24-Hr Emergency Contact - (970) 565-8441 - ask for K9

 

Who We Are

 

Officers  | Members

 

K-9 is on call twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year, regardless of weather conditions or circumstances. We are a non-profit, totally volunteer organization that depends on the support of the community, grants and fundraisers to maintain operations. We do not ask that our services be paid for, although we do ask for fuel reimbursement. When requested to respond, we will do so with a multitude of dogs, handlers, and navigators. To transport the Team and their dogs we have a modified school bus that has room for 9 passengers, kennels for 5+ dogs, and serves as the communications center on many searches.

 

We also have a 4 wheel drive pick-up truck and a base camp trailer that holds the majority of the Team’s rescue and medical gear that is brought when needed. The Team can be self sufficient for a minimum of 5 days with no outside support when required to do so.

 

 

Each dog lives with, is owned, and is trained by the individual handler. It takes approximately 600 hours of training before the dogs become "operational". Our field training imitates real life situations such as wilderness, water, disaster, child, elderly, hikers, hunters, etc. We also train the dogs to look for articles that may have been left and anything that has human scent on it.

 

This type of training is necessary for all searches and especially important when we are requested by law enforcement agencies to assist in homicides and evidence searches. Most of our dogs are trained as "air scenters" to find any human scent in an area. Some of the dogs are trained to be "trailers". These trailing dogs are used to establish a direction of travel when a last known point is available. Dogs can be an effective resource when trained and used appropriately.
 

It takes approximately 1000 hours of training for the handlers, navigators, and base camp operators. Some of the skills needed to be a SAR professional include mapping, survival, medical, etc. All of the active members are First Responders and most are EMT’s.

States requesting assistance have included Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, Alaska, California, Idaho and Texas. The Team has been asked to respond to wilderness, water, snow, urban, evidence, homicide, aircraft and disaster type searches. We have also been asked to help locate old cemeteries for archeologists.
 

In addition to training and missions, the Team spends many hours of fundraising and public relations. The Team has taught classes and held demonstrations for the Colorado and New Mexico statewide search and rescue conferences, national encampments, avalanche schools, nursing homes, church camps and at public and private schools.
 

On Jan. 1  the team made the decision to move to realign the team command structure to emulate that of the Incident Command System (ICS). Six General and Command Staff positions were appointed by vote - Team Commander, Public Information Officer, Operations Section Chief, Finance/ Administration Chief, Planning Section Chief, and Logistics Section Chief. 

 

Officers

 

Team Commander Chuck Melvin
Planning Section Chief Kat Remmerde
Logistics Section Chief Shawn Everett
Operations Section Chief Randy Bouet
Finance/Administration Chief Kim Hamilton
Public Information Officer Vicki Coss
 

Team Chaplin - Father Johnny Shepherd


Members

 

1 Chuck Melvin
2 James Melvin
3 Vicki Ayers
4 Robert Laymon
5 Wayne Harrison
6 Randy Bouet
7 Amy Melvin
8 Donnetta Bowen
9 Vicki Coss
10 Marcus Appleton
11 Kimberly Kelly
12 Shawn Everett
13 Kat Remmerde
14 Cody Zornacki
15 Kim Hamilton
16 Bethany Maxwell
17 Moki Youngquist
18 Stephen Maxwell
19 Alex Bernholtz
20 Kerry Showalter