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First Loves and Second Careers: Giving Back to the Community

Some Retirees Saw a Need and Are Still at Work

Wilma Melville, founder of the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation, with training dogs Jem and Newton.
Wilma Melville, founder of the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation, with training dogs Jem and Newton. (By Jonathan Alcorn For The Washington Post)
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By Judith Mbuya
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 12, 2007

For many people, retirement is a time to start a second career. Some set out to build a lucrative new business. Others seek to develop lifelong hobbies into money-making enterprises. Still others see retirement as an opportunity to give something back to society.

A recent report by the Pew Research Center found that 77 percent of workers expect to work after retirement. And most of those people will work not because they have to but because they want to. Here are the tales of three people who followed their hearts to serve the community.

Wilma Melville

When physical education teacher Wilma Melville retired at 50, she jotted down a list of things she wanted to take up as hobbies. Why not become a magician or proficient at archery? She also had a dream of training a dog for search-and-rescue operations.

In the end, the dog-training dream turned into far more than a hobby.

In the late 1980s, Melville got a German Shepard, named her Topa and began searching for a trainer. She searched for five years for an instructor who could bring Topa up to standard.

Finally she linked up with a nationally renowned canine trainer who urged her to get a new dog because Topa could never be trained properly after the years of bad instruction. So she kept Topa as a pet. Her new dog, a black Labrador named Murphy, was certified by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in 1995 after a year and half of training.

Melville and Murphy then set off on several deployments, such as searching for a lost snowboarder. The turning point for the dog and handler was helping the search and rescue at the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City after it was bombed in 1995.

The next year, they were off again to an advance security operation at the Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta.

It was also in 1996 that Melville founded the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation. After her deployment to Oklahoma City, Melville said she realized there was a dearth of FEMA-certified search-dog teams. At the time, there were 15, eight of them in California, she said.

So she established her foundation to train dogs and their volunteer handlers for rescue and recovery missions.

"I realized I would be of much greater service training others to go to disasters than going myself," said Melville, now 73.

Relying on her years of dog training and her experience as an educator and mother of four grown sons, Melville set out to change the status-quo and create a center that would train canine search teams from across the country.


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