[nagdu] National Epidemic of Horrible People Pretending toBe Disabled |

National Association of Guide Dog Users blind411 at verizon.net
Fri Oct 18 01:04:56 UTC 2013


Lyn,
	The implementing regulations of the ADA state that the dog must be
on a leash or tether, unless the leash or tether interferes with the work it
is trained to perform. The regulations are attached to this message.

Marion



-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of L Gwizdak
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2013 3:44 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] National Epidemic of Horrible People Pretending toBe
Disabled |

Good info, Marion!

Just last week, I was at an event at our blind center.  A man in a
wheelchair who is also visually impaired came in with some friends who are
members of our center.  I met this man once before.  He has a German
Shephard as a service dog.  I have not seen the dog perform anything but
that doesn't mean that the dog isn't trained.  I just haven't been around
them much.

Anyway, this man told me that he was just kicked oout of his apartment in a
Senior/Disabled complex where there are a couple of guide dog users I know
there.  The guy said that the manager kicked him out because he had a
service dog.  I was thinking to myself - what's the rest of the story?  That
particular complex not only allows small pet dogs, but they had a tenant
there for several years with a service dog and no problem.  My friends live
there with their guide dogs for years and no problem.  I met the manager
when I was with a prospective tenant and she was very cordial towards us and
my guide dog.

When we were riding the bus home that night, the guy started to tell one of
that complex's guide dog users that she would get kicked out because of her
dog!  My friend was starting to get upset about that and I just told her to
call me whan she got home in a casual manner, to make sure she got home OK. 
She did call me and told me that that guy was letting his dog loose outside
and that dog went after my friend's dog growling and scared my friend.  He
also said to her, "You can't see so you can't know anything".  The other
guide dog user also had a problem with this same dog and, apparently other
elderly tenants.  In my opinion, the manager was right in evicting this man.

Marion, do you know what the law says about service dogs that need to do
their work off leash?  This man had an ID - have no idea if it is fake or
not - that said his dog was certified to work off leash.  I do know that
some service dogs work off leash but they are in the process of doing a task
for the person and not running and growling at other dogs.  Do you know what
the ADA says about this?

Lyn and Landon
"Asking who's the man and who's the woman in an LGBT relationship is like
asking which chopstick is the fork" - Unknown
----- Original Message -----
From: "National Association of Guide Dog Users" <blind411 at verizon.net>
To: "'NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users'" 
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, October 14, 2013 9:25 AM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] National Epidemic of Horrible People Pretending toBe
Disabled |


