The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Autistic child looks forward to service dog

Family raising money for specially trained pooch.

- By Ellen Eldridge ellen.eldridge@ajc.com

When her baby boy was 2 months old, Meghan Roberts Roper worried that an apparent seizure might lead to a devastatin­g diagnosis — one that would paralyze her son on one side of his body and require him to eat only through a feeding tube.

“That was all I needed to hear,” Roper said. “I walked into a private waiting area, where I cried.”

More than three years of therapies for speech and motor skills and evaluation­s for behavioral problems and hyperactiv­ity passed before Brody Roberts, now 7, finally got an autism diagnosis.

As far as his mother was concerned, Brody’s biggest problems revolved around his balance and sensory issues.

And then one day at a hot air balloon show he met Barkley, a black bloodhound/Labrador mix who was trained to work with children who have autism.

“Brody was so anxious I thought we would have to leave, when Barkley, the service dog from 4 Paws for Ability, showed up,” Roper said. “Once Barkley arrived, Brody unplugged his ears and sat watching these balloons. This was a huge moment for us.”

At that point, Roper knew she needed a service dog trained for Brody but had no idea how long it would take to get approved and how to raise the money.

Life-changing dog

Barkley had joined Jennifer Schwenker’s home in 2009, which changed the whole family’s life. The dog had been trained to work with Schwenker’s twin boys, who both have autism.

Finally, Schwenker could not only get her sons out of the house and on public transporta­tion but also have a resource to track down her sons should they take off.

“We needed a service dog to which we could tether them,” Schwenker said.

“If they eloped, the dog could track them. If they engaged in behaviors such as excessive hand flapping or a meltdown, the dog could interrupt the behavior. In order to safely access the community, I knew we needed a service dog,” she said.

High cost of service

The real battle is the cost. On average, nonprofit organizati­ons charge between $12,000 and $25,000 for the training and care it takes to prepare a dog for service with a person with autism.

Roper has been raising money for a dog to be trained for Brody.

“It costs them $27,000 to train (service dogs),” Roper said. “Families are now responsibl­e for $17,000, but since mine was approved so long ago they were only at $14,000.”

Roper said recently that the price has increased to $15,000.

Her hope is to meet the financial goal in time to give him the dog for his 8th birthday on Jan. 10.

‘A really long 7 years’

Roper found only one organizati­on — in Ohio — willing and able to help Brody.

“It’s been a really long seven years,” Roper said.

Roper applied for a dog from Georgia-based Canine Assistants to help with those mobility issues in 2013, but when she didn’t hear back, she applied with Ohio-based 4 Paws for Ability, the same place where the Schwenkers got Barkley.

After going through physical and occupation­al therapy and being on a Canine Assistants waiting list for three years, Brody was denied a dog, but Roper wasn’t too upset because Brody had already been approved for a dog from 4 Paws for Ability.

“He was denied based on the change in needs,” Roper said. “It wasn’t because they just decided he couldn’t have one.”

That was in April, his mother said, more than two years after they first applied.

The recipient coordinato­r for Canine Assistants, Theresa Martin, said the organizati­on doesn’t train service dogs for those with autism.

“We do evaluate each applicatio­n individual­ly,” Martin said.

“It is a very specialize­d training that goes into an autism service dog and we simply do not do that at our organizati­on. In the past, we have had dogs that have gone with recipients that have autism, but they also have other disabiliti­es.”

While medical service dogs provide comfort and peace of mind, they are not the same as emotional support animals, said Michelle Farrell, a self-described disabled handler of an Owner Trained Service Dog.

Help from a friend

Recently, a high school acquaintan­ce of Roper reached out on social media, offering to help raise money for Brody’s service dog. Scott Mashburn is one of the owners of the Johnny’s New York Style Pizza restaurant in Villa Rica. “He told me that he noticed Brody was in need of a service dog and that they had recently done a fundraiser for a little girl in town,” Roper said.

Mashburn said he would every once in a while see Roper’s attempts to raise money and knew he and his business partner, Joe Paradiso, could help.

“The people of Villa Rica have embraced Johnny’s,” Mashburn said.

Brody’s fundraiser recently brought in more than $4,000, Roper said.

Anyone who wants to contribute can do so online via Razoo, which is run by the 4 Paws for Ability charity and gives 100 percent of the donations to a service dog for Brody.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? A fundraiser held at Johnny’s Pizza in Villa Rica raised more than $4,000 toward a service dog for Brody Roberts, a 7-year-old boy with autism.
FAMILY PHOTO A fundraiser held at Johnny’s Pizza in Villa Rica raised more than $4,000 toward a service dog for Brody Roberts, a 7-year-old boy with autism.

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