[nagdu] S.F. getting its fill of 'service animals'

Jeanette Beal bealjk at gmail.com
Sun Jan 3 19:25:56 UTC 2010


Oh there are definitely a plethora of examples regarding abuse of the term service animal and the misunderstanding/misinterpretation of the ADA - but this article is doing a piss-poor job of relaying that to the public. The article's interpretation of emotional support animal is inaccurate for one. Also service chickens? REALLY? Just....accurate reporting.
That's all. Or I'm getting an emotionally supportive chicken.
I'ma carry around a bucket of emotionally supportive fried chicken - I feel very comforted when eating a bucket'o'grease.
True story.
Jeanette

On Jan 3, 2010, at 2:20 AM, Michael Hingson wrote:

> Except that there are examples of all being purported to be service or
> emotional support animals.  I met, for example, during a speaking trip a
> woman who was proud of the fact that she helped get the first emotional
> support rat certified in Colorado.  Certified?  How?  Never the less that
> was her claim.
> 
> Such cases are why the ADA needs to be clarified.  Horses have proven to be
> successful as guides as we all know who read this list.  However, we also
> know people stretch the envelope.  
> 
> The Michael Hingson Group
>      “Speaking with Vision”
>                  Michael Hingson, President
>                          (415) 827-4084
>                    info at michaelhingson.com
>                    www.michaelhingson.com
> 
> 
> for info on the new KNFB Reader Mobile, visit:
> http://knfbreader.michaelhingson.com
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> 
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
> Of Jeanette Beal
> Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2010 7:24 PM
> To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] S.F. getting its fill of 'service animals'
> 
> This article is so poorly written that I can't even begin to process the
> awesomeness of it. Capitalizing guide dogs [for the blind] aside, the
> addition of snakes, lizards and chickens just fantasticalises this into
> something I'd rather enjoy watching SyFy handle.
> And I now want a service chicken.
> Or perhaps a service iguana. They get kind of vicious at age 3 or so but
> until then it'd be pretty sweet to have a giant black lab on one side and an
> iguana on the other. He could be my chick-magnet.
> Emotionally supportive iguanas for all!
> Heh.
> Jeanette
> 
> On Sat, Jan 2, 2010 at 3:42 PM, Michael Hingson
> <info at michaelhingson.com>wrote:
> 
>> This is from the San Francisco Chronicle, www.sfgate.com.
>> 
>> S.F. getting its fill of 'service animals'
>> 
>> Saturday, January 2, 2010
>> 
>> 
>> It is not your imagination. There really are more dogs strolling through
>> public spaces with their owners. Animals are going where they have never
>> gone before.  "In San Francisco, it is just so much more in your face,"
>> says
>> Emily Simone, a senior field manager for Guide Dogs for the Blind. "In the
>> '80s and especially in the '90s, I've just seen an explosion. We've become
>> animal obsessed. The East Coast and San Francisco are particular hotbeds
>> for
>> advocacy."
>> 
>> San Francisco has become a city filled with "service animals," meaning the
>> owner has a permit that allows him or her to take their dog, cat, or snake
>> (seriously) into restaurants, libraries, and often even rental properties
>> that don't allow pets. In 2004 the city's Animal Care and Control
>> Department
>> issued 244 permits. In 2008 the number was 500, and interim director
>> Rebecca
>> Katz speculates that 2009 numbers are at least as high.
>> 
>> Unfortunately, the practice of granting service animal permits so
>> generously
>> is undercutting the intent of the law. Permits that allow an animal full
>> access to buses, restaurants and public places should go only to service
>> animals that perform a specific task and it seems too often that's not
>> happening. That needs to change.
>> 
>> A good example of the problem can be seen on Haight Street. Residents
>> complain that many of the street bullies have intimidating dogs, often pit
>> bulls, which they take into restaurants and stores.
>> 
>> "They go into a restaurant, sit down with the dog, and when the owner says
>> he doesn't allow dogs, they show him a service animal tag," says Bill
>> Herndon, who works for the SFPD's Vicious and Dangerous Animals Unit. "The
>> police are called, they see the tag, and that's the end of the
> discussion."
>> 
>> Actually, Katz says, they don't even need a permit.
>> 
>> "The Americans with Disabilities Act doesn't require the animal to have a
>> tag," she says. Owners just need to say, "This is a service animal."
>> 
>> The ADA legislation, enacted in 1990, is so vague that it has created two
>> classes of service animals. The first is for animals that perform a
>> specific
>> task - Guide Dogs for the Blind, wheelchair assistance, hearing dogs, and
>> animals that can detect medical emergencies, like seizures, and summon
>> help.
>> 
>> The problem is the second classification - emotional support animals. All
>> animals - lizards, chickens and snakes - have been designated service
>> animals because they lend emotional support to the owner. In most cases
>> they
>> have no task-specific training.
>> 
>> "People can't believe there isn't some kind of official licensing or
>> training," Herndon says. "I think the policy is misused and abused."
>> 
>> Technically, there is a licensing process, but it is hardly restrictive.
>> Katz says her office requires a valid license, a local address, a signed
>> affidavit saying the owner needs a service animal, and a letter from a
>> doctor. After that, the permit is issued with no questions asked.
>> 
>> Katz says that in the case of vicious or aggressive behavior, an officer
>> like Herndon can cite the owner, confiscate the dog, and even have the
>> animal put down after a hearing. That's fine, but it leaves enforcement
> for
>> after the fact. What if the dog just growls? Is that enough to lose the
>> service animal designation?
>> 
>> What's really needed is a change in the ADA legislation. No one is saying
>> there shouldn't be an allowance for emotional support, but it should be a
>> different kind of permit. It is terrific that your hamster makes you feel
>> better, but you shouldn't get to take him on the bus.
>> 
>> Simone says organizations like the Coalition of Assistance Dog
>> Organizations
>> have been lobbying to change the ADA to narrow the definition of a service
>> animal. She thinks federal changes could come as soon as this summer.
>> 
>> Until then, watch your fingers. That service animal on the bus may have no
>> more training than a squirrel. And in this city it might be a squirl.
>> 
>> The Michael Hingson Group
>>     “Speaking with Vision”
>>                 Michael Hingson, President
>>                         (415) 827-4084
>>                   info at michaelhingson.com
>>                   www.michaelhingson.com
>> 
>> 
>> for info on the new KNFB Reader Mobile, visit:
>> http://knfbreader.michaelhingson.com
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Jeanette Beal
> MS.Ed Assistive Technology
> Independent Consultant
> Boston, MA 02115
> bealjk at gmail.com
> http://twitter.com/bealjk
> http://bealjk.tumblr.com/
> 
> "Talent is an invention like phlogiston after the fact of fire" - Marge
> Piercy
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