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Emergency fund keeps dog businesses afloat

Michele SwalesBy Michele SwalesAugust 14, 20203 Mins Read
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Martha Brindley, Happy Hounds training school in Neilston, has used the financial support to renew her insurance

Fourteen dog training and behaviourist organisations are now ready to open their classes again thanks to financial support they received from the Kennel Club Educational Trust’s Emergency Relief Initiative.

The fund was established in April to support canine organisations that may have been suffering financial hardship as a result of the coronavirus crisis.

Recipients of the funding included INCA Dog Training, a small business from Buckinghamshire run by Julia Meads, who doesn’t only run dog training school but also holds animal communications workshops and much more.

Like many small businesses, INCA was affected by the pandemic, forcing Julia to close her classes. Julia herself suffered from the virus and when she recovered, she applied for the KCET funding. She used the money to hire a private field in which she can now run her classes. Additionally, she purchased all the necessary personal protective equipment to make sure her customers are safe.

Julia said:  “The funding was life-saving for my business. I used the money to run my classes in the new normal again and also to invest in online learning courses which enabled me to extend my services to online consultations over Zoom.”

OVERWHELMED

Another organisation which benefited from the funding was Happy Hounds training school in Neilston, owned by Martha Brindley, who was forced to close her school and as self-employed owner was left with no income. Martha used the money to renew her insurance and to make sure she could start working as soon as possible when restrictions were lifted.

“I am very grateful for the grant, without which I would have lost the business and reputation that I have been building over the last 15 years,” she said. “I was overwhelmed with emotion when I was informed that I was eligible for financial assistance at a time when the country was struggling in so many ways. I consider myself one of the lucky people to have come through these difficult times with my health intact.”

Gerald King, chairman of the Kennel Club Educational Trust, said: “Since its beginnings in 2007, the Kennel Club Education Trust has worked closely with organisations and individuals that support responsible dog ownership, promote the importance of obedience training and health and welfare of dogs.

“When we were establishing the fund together with the Kennel Club Charitable Trust, we were thinking of all the organisations and trainers who usually run vital education programmes, who lost their income during the pandemic.

“We received many applications and had to make some really hard decisions, but we believe the recipients of our funding are those who needed our help most urgently to save their business and livelihood.”

If you would like to donate to the Trust, visit https://bit.ly/2XyGfEp

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Michele Swales

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