> Dear All,
> I think we should be very skeptical of the flurry of such articles in 
> the past couple months. Most of them have one thing in common: Most 
> either refer to or are featuring CCI consumers. CCI is the 
> organization promoting an online petition to regulate the online sale 
> of service dog gear and identification.
>
> These reports have asserted it is a federal crime to pass a pet off as 
> a service dog. I find it very interesting, as violation of the ADA is 
> not a criminal offense, rather, the aDA is a civil law with no 
> criminal remedies.
>
> It is my personal opinion that the prevalence of this sort of behavior 
> is being intentionally exaggerated in an effort to support the need 
> for certification. This would only benefit the training programs, not 
> the disabled community. I am of the opinion that the best way to 
> counter this issue - if it is really an issue - is to better educate 
> places of public accommodation about what is really a service dog and 
> that the rights of the disabled under the ADA are not absolute, but 
> carry with it specific responsibilities of acceptable behavior.
>
> I received a call from a restaurant a couple weeks ago about someone 
> who came in with an untethered  dog, claiming it was a service dog. 
> The owner asked if it was a service dog and the patron told her that 
> it was none of her business and she could not ask any questions 
> because doing so was a violation of HIPAA. I advised her that she 
> could and gave her the questions she could ask. I was advised the 
> patron came in again a couple days later, she asked the right 
> questions, he again made the same assertions, he was asked to leave, 
> and he told her he would see her in court. She handed him our brochure 
> and told him to give me a call if he had any questions.
>
>
>
>
>
> According to the Americans with Disabilities Act, it's a federal crime 
> to use a fake service animal to take advantage of privileges reserved 
> for those who genuinely need the assistance of such pets. Nonetheless, 
> according to a recent report from the Associated Press, the use of 
> phony "dog tags" is on the rise, with owners faking papers or buying 
> badges off the Internet just so that they can bring their pooches into 
> restaurants, shops, and other venues that don't usually allow dogs. 
> Advocates of both pets and the disabled are divided as to how to 
> police those who abuse service animal privileges, and some are calling 
> for federal authorities to better regulate and enforce service animal 
> rules around the country.
>
>
>
> While it's assumed that only a small percentage of the population 
> would even think of using a faux service dog to avoid leaving a pet 
> outside a store or at home in order to grab a bite at a restaurant, 
> even a single incident of phony service dog usage is enough to get 
> people-disabled and able-bodied alike-up in arms. Outrage followed the 
> story of a 33-year-old New Yorker named Brett David, who was featured 
> in the New York Post over the summer.
> David bragged about bringing his fake "therapy dog" named Napoleon 
> into movie theaters, restaurants, nightclubs, Whole Foods, Starbucks, 
> and more mainly because "I was sick of tying up my dog outside," as he put
it.
> "Sometimes, they'll give me a hassle and say bring the papers next 
> time, but for five bucks, you order [a patch] off eBay, and it works 
> 90 percent of the time," he explained.
>
>
>
> People like David aren't the only ones pretending to be disabled to 
> take advantage of special perks. In late September, the Walt Disney 
> Company felt compelled to change its disabled guest policy at theme 
> parks partly due to "abuse of the system." The announcement came after 
> reports surfaced that wealthy guests were paying wheelchair-riding 
> tour guides top dollar so that the group could use the line-skipping 
> privileges granted to the disabled at Disney theme parks.
>
>
>
> Meanwhile, over the years, police around the U.S. periodically engage 
> in sweeps to round up drivers fraudulently using handicapped parking 
> passes, and apparently it's pretty easy to snag people abusing the 
> system. Last spring, over the course of a mere four hours, authorities 
> in Oakland, Calif., confiscated 13 handicapped placards being used 
> illegally by drivers.
> That's out of a total of 70 placards they came across, meaning nearly 
> one in five was fraudulent.
>
>
>
> A report in Seattle published over the summer estimated that one in 
> eight drivers using disabled parking placards is doing so 
> fraudulently, costing the city $1.4 million annually. Like in Seattle, 
> drivers with such placards get to park for free in Providence, R.I., 
> where it just so happens that there has been an influx of cars with 
> disabled parking passes near train stations and bus stops. Police 
> began routinely demanding verification and handed out multiple $500 
> fines to those who were using passes registered to someone else. "Not 
> only is it an affront to the persons who have a disability and need 
> the space, they're cheating the city out of revenue by parking there," 
> one Providence police officer said of the offenders.
>
>
>
> In yet another sting, in Orlando, Fla., police zeroed in on offenders 
> like a 34-year-old woman using a placard registered to someone who was 
> 85, and who had died a few months prior to the bust. Apparently, the 
> driver, arrested just before 3 a.m., was using the placard in order to 
> park in a convenient handicap spot downtown-so that her car was nearby 
> when the bars closed.
>
>
>
> Suspicions of disabled placard abuse have gotten so bad in New 
> Jersey-where more than 500,000 people have special placard and license 
> plate privileges-that the state introduced tougher regulations last 
> spring. In the past, anyone who classified for a pass could renew 
> automatically every three years. As of August 1, though, drivers must 
> submit proof of their condition every three years before they're 
> granted special privileges. Disabled parking placards were also 
> redesigned so that it is easier for police and meter checkers to see 
> expiration dates, and so that it's more difficult for drivers to 
> unlawfully change the information on the passes.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Brad Tuttle @bradrtuttle
>
>
>
> Brad Tuttle covers business and personal finance for TIME. He lives in 
> Massachusetts with his wife and four sons, and also teaches journalism 
> at UMass-Amherst.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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