During periods of severe cold, many cities offer warming centers: temporary shelters for those in need, often operated out of churches and non-profit facilities. But if animals aren’t allowed inside, this creates a conundrum for pet owners who are homeless. Now Bogey’s Buddies, an animal rescue based out of Bartow County, Georgia, is confronting this challenge in an innovative and admirably selfless way.

When needed, the staff park outside a local warming center in their bus and stay through the night with pets who can’t accompany their owners indoors. In a recent Facebook livestream, you can see a couple pups playing with toys and munching on treats in the spacious vehicle, which is decked out with plenty of crates and blankets.

You can find more information about the Bogey’s—officially known as Bartow Rescue & Resources—at their website. “At Bogey’s Buddies, our mission goes beyond just rescuing pets; we are dedicated to keeping families united,” reads their “About Us” section. “This is why we engage in community outreach to support pet owners and prevent unnecessary separations. We provide resources and guidance while organizing educational events to strengthen the bond between humans and their cherished pets.”

To help support their ongoing efforts, you can donate to their Givebutter campaign, helping cover the cost of both owner-surrendered pets and those who arrive as strays. In addition, Bogey’s recently announced a three-hour live fundraiser with the national animal advocacy organization Jordan’s Way, set for March 9th.

The timing is critical. “The country is in crisis mode. Healthy dogs and cats are being euthanized. Animals are getting sick and dying from preventable diseases that are being spread from overcrowding,” they write on the Givebutter site.

Jo’El Lapp, director and founding member of Bogey’s, spoke to GOOD about the origins of their organization, launched in April 2024 with co-director Becca Gosnell, whom she knew casually through rescue efforts.

“I knew from online she was a cat person, and I reached out because I had a foster dog that needed to be tested with cats,” she says. “We got along very well. Samantha [Able] is another co-founder, and her dog passed away the year before. As I went around town with my foster dogs, people would tell me that I needed to meet Sam because her dog Bogey just died and she might be looking for another pet. With these two ladies, the first glimmer of a rescue started.”

They named their organization after that dog because of his powerful path to rehabilitation. “[Bogey] was on the euthanasia list, severely emaciated, heartworm-positive, and terrified,” Able wrote on their website. “The only reason we were able to adopt him was thanks to an incredible woman who chose to foster him! It’s fitting that Bogey became the namesake of our rescue organization, as his story embodies the spirit of hope and second chances that we strive to provide for other animals in need.”

The all-woman crew expanded to include board member/Bogey’s Boutique supervisor Elizabeth “June” Boardman, board member Kelsey Strawn, non-board members Macie Rae and Madie Rose, and a crew of volunteers and fosters. And despite the heavy hours they clock, this has never been a financial endeavor.

“Becca and I are self-employed, and Sam is a manager at a brewery in Cartersville. All but one of the ladies on the board have full-time jobs or are business owners. One is a retired school teacher,” Lapp says. “Yes, volunteering the amount we do is a challenge. Our goal is to have a facility and start getting some form of compensation for the 60-plus hours we put in a week. Not to mention that we desperately need a place to put at-risk pets that do not have a foster home waiting, like soon-to-whelp moms and abandoned pets.”

The Bogey’s team is clearly putting in an exceptional amount of effort—and that’s before even mentioning their Internet-viral bus, the P.A.W. (Pet Adoption Wagon).

“We were having an adoption event in the summer, and the temps got into the 90’s,” Lapp says, detailing that project’s early days. “It was miserable. Even with fans blowing, it felt like we were in a convention oven. So I started thinking about a mobile adoption center. I had the idea of an air-conditioned and heated vehicle that we could use at events. A place for pets and humans to be comfortable.

“Becca also needed a meeting area for cats, so the meet and greets did not need to keep happening at her home,” she continues. “We looked at buses and RVs and finally fell on a semi-converted skoolie for a fair price. As we started the planning, we brainstormed on possible uses and something that always bothered me was that people had to choose between warmth in the bitter cold and their pets. It was an easy path to where we are.”

