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‘Comfort dogs’ provide solace to those affected by Connecticut tragedy

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Maili Pieragostini, 6, of Newtown, Connecticut, stopped in to Excel Tutoring to visit with a pair of comfort dogs provided by the Lutheran Church Charities from Illinois. The K-9 Comfort Dog Ministry has nine Golden Retrievers in Newtown to help comfort community residents in need. Maili is a first-grader at the Head O' Meadow Elementary School in Newtown. School was supposed to start this morning but was postponed for one day. At left is Dona Martin, K-9 coordinator for for the K-9 comfort Dog Ministry, and at right, Barb Granado of the ministry. In the foreground is Ruthie, the Golden. (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Hartford/Courant/MCT)

(MCT) — NEWTOWN, Conn. — Maili Pieragostini, 6, opened a box of crayons Tuesday, selected one and drew a butterfly on a piece of folded paper.

The artwork was for her friend, Charlotte Bacon, 6, who was killed in Friday’s mass shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School. As Maili worked on her card for Charlotte at a local tutoring center, she looked up as a line of police cars passed by, followed by a hearse.

Watching her young daughter, Katja Pieragostini dabbed her eyes before regaining her composure and explained that her daughter’s elementary school — Head O’Meadow School — was closed Tuesday due to what police said was an anonymous threat. Pieragostini said she decided to bring her daughter to Excel Tutoring to spend time with “comfort dogs” provided by Lutheran Church Charities.

Pieragostini said she wants her daughter’s life to get back to normal, including going back to school. But on Tuesday, the first day classes were to resume in Newtown, parents of Head O’Meadow students were notified an hour before classes were to start that the school would be closed. Pieragostini said she called police to verify the information, wondering if it was a hoax.

But it wasn’t, and so police closed Head O’Meadow Tuesday “for precautionary reasons.”

While Pieragostini said she worries about additional threats, she also wants Maili to resume her normal routine, and that includes time spent at school, with her classmates.

“It’s all about that,” she said.

But with school canceled, the trip to Excel Tutoring on Church Hill Road to see the dogs proved a good distraction, Pieragostini said.

The golden retrievers — nine in all — arrived in Newtown Saturday from Illinois at the request of Christ the King Lutheran Church and are making their way through town. Trained to be calm and social, the dogs are available to provide comfort and solace to those affected by Friday’s tragedy, said Dona Martin, coordinator of the charities’ K-9 Comfort Dog Ministry.

The comfort dog ministry program began in 2008 following a shooting at Northern Illinois University, and Martin said the dogs have helped during a number of devastating situations since. Most recently, some of the dogs were in New York and New Jersey to comfort people affected by Hurricane Sandy, she said.

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