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The Goldie Standard

School safety dog offers assurances, education

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Goldie, a school safety dog with Interquest Detection Canines of Chicagoland, sniffs along a row of lockers at Minooka Community High School's Central Campus Wednesday morning looking for illegal substances. (Herald Photo by Lisa Pesavento)

Minooka Community High School’s furriest “staff member” just turned 4 years old, but has been working in the district for almost a year already.

Goldie, Minooka’s school safety dog, is a non-aggressive search dog trained to seek out illegal drugs, gunpowder-based items such as ammunition and fireworks, alcoholic beverages, and both prescription and over-the-counter drugs in the school and elsewhere on campus.

The board of education for Minooka District 111 agreed last November to give Goldie and her trainer, Glenn VadeBonCoeur, of Interquest Detection Canines, a one-semester trial.
Goldie’s first semester in Minooka was donated to the school by the Grundy County State’s Attorney’s office.

“Over the summer, we approached our school board with continuing the program,” said Minooka Assistant Principal Matt Wikoff. “They were very receptive and, fortunate for us, through the hard work and what they saw with Glenn and Goldie, they saw this as a great program to continue.”

Goldie is now in her second semester at Minooka, but has been working with Interquest Detection Canines for about three years, VadeBonCoeur said. She was trained in Houston, Texas, to take over for her predecessor, Dandy, when Dandy retired.

Interquest rescued Goldie from a previous owner who did not want her anymore.

“We’re a nationwide company,” VadeBonCoeur said. “We’ve been in business for roughly 25 years. We have offices scattered from Texas to the East Coast.”

VadeBonCoeur is responsible for the Chicago region, with a total customer list of between 20 and 25 schools. Other than Minooka High, VadeBonCoeur and Goldie also visit local schools in Coal City, Morris, and Ottawa. They also travel to schools in Bradley and make stops at the Lincoln-Way schools, too.

The number of visits to any one school seems to vary throughout the semester, VadeBonCoeur said.

“The more they see us here, the more they understand that the school has taken a very solid stance,” VadeBonCoeur said.

“We try to make it frequent enough to keep a routine in place, but we don’t want to get into a situation where we are advertising that she’s coming,” Wikoff added.

When Goldie arrives in Minooka, she and her trainer meet with the administration to determine a location or several locations that will be searched that day. They visit hallways so she can sniff the lockers, the locker rooms, other common areas, as well as the parking lot so she can sniff cars.

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