The bus was originally was parked on Lapp’s lawn—a temporary measure. (“It resulted in an 85-pound German Shepherd getting tied to my neighbor’s porch and two other dogs that were found on my street being brought to my house. I like not having a 45-foot sign on my lawn. Not sure where the bus will stay once the weather gets warmer.”) But for now it will be parked at the Compassion Center, a nonprofit in Cartersville, Georgia, through the winter. And, crucially, they have a plan in place, helping them prepare for those bus sleepovers.

“Once we receive a call from the Compassion Center with the expected dates that the warming shelter will be open, we let them know if we can staff the bus,” she says. “They then spread the word that we will be there. We get there about an hour before sunset, and then we start taking in the dogs. We had a cat this past week. The pet’s human is asked to walk the pet before 11 p.m. when lights are out and to get the pet by 8 a.m. The shelter allows pets during the day use.”

Given the success they’ve already seen, I wondered if Lapp has any advice for places like warming centers—suggestions that could help them welcome pets into facilities in the future.

“The bus is dual-purpose and not necessary if this is what they are trying to achieve,” she says. “The community is very supportive of helping the pets of the unsheltered. My suggestion is to get with the local humane society or a rescue group and fundraise for a heated shed with kennels. Just the type that are in Home Depot or Lowe’s parking lot. They may even be able to get one donated if the company can get some bragging rights. Maybe a local builder? Does not need to be fancy, only functional.

“People need to think out of the box. We are not in a normal situation with the current pet crises, so the usual solutions are not going to work. Be creative and make the big asks. People want to help if you give them the opportunity.”

Despite the noble efforts of the Bogey’s crew, there are still “many” people going unserved in similar situations. “It is a trust issue that we are still working through,” Lapp notes. “Municipalities are not kind to the unsheltered. I understand that there are challenges, but a little humanity goes a long way.”

A key theme, she adds, is that “we sometimes overlook those who cannot help themselves.”

“We are trying to bridge that gap,” Lapp says. “We have taken two of the pups to get fixed after our last cold spell. Another got all of his shots. We try to educate on how dangerous it can be for a dog to have puppies and how easy it is for the puppies to die in those conditions. We are hoping to be able to track and manage these dogs so that they live healthy, happy, and safe lives and continue to be the support that their human needs.”

  • Pit bulls saves unconscious couple after flagging down a stranger
    (L) A pitbull on a leash; (R) Paramedics look after an injured womanPhoto credit: Canva
    ,

    Pit bulls saves unconscious couple after flagging down a stranger

    “I got this overwhelming feeling that he wanted me to follow him,” the Good Samaritan said of the heroic dog.

    We often hear stories about the intuition of dogs, but a recent event in Pittsburgh serves as a powerful reminder that our four-legged friends are capable of complex, life-saving communication. In this case, a pit bull didn’t just bark for help; he actively recruited a stranger to save his owners’ lives.

    The incident unfolded when Gary Thynes was in a local park with his own dog. He noticed a pit bull acting frantically, clearly in distress but hesitant to approach. Thynes, sensing something was wrong, decided to engage rather than walk away.

    “I’m really glad that he did what he did,” Thynes told local station WTAE-TV. “He definitely got my attention…He’d come just close enough for me to be out of arm’s reach. Then he would bark, turn around, run a few steps, turn around, bark again. It felt like he was trying to get my attention. I got this overwhelming feeling that he wanted me to follow him.”

    Thynes trusted that feeling. He handed his own dog off to a friend and followed the pit bull away from the street and toward a secluded tent encampment. What he found there was terrifying.

    The dog led him to a red couch where a man was lying unresponsive. “I couldn’t even tell if he was breathing or not,” Thynes recalled. As he assessed the situation, he realized the emergency was twofold. “Then I turned around and noticed a pair of legs sticking out of a tent. I tried to shake them. It was a woman who wouldn’t respond to me either.”

    pit bull rescue, hero dog, Gary Thynes, Pittsburgh, WTAE-TV, dog saves owners, animal control, foster dog, good news, canine hero
    A couple sleeping in their tent Canva

    Thynes immediately called 911. Pittsburgh Public Safety later confirmed to CNN that medics arrived promptly and transported both the man and the woman to the hospital for treatment.

