USA TODAY US Edition

Chesney’s warm and fuzzy cause

Singer comes to the rescue of islands’ animals.

- Bob Doerschuk Special to USA TODAY

Kenny Chesney is the bard of island life. In the world he conjures through song, it’s always summertime. Beachside bars welcome shirtless, shoeless customers. You And Tequila are all one needs for a tropical idyll. And paradise grows even sweeter When the Sun Goes Down.

For 17 years, Chesney, 49, has found inspiratio­n for his bucolic vision right outside his front door in “Love City,” aka St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands. For all but two of those years, Cookie, a mixbreed canine companion, shared his life. Then, in September, while the six-time Grammy Award nominee was away, Hurricane Irma shattered their world.

“A friend of mine — we call him Low-Key Bob — took care of Cookie while I was gone,” Chesney says. “He brought her to Tennessee, but then a week later she passed in my assistant Jill Trunnell’s arms. So what we did after that has been kind of in Cookie’s honor.”

The country superstar created a foundation, named it Love For Love City, dedicated it to providing aid to Ir- ma’s victims and flew back home to survey the damage. “I’d never seen anything so apocalypti­c,” he says. “An area called Coral Bay was hit especially hard. My home was gone — and it had been built really strong. I’d lived there for so long, so to see it broken and bleeding, especially a place that was known for its beauty and charm, it was devastatin­g. It had become a ghost of an island.

“We did all we could for the people who were struggling there. We flew generators and coolers down there. You bring them to these people who have been without power for two months and they’re literally crying. They appreciate anything you can do because they need it so badly.”

As they worked amid the devastatio­n in St. John, Trunnell began to notice the countless domestic animals wandering down the rubbled streets. “She said to me, ‘What about the animals who have been left behind?’ I said, ‘You’re right. We’ve got to help them too.’

“Once we got past the anxiety of getting water to people and taking care of their basic needs, Jill contacted Big Dog Ranch in Florida and Island Dog Rescue in St. John, St. Thomas and Vieques in Puerto Rico,” Chesney says. “Next thing you know, we’ve got three or four planes going down there to get these animals healthy and safe.”

Since Nov. 16, Love For Love City has mobilized boats, ferries, box trucks and about 100 volunteers on behalf of lost and abandoned pets. About 250 animals have been transporte­d to West Palm Beach, Fla. There they were boarded onto two 50-passenger jets to Norfolk and Statesvill­e, N.C., with volunteers driving them to those owners who could be tracked down. The remaining animals were delivered to facilities in Virginia, North Carolina, Maine, Massachuse­tts and Missouri and offered for adoption.

This mission isn’t over. Donations are still welcome at Loveforlov­ecity.org.

“But,” Chesney says, “I’ll tell you, it’s getting better every day, thanks to a lot of people. First time I flew there after the hurricane, every tree was broken. It looked like it had been bombed. Then a couple of weeks ago I went back and noticed a little bit of greenery.

“It takes a while. There’s no blueprint for something like this. But I’m really proud to be a part of helping the animals. Without Cookie, it might not have happened.”

 ??  ?? LOVE FOR LOVE CITY FUND
LOVE FOR LOVE CITY FUND
 ??  ?? Kenny Chesney and friends — two-legged and four-legged — prepare to fly to the USA from the U.S. Virgin Islands as part of his Love For Love City mission to reunite rescued animals with their owners or offer them for adoption. LOVE FOR LOVE CITY FUND
Kenny Chesney and friends — two-legged and four-legged — prepare to fly to the USA from the U.S. Virgin Islands as part of his Love For Love City mission to reunite rescued animals with their owners or offer them for adoption. LOVE FOR LOVE CITY FUND

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