Service groups rely on volunteers to socialize their dogs. Could you be a puppy raiser? Today’s new breed of service dogs provides assistance in a variety of ways beyond their best-known role as escorts for blind companions. They retrieve household objects for people with limited mobility, act as ears for hearing-impaired individuals, monitor children with life-threatening food allergies and more. Some researchers are even exploring the role dogs can play aiding adults suffering from dementia. All of these impressive adult dogs, though, start life much like any other puppy, growing up in a home where they’re loved, socialized and taught basic obedience. Volunteers are a critical part of this process. Because of the high demand for service animals, most training organizations rely on outside help to oversee their dogs’ early care, usually from the time a puppy is about 2 months old until sometime between his first and second birthday. “We could not do what we do without our puppy raisers,” says Nancy Fierer, director of Susquehanna Service Dogs in Pennsylvania, which has more than 60 puppies receiving early socialization in volunteers’ homes at any given time. Who Makes a Good Volunteer? An extensive background with dogs is not required to raise a service pup, says Joyce Thielen, board member (and three-time puppy raiser) with Canine Partners of the Rockies in Colorado. If you want to bring some puppy love into your empty nest — and make a difference in your community — becoming a volunteer “puppy raiser” may be for you. “Puppy raising is an opportunity for someone who is nurturing and interested in the way a puppy learns,” Thielen says. “You’re expected to give the puppy your time, energy and love and attend regular training sessions.” Agencies...