    But the story didn’t end with the ambulance ride. Thynes, who shared on Facebook that he is “16 months sober from heroin addiction,” felt a deep responsibility toward the dog who had orchestrated the rescue. When animal control arrived, they informed him the dog would be taken to a shelter “far outside the city.” Worried that the owners would struggle to retrieve their pet due to distance and fees, Thynes made a generous offer.

    He volunteered to foster the dog himself.

    “[I]t is an honor for me to take care of this guy,” Thynes wrote on Facebook, “until his humans are well enough to reunite with a dog that loves them very much.”

    For now, the hero dog is safe, fed, and getting plenty of attention from his temporary guardian. As Thynes told WTAE, “He’s a persistent little puppy… He’s amazing. And he definitely saved some lives.”

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • NBA legend Michael Jordan opens up fourth North Carolina health clinic for the uninsured

    After successfully building three other clinics, as mentioned on Upworthy and Scoop Upworthy, NBA all-star Michael Jordan teamed up once again with Novant Health to build a fourth clinic for the uninsured in North Carolina. The health clinic is the second one built in Wilmington and opened on February 19, 2025.

    Jordan is considered by many to be the greatest basketball player to compete in the National Basketball Association. With a career at the top spanning from 1984 through 2003, Jordan became a six-time NBA champion and four-time gold medalist in the Olympics. Jordan would be inducted in the NBA Hall of Fame in 2009.

    How these clinics are changing lives for the uninsured

    This creation of this health clinic was based on the benefits shown from the previous clinics in the state. After the success of the first clinic, Jordan gifted $10 million to Novant Health to expand and create others. Each location was chosen based on the barriers the community was facing in obtaining health care, including transportation. Many patients had their first primary care visit with a physician thanks to Jordan’s clinics providing these services for people who cannot afford health insurance.

    This new clinic will have a standard primary care team of physicians, but also a community health worker to assist the patients and grant access to community resources. The 7,3000-square-foot clinic and its 12 patient rooms will be open on weekdays.

    The broader picture: Healthcare access in America

    Unfortunately, many people still lack access to affordable health care and health insurance. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 27.1 million Americans were uninsured in the first quarter of 2024. Keep in mind that being insured doesn’t necessarily mean that a person’s health needs were met or had received full coverage. A 2024 YouGov poll showed that 49% of Americans were dissatisfied with the state of the U.S. health care system.

    healthcare access, Jordan donation, community clinic, patient care, primary care, affordable healthcare, health insurance, healthcare disparity, social impact, NBA legend, Jordan clinic, nonprofit health, underserved communities
    Clinic are factoring more and more into health planning in the US. Photo credit: Canva

    So what can a person do to improve their health care? Individually, if a person obtains health insurance through their employer, they can investigate speaking to their HR representative or union head and work with them to go through different plans for you and your coworkers to find the best option. Discuss gaps in various coverage and see if your employer is open to finding a different employee health plan to address those gaps. If you don’t have a health care plan through your work, you can see what options are available to you through the Affordable Care Act.

    If you aren’t finding the health care you are looking for and want to enact larger change, you may want to get politically involved. Investigate to see if there are groups in your area advocating for the change you want to see in the American health care system. They can point you towards proposals, elections, and candidates that fit your views and that you can help get elected or enacted.

    Doing so will help not only yourself, but help others gain access to the health care you wish to receive, much like Michael Jordan’s generous gesture. It’s a slam dunk for the whole team.

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.
  • Employee scolded for buying homeless man a pizza, customer came up with an idea to help
    Pizza will find a way. Photo credit: commons.wikimedia.org
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    Employee scolded for buying homeless man a pizza, customer came up with an idea to help

    The customer came up with a way to see that the homeless man got plenty of pizzas free of cost.

    Acts of kindness can brighten someone’s day, but sometimes they don’t go as expected. It’s disheartening when good deeds are punished. On Reddit, former pizza joint employee u/Huge_Buddy_2216 shared how his manager criticized him for buying dinner for a homeless man. However, the story took a surprising turn when a customer found a clever way to help.

