Sign In

Top Tier K-9, training dogs to smell COVID-19

April 7, 2020

With the economic uncertainties from the Coronavirus, we here at ABC 27 are shining a light on businesses that are doing their part to help out the community while keeping their business open.

During our newscasts, we’re highlighting local businesses that are still open, despite the coronavirus.

We’re highlighting a local K-9 training business that’s not only training scent-detection dogs to find drugs, but also to sniff out coronavirus.

Top Tier K-9 training facility is training dogs with multiple different skill sets. Their latest development is preparing their K-9’s to sniff the COVID-19 virus.

The dogs are given scent training as a base and then when they are ready for a finalized scent, they are transported to Atlanta for the actual coronavirus scent training, according to Jeff Minder, owner of Top Tier K-9.

“The dogs then go to a secure facility where the dogs and handlers are protected. We keep them clean, we sanitize them, we decontaminate them after we do the searches but we put that odor in their portfolio so they can later detect it,” said Minder.

Puppies from around the world are brought into this facility to go through an intense 12-week foundation class.

Each dog is trained on 50 things that roll up into four functions: police, military, service and protection. Minder says that once a dog has graduated from the foundations course, they go to finishing school, where the dog learns the specifics of what they are needed for.

Top Tier K-9 also offers the opportunity to become a certified trainer. The program is about a year long

“We put a lot of work into these guys and a lot of emotions. You watch them grow from when they were babies and the day they leave, it’s bittersweet you cry a little,” says Alyssa Browning a former student who now works at Top Tier K-9.

Travis Lloyd, a current student, is almost done with his training.

Lloyd was originally introduced to Top Tier K-9 when he received a service dog for himself, after serving eight years in Afghanistan.

“My service animal gives me a sense of confidence and allows me to let my guard down where I haven’t been able to in the past,” said Lloyd.

“If I could just train one dog a year, and just help one person with a dog like mine it, would be worth it,” Lloyd added.

There is currently around an eight-month wait for a fully trained dog from Top Tier K-9.

If you’re a business supporting our community, we want to hear from you.

ABC 27 has made it easy to submit your own business.

This is not just Tallahassee. South Georgia small businesses, we want to hear from you too!

 

Register Your Dog

  • Most Recent News

    Former Victoria man’s diabetic alert dog helps him get back to life

    When Luke Hengen’s diabetes worsened in his early twenties, it stripped him of the outdoor activities where the country kid felt at home. Countless wilderness adventures and years of hard-fought football games took a toll on his body, to the point where he could no longer sense when his blood sugar was too high or […]

    Read more

    Students Get Therapy Dog

    When middle school students return to class on Jan. 11, they’ll find a new face at the door: Daisy. Daisy is a therapy dog and the personal pet of Rob Kreger, principal of the Rock L. Butler Middle School. The five-year-old golden retriever is not a school pet or mascot, but rather a working dog […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dogtor

    Last March, Caroline Benzel, a third-year medical student, began to notice the stress and discomfort her nurse friends were feeling from the pressures of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. “[Personal protective equipment] can be really rough on the skin,” Benzel, 31, tells PEOPLE. Benzel and her 3-year-old Rottweiler, Loki (who’s also a therapy dog) hatched a […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dog Pups

    When Stanley the miniature fox terrier’s owner passed away, the little dog started a ‘paw-some’ new role – bringing puppy love to some of the Gold Coast’s oldest residents. After Carinity Cedarbrook Diversional Therapist Julianne Staff adopted Stanley, he began visiting the aged care community at Mudgeeraba as a therapy dog. Therapy dogs help to […]

    Read more

    Puppy Cams

    A nonprofit is providing an unusual form of therapy for those on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic – puppy cams! “You spend five minutes with a puppy and try not to smile,” said registered nurse Robin Lingg Lagrone. Lingg Lagrone says watching little furballs wag their tails and prance on their paws helps […]

    Read more

    Pet Committee

    When Moore County’s school doors were abruptly closed earlier in 2020, two- and four-legged volunteers from the Moore County Citizens’ Pet Responsibility Committee (PRC) were in their 12th year of presenting a six-session Pet Responsibility Education Program for fourth-graders. The PRC quickly shifted gears and placed its program materials online as part of a home […]

    Read more