and to date they have helped more than 200 off our 200 of our nation s heroes here to tell us more is mary peter at the end. communications director greg right here and two of the program s graduates we have army veteran travis mac and his service dog bear. good morning to you. and navy veteran cindy hogg and her. hagg. steve: sorry about that. that s okay. steve: her service dog baby. there are a number of service dog organizations out there what makes yours unique. multifaceted. when we provide a dog for a veteran we test a dog for the ability to send adrenaline. there aren t many organizations that i know of that do that. steve: one of the other things, greg, is the fact that some service dog organizations do not spend as much time with the vet training the veto work with the dog. it takes a year to train a
it doesn t even advocate the ownership of firearm. it strictly says that missouri will protect the second amendment rights of missourians. reporter: but opponents worry such a law could all but end any joint operations between local and federal law enforcement agencies when it come to taking guns off the streets. st. louis police chief sam dodson has been one of the most vocal opponents. this bill, if the legislature overrides the governor s veto work preclude us from enforcing those laws. basically putting a sign on missouri that says, okay, criminal, it is okay to come to missouri. we won t prosecute to the fullest extent of the law. like illinois, kansas, like every other state in the union. reporter: what do you say to people who believe this bill go too far? i don t think it goes too far. i don t think it go that far at all. i don t think it will have that much impact on life as we know it. on law enforcement as we know it.