The Borneo Post

Dogs to be occasional­ly allowed at US Interior Dept

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WASHINGTON: The Cabinet secretary who rode a horse to work on his first day is letting his employees bring their dogs to the office.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke will announce in an email to employees on Thursday (this) morning the start of “Doggy Days at Interior,” a programme that will launch with test runs at the agency’s Washington headquarte­rs on two Fridays in May and September.

The new policy will make Interior the first federal agency to go dog-friendly - and cement Zinke’s status as the Trump administra­tion’s most visible animal fan. Zinke earlier this month arrived at his new workplace astride Tonto, a bay roan gelding who belongs to the US Park Police and resides in stables on the Mall.

President Trump, meanwhile, remains pet-less, a status that makes him the first US leader in 150 years without a companion animal and leaves the White House without a first dog or cat. Vice President Pence and his family keep two cats and a rabbit at their Naval Observator­y home, though those critters keep a relatively low profile.

Zinke, a fifth-generation Montanan, former Navy SEAL and congressma­n, said his dog policy’s primary goal is to boost morale at the far-flung Interior agency, which includes the National Park Service, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management and six other department­s. Interior ranked 11th in employee morale of the 18th largest federal agencies in last year’s Best Places to Work in the Federal Government survey, with just 61 per cent of its 70,000 employees saying they’re happy in their jobs.

“I’m taking action to establish a pilot programme for Doggy Days at Interior!” Zinke will say in his 9 am missive to Washington­area employees, which shows two photograph­s of him with his wife, Lolita, and their 18-month- old black and white Havanese dog, Ragnar.

“Opening the door each evening and seeing him running at me is one of the highlights of my day,” Zinke’s e-mail says. “I can’t even count how many miles I’ve driven across Montana with riding shotgun, or how many hikes and river floats Lola and I went on with the little guy. But I can tell you it was always better to have him.” The new policy, which has never been tried in the riskaverse federal government, puts the Trump administra­tion in the vanguard of public institutio­ns with dog-friendly policies. Members of Congress have been bringing their dogs to the US capitol since the 19th century, but few other taxpayer-funded workplaces have gone to the dogs. Private companies, on the other hand, are increasing­ly touting their dog-friendline­ss as an employee perk. Among the most prominent are Kimpton hotels, the biotech firm Genentech and Google, which says in its code of conduct that “affection for our canine friends is an integral facet of our corporate culture.”

In a survey conducted last year by Banfield Pet Hospital, the nation’s largest chain of veterinary clinics the vast majority of US employees and human resources managers at pet-friendly companies said the policies improved morale, lowered stress and decreased guilt about leaving pets at home.

Zinke promised on his first day as secretary earlier this month to bring a dog-friendly office policy to Interior, which has 70,000 employees across the country. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, right, with his wife, Lolita, and their Havanese dog, Ragnar. — Photo ourtesy of the Department of Interior
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, right, with his wife, Lolita, and their Havanese dog, Ragnar. — Photo ourtesy of the Department of Interior

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