Thursday, March 17, 2022

Eye on Oshkosh - Major changes ahead for the Oshkosh Area Humane Society - taped 3-17-2022

The Oshkosh Area Humane Society is undergoing major changes. After 30 years of service to the shelter and the Oshkosh community, Executive Director Joni Geiger is hanging up her dog leashes and retiring in April. At the same time, Cheryl Rosenthal, who has also worked at the shelter for 30 years, serving as the shelter’s Communications & Education Coordinator and Cat Consultant, is reducing her hours from full- to part-time. It’s a trip down memory lane as host Cheryl Hentz talks with Geiger and her successor, incoming Executive Director Jessica "Jessie" Miller, who started at the shelter as a volunteer when she was in high school and later became a paid employee. The group reminisces and looks at pictures of the very crowded and depressing original city dog and cat pound on Dempsey Trail – a place they worked in for approximately 12 years, where rooms served a double, sometimes, triple purpose, including the employees’ kitchen or lunchroom, where animals were also euthanized. Geiger tells the story of how the shelter was bequeathed $1.2 million dollars, which allowed the board, staff, and volunteers to start dreaming of a new place. In 2005 that new home became a reality, and the women share pictures of the convoy moving all the animals to the brand-new shelter, on a street that would eventually be named Shelter Court. There are also pictures of the new shelter that has so much more space to work within and carry out the shelter’s lifesaving mission. This is a show you won’t want to miss, especially since it showcases a significant piece of Oshkosh history. See it here or by following this link:  https://youtu.be/pRut1MwehYc


Tuesday, March 08, 2022

Oshkosh Police Department Adds a Therapy Dog to the Team


 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

OSHKOSH POLICE DEPARTMENT

________________________________________


Date: 03/08/2022

Time: 11:30 AM

Contact: Officer Kate Mann

Public Affairs/ Crime Prevention

(920) 236-5742


Subject: Oshkosh Police Department Adds a Therapy Dog to the Team

(Oshkosh, WI) February 08, 2022: The Oshkosh Police Department has added a new therapy dog to the Department.

Magic is a professionally trained, two-year old female Golden Retriever who will provide emotional support to both members of our community and Officers. She will be working with our Behavioral Health Officer, Scott Sopata, who since October 2021 has been responding to behavioral health-related calls, highly-sensitive/emotional calls for service, as well as being used to support employees of the Oshkosh Police Department after Critical Incidents.

She is a very friendly dog, loves to be pet, and always has a smile on her face. The Oshkosh Police Department continues to be proactive in seeking various strategies to help Officers deescalate situations and bring them to peaceful resolutions. Magic will work "her magic" by bringing a sense of calm to high stress situations and will be an important asset to both the Department and the City of Oshkosh.

Magic was trained through a program called, Journey Together. Journey Together Service Dog Inc., is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit charitable organization in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Their mission is to provide highly trained service dogs to people diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Dogs are placed at no charge with qualified Wisconsin residents who are 18 years or older. This organization has a unique training program for their service dogs. The service dogs reside at the Oshkosh Correctional Institution and inmates apply to the program to provide training in a number of areas and care for the dogs. Community volunteers go to the facility to provide instruction with inmates and take the dogs out of the prison to provide experiences that are not possible in a correctional facility. This partnership significantly decreases the cost of training service dogs, increasing the number of dogs who can be trained and placed in the community. The Oshkosh Police Department feels that partnering with Journey Together and the Oshkosh Correctional Institution helps to support rehabilitation programs and also support citizens in our community who are diagnosed with PTSD.

The Mission of the Oshkosh Police Department is to promote public safety and to enhance the quality of life in our community through innovative policing and community partnerships Magic has completed extensive training with Journey Together and with Officer Sopata. She has several Certifications: Canine Good Citizen, Advanced Canine Good Citizen, Urban Canine Good Citizen and Trick Dog. Journey Together typically trains their dogs from the time they are 8 weeks old until they are two years old.

Chief Dean Smith stated, "The ability to add a therapy dog to our programming to help our community members in need is another step forward that the Department has taken to respond to our community members in need. Magic has come to us through generous donations from our community through the Oshkosh Area Community Foundation. We are incredibly thankful for the support that our donors provide to us. Our community believes in the work that we are doing and we appreciate that!"

Behavioral Health Officer, Scott Sopata stated: "I am very excited about incorporating Magic into my role as BHO. We will work as a Team to assist individuals in crisis situations, help them get any needed resources, and will also conduct after care follow up with them. Magic will bring an additional sense of calm and peace wherever she goes."

The Oshkosh Police Department has partnered with Winnebago County Human Services who will be providing a Mental Health Crisis Specialist Co-Responder to the team in the near future as well. This Co-Responder will be working with Behavioral Health Officer Sopata and will respond to calls for service with him to provide assessment and brief counseling to citizens experiencing a mental health emergency and determine the best intervention/ treatment options. Funding for this new Co-Responder position is provided by Winnebago County (Human Services) and the City of Oshkosh and is currently posted online: https://www.co.winnebago.wi.us/human-resources/employment-opportunities. The Oshkosh Police Department feels that Mental Health Wellness is a priority for both its employees and community members. By incorporating a Behavioral Health Officer, a therapy dog, and a Mental Health Crisis Specialist Co-Responder to our team as well as having a Mental Health and Resiliency program for employees we are striving to promote this wellness in our community.

City of Oshkosh 

Police Department

420 Jackson Street

Oshkosh, WI 54901

Tel: 920-236-5700

www.oshkoshpd.com


PROFESSIONALISM ● PRIDE ● INTEGRITY ● TEAMWORK


Thursday, March 03, 2022

Gordon Hintz not seeking re-election this fall

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date: March 3, 2022

Contact: Rep. Hintz, (608) 266-2254

REP. HINTZ ANNOUNCES HE WILL NOT SEEK RE-ELECTION TO ASSEMBLY

OSHKOSH –State Representative Gordon Hintz (D-Oshkosh) announced today that he will not seek reelection to the state Assembly in the fall of 2022.

“It has been a great honor to represent the people of Oshkosh in the Wisconsin State Assembly the past 15 years. As someone born and raised in Oshkosh, a product of Oshkosh public schools, who shared his parents’ interest in public service, the job has been a thrilling and incredibly rewarding experience.

“Despite the changing nature of politics and different roles and responsibilities I have had in the Assembly, the people of Oshkosh have always remained my absolute priority. I am proud of the accomplishments I have been a part of during my time in the legislature. And while disappointed by many of the decisions that were made — or failed to be made — during my tenure, I have always strived to find value in my work that benefitted the people of the 54th District and of our state. I will miss many of the people I have served with, and the important work done each and every day.

Representative Hintz was first elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly in 2006 and re-elected to his eighth term for the 2021-2022 Legislative Session. He has served as Chair of the Assembly Consumer Protection Committee (2009-10), a member of the State Building Commission (2009-14), on the legislature’s budget-writing Joint Committee on Finance for two budget cycles (2015-16 and 2017-18) and as a board member of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (2019 to present).  In January, Rep. Hintz concluded his tenure as the Wisconsin State Assembly Minority Leader, a role he had been elected by his colleagues to serve in since the fall of 2017. 

“I haven’t made any decisions about my future at this time, but look forward to the next challenge. Until my term as representative is up, I plan on continuing my service to my constituents. I’m grateful to have had this amazing opportunity to serve, and appreciate the support of my family, especially my wife Liz, during my time in office. I would like to thank the people of Oshkosh for their trust, and support in giving me the opportunity to represent them in the Assembly.”