Charlie Petrizzo '85SVC Changes Kids' Lives One Pup at a Time

March 29, 2010

By the time Charlie Petrizzo ’85SVC began his studies as an Athletic Administration major on the Staten Island campus of St. John’s University, he had already suffered two serious accidents that would, more than two decades later, profoundly change his life. 

“I was a pretty good athlete before I got hurt,” he recalled, “but after my second accident I realized than any chance of me playing competitive ball were over. When I got to St. John’s I still wanted to do something related to sports, and so I got into the Athletic Administration program.”

After graduation Petrizzo began a career on Wall Street, where he rose through the ranks of the retail financial sector from an Account Representative to Managing Director at Wachovia Bank.

The well-earned success and the perks that went along with it were satisfactory but not sufficient, and in 2004 he left the corporate world to begin a new life in which service to others played a major role. “When I got hurt as a teenager, a lot of people helped me,” he said. “I had been seriously burned, and being a typically vain 16-year old I was somewhat shy about going out in social settings. At that time I had a young dog who was my friend, and I always remembered how important the relationship with that dog was for me during those difficult days. I decided that I wanted to help others in the same way.”

Petrizzo put his ideas into practice by founding Circle of Life Labrador Retrievers in his home state of North Carolina, and currently serves as the organization’s President. He and his wife Sandy (’88NDC) spend their days breeding and providing Labrador Retriever pups to assistance dog organizations, making placement of pups to families with a child with developmental or emotional challenges and offering canine therapy sessions with one of their own dogs for children with special needs. Working closely with a number of assistance dog organizations, including the North Star Foundation, Petrizzo currently has dogs placed in 10 states from coast-to-coast.

“I personally delivered a dog to the family of a six-year old with Down Syndrome in the state of Washington,” he said.  “The child needed a friend and I trained the dog myself.  When it was ready, I brought it out there and arranged for a trainer in Spokane to finish up the training while the dog was still a puppy.”

Petrizzo has never charged for any of his service dogs nor taken any donations to support his work.  He funds his activities through the breeding and boarding of other dogs, the commercial side of his current career.  “Sandy and I have never wanted to accept any money for what we do,” he said. “This is a ministry for us to serve God by serving the afflicted. One of our future goals is to take at-risk children - children who are wayward, who are possibly heading for incarceration – and teach them empathy, stability, discipline and goal-setting by allowing them to train the dogs here with us. We want to show them what they can do when they put their mind to it.”

The Petrizzos credit their Catholic faith and Vincentian values as the foundation of their commitment to reaching out to others. “Our work really reinforces our St. John’s values and has helped us to live the Catholic life through service to others,” he noted. “God has given me a gift. I never understood why I loved dogs so much, but I came to realize that I have a talent that I can use in the service of others. Christ told us that He came to serve, and we need to be Christ-like in the service of others. That’s one of the most important messages that St. John’s is sending today.”

His advice to today’s students and fellow alumni is both simple and profound, echoing the beliefs that are such an important part of his life. “Think about the impact of what you’re doing with your life, the impact that you’re having on other people, and be sure that, in some way, you’re serving others. I’ve been in both places. I’ve had the half-million dollar a year job, and all of the amenities that went with it, and I gave it up to breed puppies to help others. And you know what?  I’m happier today than I’ve ever been!”