So.. you are saying that (((SOMETHING))) Has happened in the last 3 years that hospitals are now hiring K9 Teams to keep their staff safe..
Gee. Maybe its the massive amount of imported ILLEGAL ALIENS or the decriminalization of psychotropic mushrooms or the fentanyl crisis. Never mind the MASSIVE gang and cartel problem in the general Grand Junction area... yeah, that's a thing too. Kind of funny going to a brewery with signs up saying "no gang colors or visible tattoos". The people that are non-local think its a joke.. yeah, its not.
They are literally hiring teams of ATTACK DOGS to keep staff "safe".
Maybe.. Just maybe, You have fucked up.
Archive: https://archive.today/tJosI
From the post:
"Moose isn’t the typical staff member at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Grand Junction.
For starters, he’s a dog, not a human. The two-year-old K9 has some important duties inside the Intermountain Health hospital.
“We patrol the halls,” said Moose’s handler, and fellow security officer, Christopher Firm. “Nurses have us as a tool, as well to be able to call us into rooms if they have a difficult patient. And if a patient is having a bad day we ask, 'Do you like dogs?' We can go in and visit – it really helps patients either calm down or just have a better day. Because nobody wants to be at the hospital, right?”"
So.. you are saying that (((SOMETHING))) Has happened in the last 3 years that hospitals are now hiring K9 Teams to keep their staff safe..
Gee. Maybe its the massive amount of imported ILLEGAL ALIENS or the decriminalization of psychotropic mushrooms or the fentanyl crisis. Never mind the MASSIVE gang and cartel problem in the general Grand Junction area... yeah, that's a thing too. Kind of funny going to a brewery with signs up saying "no gang colors or visible tattoos". The people that are non-local think its a joke.. yeah, its not.
They are literally hiring teams of ATTACK DOGS to keep staff "safe".
Maybe.. Just maybe, You have fucked up.
Archive: https://archive.today/tJosI
From the post:
"Moose isn’t the typical staff member at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Grand Junction.
For starters, he’s a dog, not a human. The two-year-old K9 has some important duties inside the Intermountain Health hospital.
“We patrol the halls,” said Moose’s handler, and fellow security officer, Christopher Firm. “Nurses have us as a tool, as well to be able to call us into rooms if they have a difficult patient. And if a patient is having a bad day we ask, 'Do you like dogs?' We can go in and visit – it really helps patients either calm down or just have a better day. Because nobody wants to be at the hospital, right?”"
(post is archived)