Gina Zaffarano-Keller's dog, Ziggy, has a goofy personality and an innocent spirit. Those qualities, Zaffarano-Keller said, make Ziggy a good match for Twin Cities children dealing with significant health problems.
"Most people love dogs and dogs are, unilaterally I think, friend-makers," she said. "And so we felt that she was the right face for this bus because children love her."
The bus is aptly named Ziggy's Art Bus — a cheery activity center on wheels that invites children with mobility issues to come inside and spend an hour or more molding clay, painting pictures and being creative. The bus includes a wheelchair ramp, seating, shelves with jars of art supplies and space for tables that can be turned into easels.
Zaffarano-Keller, who works as a hairdresser, was certified as a hospice volunteer two years ago. While volunteering, she noticed that the families she was working with didn't have much opportunity to create art, something Zaffarano-Keller considers an equalizing experience.
To figure out how she could help, she interviewed families, as well as hospice and palliative professionals. She realized she needed a way to bring her vision to families.
"What became really important to these families is the mobility aspect because so often … it's day-to-day [whether] a family can get out of their house with their child. If the child is having a day where they're physically weak or they're not feeling well, the family's locked in," Zaffarano-Keller said.
"And so the mobility aspect became sort of the forefront."
In January of 2018, Zaffarano-Keller and a board of volunteers raised funds to allow her to purchase and remake the bus that would become Ziggy's Art Bus (ziggysartbus.org).