Program Update: The Impact of Losing WWSDP Support
Lani Rethaber, Executive Director
Patriot K9s of Wisconsin has faced a major shift with the loss of funding from the Wounded Warriors Service Dog Project (WWSDP). We want to be transparent about how this has impacted our program, and what has not been affected.
Many of our readers may not be familiar with WWSPD. WWSPD was a federally funded service dog program supported by the Department of War (DOW) and designed to help ensure veterans nationwide could access trained service dogs and continued support.
Patriot K9s of Wisconsin was not the only organization impacted. All 28 organizations in the national network—serving veterans in all 50 states—have now lost this funding. That change has created immediate strain across the country and has jeopardized the stability of service dog programs for veterans.
What WWSDP Support Made Possible
WWSDP helped strengthen the day-to-day financial stability required to raise, train, and place service dogs. That support contributed to essentials that many people don’t see—consistent training hours, veterinary care, food, equipment, transportation, and the follow-up support our veteran teams rely on after placement.
What Has Changed
Losing WWSDP has created real constraints. Specifically:
- Fewer dogs in training at one time due to increased financial pressure per dog.
- Longer timelines as we pace intake and training to match available resources.
- Less flexibility for non-emergency needs, including travel, gear replacement, and additional training sessions including recertifications.
- More strain on staff and volunteers as we work to keep quality high while stretching resources further. We have had to reduce the number of staff we have available and put on hold some expansion positions, including a kennel worker and RGCI support personnel.
This is the reality of service dog work: it requires steady funding to stay consistent, ethical, and effective.
What Has Not Changed
Some things remain non-negotiable:
- We do not cut corners on training standards or safety.
- Our dogs still receive proper care and vet support.
- Our commitment to veterans remains the mission—always.
How We’re Moving Forward
This change pushed us to build a stronger foundation. Our focus now is:
- Diversifying funding so we are not dependent on one source of support.
- Growing monthly giving to stabilize our training pipeline.
- Building local partnerships and sponsorships to reduce costs and expand capacity.
How You Can Help
If you’re looking for the most direct way to keep dogs in training, it’s consistent support:
- Become a monthly donor
- Host a fundraiser (big or small)
- Sponsor a training milestone (vet visit, equipment, food, or gear)
- Share our mission and invite others to support or volunteer
Thank you for standing with us through this transition. We are still training, still serving, and still committed to providing life-changing service dogs to the veterans who need them most.
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