City of Greensboro, NC

11/12/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/12/2025 15:13

The Dog-tor is In the Building

Walking around the Public Safety Training Facility, Captain Shawn Hyatt may be the most popular human in the building.

The word "human" is used because walking next to him - at a height no taller than his lower-shin bone - traipses Natty, an 11-week-old golden retriever with a fur coat as fluffy as your favorite sweater and a face that could melt ice.

The duo can barely walk 10 feet before they're immediately stopped by a gaggle of the City's firefighters who take a minute out of their day to give her a good head pat or scratch behind the ear. She reacts accordingly with a frantically swooshing tail and licks.

For Hyatt - who has been a part of the Greensboro Fire Department for 12 years, and currently serves as the EMT coordinator - it's a whole new part of his job. Meanwhile, for Natty, it's the very start of her role as the department's first ever therapy dog.

AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

Despite having worked within the fire department for going on a dozen years, Hyatt never expected to find himself in this specific line of work.

Prior to his time with the City, the Greensboro native worked construction before getting his EMT and going to work in the ER at Cone Hospital. Then a friend came along and made a suggestion to join him in the fire department.

"I needed a job - it was not something I grew up wanting to do; it was never on my mind," said Hyatt with a laugh. "There was a point in time where one of my best friends - I met him probably about 15 years ago - and he worked at the fire department and talked me into applying. I didn't really know if I wanted to, but I did and got my EMT - it was the best decision I ever made."

On his third attempt in applying to the fire department, Hyatt finally got in.

Going into the fire academy Hyatt had no idea what all the job would entail. There were even a few times during his training where he questioned if he should be there.

Hyatt would stick it out and eventually came to a realization that all of the hard work and training was exactly what would prepare him for dealing with real-life emergencies.

"Just because it was challenging, I wasn't really sure," Hyatt said. "But once you kind of get past that and you realize they're training you like that for a reason, then you realize how beneficial it was."

Since then Hyatt has, as he would put it, "done a little bit of this, and a little bit of that." From being on the hazmat team to being a driver to becoming a captain two years ago.

But for the last year, along with serving as a captain, Hyatt has overseen the EMT training necessary to prepare both current members of the fire department, as well as the department's trainees.

While the City's current firefighters are EMT certified and receive formal reviews to stay up on techniques and things, the trainees Hyatt gets to oversee are sometimes fresh to the information.

"It's teaching people who don't know how to check blood pressure all the way to performing lifesaving procedures - they become fully functioning EMTs in seven weeks," Hyatt said. "We're one of the few fire departments in the state that are an educational institution, so we can run our own classes."

SOMEONE ORDER A NATTY?

Several months ago Greensboro Fire Chief Jim Robinson had an idea - "What if we had a therapy dog that could bring some relief to the firefighters of the City?"

Therapy dogs serving within fire and police departments is not a new thing, but for Greensboro's fire department it was. And with that simple idea the process got off and running when the Greensboro Firefighters Foundation purchased the recently named Natty as a part of their first major project from a retired fireman and dog trainer in Charlotte.

With it being the department's first therapy dog, Chief Robinson wanted the new four-legged crew member to be stationed at the Public Safety Training Facility next to Fire Station 1. Hyatt immediately volunteered to take on the role, which also means Natty lives in the Hyatt household.

"With a puppy golden retriever it is more of a wrangling position than a handling job," Hyatt said with a laugh. "But how can you say no? I love dogs, my wife loves dogs, my family loves dogs, and it's a benefit to the department."

Over the last few weeks Natty has become a constant presence in the facility, having made friends with at least 350 City employees, Hyatt said. Even when Hyatt is in the classroom leading courses, Natty is there taking a nap in the corner or enjoying a cuddle with one of the class participants.

While Natty is preparing to go off to obedience training around the first of the year, she has already made an indelible impression on those who've gotten a chance to meet her, Hyatt said.

"Everybody comes in and plays with her, and takes pictures and sends it their significant others and kids, and people stop by simply wanting to see her - which is the purpose," Hyatt said. "I think the plan in the future is to have multiple dogs, but I think it has been a positive addition to the department already."

When asked how she felt about her new role serving some of Greensboro's finest public safety workers, Natty simply replied with a high pitched "bark," followed by an approving lick.

City of Greensboro, NC published this content on November 12, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on November 12, 2025 at 21:13 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]