[nagdu] Altercation on the bus yesterday - who "wins"?

Jewel herekittykat2 at gmail.com
Thu Jun 7 14:17:04 UTC 2012


This made a lot of sense to me. It really cleared up the topic in my mind. Thanks for posting!
--Jewel

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 7, 2012, at 2:07 AM, Dailyah Patt <dailyahpatt at yahoo.com> wrote:

> Hi Jenny and all,
> 
> As a sighted person who has a service dog (not a guide) and uses a wheelchair, as well as being the director of a legal advocacy program focused on service dogs of all types and their handlers - I want to take a moment to speak to this.  (BTW:  I don't find any of the commentary on this thread the least bit offensive.  It is what it is and we all need our tools to get around in the world.)
> 
> I'm going to really simplify this, but when it comes to public transit and accommodating peoples' different disabilities, whoever has the more serious disability "wins".  (Not a great way to put it, but this comes up a lot with air travel...someone is griping that they're allergic.  So, the question becomes, "How serious is their allergy?"  My disabilities aren't usually imminently life-threatening, but they're fairly serious.)  Obviously this gal's dog allergy was not life threatening as she neither requested to get off the bus (to protect her health) - nor have you made any mention of hearing her take an inhaler or anything to head off the potential allergic reaction.  If it is the case that the allergy rises to the level of the dog handler's disability or is even more serious (like, life threatening...which is rare, but possible), then the transportation provider must reasonably accommodate both parties - usually by rerouting or calling
> paratransit for one party or the other and generally the person with the more "serious" disability is who is probably going to get priority.
> 
> I always hope that people can interact reasonably via a third party if such a thing does come up, but disability often gets peoples' hackles up REALLY fast.  I've only once run into this.  It was a flight and I knew something was up when I turned up at the gate and this lady made a beeline away from me and towards an agent. (This is usually a good indicator about someone's ACTUAL level of allergy.  If they're THAT allergic, they're not going to stand and argue with you with the dog right there, they're going to move away, right?  Duh!)  The agent came over to me, explained the situation and then through the agent the lady and I traded info regarding what each of us was travelling for and what our time tables looked like.  I don't even remember which one of us got re-routed, but it wasn't a giant deal. We were both disabled and made a fair compromise.  If only it were always so easy, right?
> 
> The individual you've described, Jenny, sounds more like someone who is used to "invoking" disability to get her way (which I've never understood) and she may have had numerous other things going on ranging from being fearful of dogs (when sometimes folks say they're allergic instead of admitting they are afraid) to having some sort of pain flare up with was making her particularly grumpy to she just woke up on the wrong side of the bed that day.  Ya just never know.  I do try to give people the benefit of the doubt when I can, but I did want to speak to how I've seen "dueling disabilities" handled.
> 
> Dailyah Rudek
> The ProBoneO Program, Director
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