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Their Time to Ride

By Eric Butterman

Bryan McQueeney 鈥80 harnesses the healing power of therapeutic horseback riding to enhance the quality of life for the disabled

Thirty-five years ago, Bryan McQueeney 鈥80 was on a date with riding instructor Gloria Hamblin when he was introduced to the world of hippotherapy鈥攖he use of horseback riding as a therapeutic treatment. 鈥淚 went out on a beautiful clear Saturday morning to this ranch out in the hills in the San Fernando Valley and I just saw this universe of people helping others,鈥 he remembers. 鈥淎nd it spoke to me, because I鈥檓 here all these years later.鈥

In 1985, McQueeney married Hamblin, who holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree in recreational therapy from Cal State Northridge and has worked with the physically and developmentally disabled throughout her career. And in 1994, the couple co-founded Ride On Therapeutic Horsemanship, which teaches riding skills to children and adults with mental and physical disabilities and uses the movement of the horse to improve a host of medical conditions through occupational and physical therapy.

With a staff of nine certified instructors, six therapists, and 30 horses, Ride On works with approximately 240 riders a week and has given more than 120,000 lessons over its 25-year history. 鈥淭hey have the same dreams and aspirations that you or I have,鈥 says McQueeney, who worked as a technical writer prior to becoming Ride On鈥檚 full-time CEO in 2000. 鈥淚f you get on a horse, you feel power, control, like you鈥檙e on top of the world. These are all metaphors our riders might feel, too. They just don鈥檛 have the ability to go out and do it on their own.鈥

While riding may evoke images of galloping to many, quiet steps can make all the difference with Ride On鈥檚 clientele. Working with young kids who may have problems walking, McQueeney says, 鈥淵ou may not be able to put them on a treadmill to walk but you put them on a horse and the horse walks for them. A horse can take 1,000 steps and each step can strengthen their core and neck. Obviously steps have to be taken to make sure it鈥檚 safe, appropriate, therapeutic, and effective but that鈥檚 part of what we do.鈥

The path to sustaining a nonprofit with a $1 million annual operating budget is not an easy one, even for a seasoned executive like McQueeney. 鈥淔inding clients is not the problem,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he issue is getting the staff, facility, horses, volunteers, and funding to support it.鈥

鈥淵ou have to have a plan to keep going and somehow figure out what will work,鈥 says Hamblin, who serves as Ride On鈥檚 program director. 鈥淏ryan鈥檚 the guy who does that鈥攑lanning ahead. He鈥檚 amazing.鈥

Therapeutic riding dates back more than half a century, prompting the formation in 1969 of the North American Riding for the Handicapped Association (today known as the Professional Association of Therapeutic Horsemanship International). Ride On is among the largest of 873 PATH-certified member centers worldwide, which collectively work with about 69,000 children and adults each year.

The organization was born out of necessity in 1994, when the nonprofit teaching adaptive riding program where Hamblin was working as head instructor closed down. 鈥淕loria had all her clients and no way to serve them, so we decided to open Ride On,鈥 McQueeney says. 鈥淭he first lessons were at a borrowed arena with horses ridden in from five area ranches by volunteers.鈥

Soon after, Ride On found a permanent home on a three-acre ranch in Chatsworth. 鈥淚 had just finished designing and building our house and, after the Northridge earthquake, had to spend some more time fixing things,鈥 McQueeney says. (Seven years later, the Conejo Recreation and Park District offered a 40-year lease on the Walnut Grove Equestrian Center in Newbury Park at a cost of $40 per year.)

In addition to offering nearly 40 varieties of programs, Ride On was among a handful of centers in the country selected by Columbia University to participate in a study for the Man O鈥 War Project, which examines the efficacy of equine-assisted therapy in treating veterans with PTSD, according to McQueeney.

Each May, Ride On also puts on the CALNET Show for more than 130 riders with disabilities, with competitions ranging from trail to dressage. The event takes place at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center, as did the 2015 Special Olympics World Games Equine Competition. With McQueeney as competition manager, Ride On was charged with finding 85 horses suitable for 123 athletes, ages 11 to 60, hailing from 35 countries, speaking 16 languages, and competing in four disciplines.

鈥淣one of our athletes had a horse so we had to find the horses that were safe and appropriate for international competition,鈥 McQueeney recalls. They wound up with a team of roughly 100 people to manage the competition and the event was a rousing success. 鈥淵ou work so hard so these athletes can get their due,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat they can enjoy something that is rare for any of us鈥攖o be celebrated.鈥

In 1998, McQueeney鈥檚 daughter, Megan鈥攚ho participated in the 2015 World Games as a PATH-certified advanced instructor alongside Hamblin鈥攂ecame temporarily paralyzed following a bone infection in her hip. 鈥淪he went from healthy to paralyzed overnight,鈥 McQueeney recalls. As she relearned how to walk鈥攁 process that took three months鈥擬egan utilized the Chatsworth stable as a rider, eventually recovering completely.

鈥淚 gained a deep appreciation for parents who have to juggle life when a child becomes seriously ill,鈥 McQueeney says of the experience. 鈥淢any of our families manage illness over a lifetime; we were lucky that Megan recovered completely. When we started Ride On we had no conception that we would one day need it and benefit from it.鈥

As a political science major at Occidental, McQueeney found a mentor in Roger Boesche, who joined the faculty as an assistant professor during his sophomore year. 鈥淩oger was the first professor who saw something in me, and it was his faith in my ability that inspired me to do better,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 loved being challenged and challenging others.鈥

In addition to his major, he was also close to having enough credits for an economics minor. 鈥淓conomics gave you a prescriptive understanding of how you should behave and see the real world,鈥 he says. That understanding has helped him navigate many a monetary storm, from the financial crisis of the previous decade to the inevitable loss of a portion of benefactors who develop other interests.

Ride On has a four-legged financial approach: donations, special events, grants and fee for service. And each accounts for roughly one quarter of the funding, he says, which helps to reduce the risk from a downturn in any one of them.

Ride On marked its 25th anniversary with its annual fundraiser at its Chatsworth ranch. The event raised nearly $180,000 and drew around 300 people, including longtime supporter Harrison Ford. (McQueeney鈥檚 mother, agent and manager Pat McQueeney, met Ford in 1970 and represented him until her death in 2005.) Hollywood notables such as Ellen DeGeneres and Kaley Cuoco have been generously with their time at past events.

McQueeney credits much of the success of Ride On to his wife, as he didn鈥檛 have much experience with horses growing up. 鈥淕loria鈥檚 mother was a rehab nurse and that鈥檚 how she got interested in rehab,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he always had what I call the 鈥榟orse gene,鈥欌 he adds with a laugh. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a certain class of human beings who love horses and would be happy to be around them all day.鈥

After nearly 20 years in the saddle as CEO, McQueeney isn鈥檛 riding off into the sunset just yet, but he understands the importance of knowing when to hand over the reins. 鈥淭he founders鈥 classic scenario for nonprofits is that they tend to be very controlling and afraid to let go,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ur theory always was in opposition to that. The more you include an independent board or an empowered board, the broader your base of support and the further you can go as an organization.鈥

When he needs to get away, McQueeney often turns to his horse, Luke鈥攈alf draft, half palomino鈥攚hom he loves to take for a ride on a sunny Southern California day. But today he鈥檒l stay inside so others can have their day in the sun.

Eric Butterman is a freelance writer based in McKinney, Texas. Photo by Kevin Burke.