    The employee shared that he was working at a well-known US pizza delivery chain store in the early 2000s. He wrote, “For anyone who has ever worked in the US food service industry, you’re probably familiar with what a failing dumpster fire of a restaurant looks like. On many nights, it was just me and one driver taking care of the whole restaurant.”

    He further shared his grievances as he mentioned that he did not have any breaks during his shift. He said in the post, “Breaks were out of the question because the restaurant would be completely unattended, the recent franchise buyers were complete and total idiots who would show up unannounced to yell at me, and the overwhelming majority of our customers ordered once and then never again. We had pizza deliveries taking 90+ minutes, people bringing them back to the store … it was a nightmare.”

    good deeds, customer hero, clever workaround, feel-good story
    Representative Image: Making pizzas for hungry people. Pexels I Photo by Jvxhn Visuals

    After talking about his workplace’s toxic environment, the employee goes on to narrate how one day a homeless man walked into the store to enquire whether the shop had any leftover pizzas. He wrote, “Well, 11 pm rolls around as I’m kind of standing by the phones watching the clock tick down, and a homeless man walks in. He introduced himself as Ricky and asked if we had any leftover pizzas that nobody picked up.”

    A simple start

    The employee mentioned that he apologetically informed Ricky that there were no leftovers. But, since he was in a good mood, he asked him what he wanted. The user described the incident saying, “He says he likes the meat lovers’ pizza. Since he isn’t a sociopath like some of our customers, I say I’ll be happy to make him one. Ricky at this point is so thankful that he sits down in one of our chairs and starts bouncing up and down like a little kid.”

    Representative Image Source: Pexels I Photo by Polina Tankilevitch
    Representative Image Source: Pexels I Photo by Polina Tankilevitch

    The former employee had also paid for the pizza on behalf of the homeless man which cost him 12 dollars, equivalent to the wages of an hour and a half at the shop. He calls the transaction a “Good deal.” Soon, things took an ugly turn as the manager arrived. “As the pizza comes out of the oven, in comes the area manager – the brother of the franchise owner. He begins shouting as usual and accuses me of stealing from the store,” he wrote.

    via GIPHY

    The user talks about Henry, who is a regular customer at the shop and witnessed the commotion. He narrates, “The area manager shouts a bit more, calls me a liar, says the count better be right that night, and leaves.” Soon both Ricky and Henry get their respective pizzas and leave the store with the duo spotted having a chat outside the shop.

    The employee then explained how Henry devised a clever plan to help feed Ricky. “The next night, Henry calls me for an order. This was unusual because he was generally a once-a-week guy. I also found it unusual that he ordered a meat lovers’ pizza instead of his usual supreme. I took it, made it, and 20 minutes later Henry called again apologetically to cancel it. I say OK. In a bizarre coincidence, Ricky rolled in right around that time asking for a pizza. I just so had one that was going to go uneaten sitting under the heater.”

    employee punished, manager backlash
    Representative Image: Is there anything better than pepperoni? Pexels I Photo by Pixabay

    The so-called “coincidence” soon started to take place every night as the user narrated, “Henry would call, order a meat lovers’ pizza, and I’d make it. Henry would then call again and cancel and Ricky would coincidentally roll in. Every night, same time. You could time it to the second. This went on for months.” Unfortunately, the clever scheme finally came to an end after one of his colleagues snitched on him and reported the full story to the manager. In the end, the user shared that the restaurant went under about a year later.

    @joshlilj Handing Out Pizza to Hungry People! ❤️
    ♬ original sound – Joshlilj

    The heartwarming post went viral and gained around 8.5k upvotes with over 200 comments. u/Ashshaun commented, “Good people doing good for the sake of being good. I love it. Besides if a business can’t cover the loss of 1 pizza a day (when most pizza places will give their employees free food anyway) they don’t deserve to be in business.” Another Reddit user expressed, “This. I’ve had to deal with homeless people more than a few times when I worked retail. You want a meal? I got you. I just wish I could have helped more. They usually have some nasty problems.”

    community support

    This article originally appeared last year.

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