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UMC to host public course on Technical Large Animal Emergency Rescue

The University of Minnesota Crookston will host a public course on Technical Large Animal Emergency Rescue (TLAER) on November 16 in the Charles H. Casey Equine Arena. This course teaches the safe extrication of live large animals in local emergency situations such as trailer overturns, mud, ice, barn fires, and more. The session includes a classroom presentation, a discussion with Rebecca Gimenez Husted, Ph.D., an internationally recognized speaker and editor of the only TLAER textbook in the industry, and a trailer tip demonstration and Q&A.

To register, visit z.umn.edu/TLAER or pay at the door. The public’s fee is $45, and continuing education units (CEUs) are available for participants as part of professional development. A separate session for U of M Crookston students will be held on the same day.

Husted is a decorated combat veteran, retired U.S. Army signal officer, and holds biology and animal physiology degrees
. She offers consulting and training throughout the United States and internationally for emergency response services such as fire departments, law enforcement agencies, emergency management, county and state emergency response teams, animal control officers, and other rescue squads. During the TLAER course, Husted teaches how to safely perform rescues without injury to the animal or people and focuses on animal behavior and how it might affect people attempting to extricate large animals.

TLAER courses are designed to concentrate on livestock, with horses being the most encountered large animal in an emergency incident. The term “large animal” also includes commercial livestock, exotic animals, zoo animals, and more. Information from the course is particularly beneficial for cruelty investigations and neglect/abuse seizure cases. Prevention,
safety and education are major themes of the courses because, as animal owners and stakeholders learn to prevent the most common types of incidents, the focus can be shifted to the unusual and highly technical ones.

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Beth Rose
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