they have an interest of wanting to help others,' Kolaitis said. 'And, you know, if they're looking for something to do, this is a really good way to spend some time.'
Joseph, the analyst who was fired from the Education Department, said she couldn't sleep after she received an email Jan. 29 with a letter attached. It said she would be placed on administration leave 'pursuant to the President's executive order on DEIA,' referring to Trump's efforts to end diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility programs in the federal government.
Walking Wren and Wrigley around her neighbourhood in Waldorf, Maryland, three or four times a day has brought her joy. She has house-trained them - but she still bought a patch of turf to place in front of their crates in case they relieve themselves inside.
While Joseph said Wren and Wrigley, both 16 weeks old, are bigger than she prefers - they're each roughly 35 pounds and counting - she plans to foster them until someone adopts them.
Then, she might find more dogs to foster while she job hunts.
'I just have this mindset to help people and to help raise them and train them,' Joseph said, 'so they can be their best selves - or their best animal selves.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

On this day: Just how much about 'fairy' tales and oral tradition is gospel, and women have the courage to lead where men can't
On this day: Just how much about 'fairy' tales and oral tradition is gospel, and women have the courage to lead where men can't

IOL News

time5 days ago

  • IOL News

On this day: Just how much about 'fairy' tales and oral tradition is gospel, and women have the courage to lead where men can't

The Kaalvoet Vrou (Barefoot Woman) statue at the Voortrekker Pass, near Bergville. This historic monument stands as if walking away from Natal and is in memory of Susanna Smit, who in 1837 declared that she would rather trek barefoot back over the Berg than live in Natal under British rule. Just over 30 years before, intrepid women had found a way over the Drakensberg when their menfolk couldn't. 1284 A piper leads 130 children of the German town Hamelin away from their homes. Records suggest that the story of The Pied Piper of Hamelin was real, but the story changed over time and the mystery of what happened to the children has never been solved. The story also raises the question, if The Pied Piper of Hamelin was true, how much more truth is there in other fairy tales, some of them grim? 1409 The Roman Catholic Church goes into a double schism as Alexander V is crowned as pope in Pisa, while Pope Gregory XII sits in Rome and Pope Benedict XII in Avignon. 1806 Voortrekker Antjie Scheepers, who with Martha Trichardt and Breggie Pretorius, found a way to descend the Drakensberg after the men gave up, is born in Swellendam. A tough old bird if ever there was one, her husband died while they were on trek with Louis Trichardt and left her nine children to raise. Known for disciplining her children when they committed adultery, Trichardt tells in his notebook how one of her sons was among three young men who ran away. When they returned after a few days of hardship, he felt they had been punished enough, but not the widow Scheepers. She had her son held by two men while she whipped him. 1857 The first 62 recipients are awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Crimean war. 1860 The first railway line in South Africa, between Durban and the Point, is opened. 1904 The first mail boat in Durban, the Armadale Castle, anchors after crossing the newly dredged sandbar, a hazard to shipping. 1936 The Focke-Wulf FW 61 helicopter flies. 1974 The barcode is first used. 1997 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, the first book in JK Rowling's best-selling, Harry Potter series, is published. 2018 A Sudanese court overturns death sentence for teenager who killed the husband after he raped her. 2019 Two Florida towns pay hackers considerable ransoms to unfreeze their computer systems; Riviera Beach forks out $600 000, while Lake City hands over $500 000. 2021 South Africa announces 14-day lockdown to counter the COVID-19 pandemic. 2024 Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, returns to Australia after pleading guilty to one charge of espionage in a Saipan court and being released by the US Department of Justice. DAILY NEWS

Hartbeespoort father rescues daughter as fire guts home, 8 pets perish
Hartbeespoort father rescues daughter as fire guts home, 8 pets perish

The Citizen

time24-06-2025

  • The Citizen

Hartbeespoort father rescues daughter as fire guts home, 8 pets perish

The home of Francois le Grange and his daughter, Carla, in Jean Botha Avenue, Meerhof, Hartbeespoort, went up in flames around 03:00 yesterday. 'I woke up to my daughter screaming. She lives on the top floor. When I ran up the steps to the door connecting the two units, I encountered flames. I screamed at her to get out on the balcony and ran around the house,' a traumatised Le Grange told Kormorant. Carla climbed over the balcony and held onto the railing. Le Grange managed to reach her legs and pull her down. 'I ran back to the front door on the top floor to try and get to the three dogs, five cats and the African Grey that were with her. However, I could not get in. Everything was engulfed in flames.' Neighbours rushed to help the family, and Necsa Fire, Hartbeespoort Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) and Madibeng Fire were soon on the scene. Despite firefighters' efforts, the top floor of the house was completely destroyed. 'I was looking for the animals this morning. I found the German Shepherd's carcass, but there was nothing left of the two Yorkies and four cats. All that was left in the bird cage was a small heap of ashes.' Two of Le Grange's dogs, which were with him in the ground-floor unit, escaped the fire. 'It seems one of the cats also managed to get out and was seen running around by people on the scene.' The cat has since been found. Le Grange's wife passed away four months ago, and he was living with his daughter in the house. 'We don't know what caused the fire. It started in Carla's unit. I doubt whether it will be possible to save any part of the house. Even the nose of the car in the garage melted from the heat. I am waiting for the assessors. I would like to know how the fire started,' said Le Grange. 'I want to thank everyone who came to our rescue – both neighbours and the firemen who did a wonderful job. My daughter is safe, I am safe, and I am thankful for that.' Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel. Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal. Read original story on At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Nigeria receives over 100 looted artefacts from the Netherlands
Nigeria receives over 100 looted artefacts from the Netherlands

eNCA

time22-06-2025

  • eNCA

Nigeria receives over 100 looted artefacts from the Netherlands

LAGOS - The Netherlands on Saturday officially handed back to Nigeria 119 precious ancient sculptures, stolen from the former kingdom of Benin more than 120 years ago during the colonial era. It is the latest return of artefacts to Africa, as pressure mounts on Western governments and institutions to hand back the spoils of colonial oppression. Nigeria celebrated the return of the priceless "Benin Bronzes" -- metal and ivory sculptures dating back to the 16th to 18th centuries -- with a ceremony held at the National Museum in Lagos, showcasing four of them in the museum's courtyard. The selection included a bronze carving of a king's head, a carved elephant tusk and a small leopard. In the 19th century, British troops stole thousands of Benin Bronzes in the then-independent kingdom of Benin, in the south of present-day Nigeria. The sculptures were pillaged from the kingdom's royal palace and have since been held in museums and private collections across Europe and the United States. The four artefacts currently on display in Lagos will remain in the museum's permanent collection, while the others will be returned to Ewuare II, the Oba of Benin -- the traditional ruler of the kingdom of Benin in southern Nigeria. "These are embodiments of the spirit and identity of the people from which they were taken from," said Olugbile Holloway, director-general of Nigeria's National Commission for Museums and Monuments. "All we ask of the world is to treat us with fairness, dignity and respect," he said at the ceremony, where he announced that Germany had agreed to return more than 1,000 additional Benin Bronze pieces. "The German government has actually signed a transfer agreement to hand over a 1,000 Benin Bronzes back" to Nigeria, he said. Nigeria's art and culture minister Hannatu Musa Musawa, who signed the handover document with the Dutch ambassador for international cultural cooperation, Dewi van de Weerd, said "Nigeria needs to reclaim its history and its heritage".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store