[NAGDU] Ethics, Law, & Your Public Comments: Was Retired Dogs & Rent

Star Gazer pickrellrebecca at gmail.com
Fri Jun 23 14:59:24 UTC 2017


	This is interesting Julie. 
I'm curious, and Meghan, if you're on here or can get this note, I'd like to
ask you too. How do you write your contracts so you don't get screwed
finantially and professionally when a dog can't or doesn't work out? What
does "work out" mean in terms of your contract? Is there a period of
performance?
You and I talked awhile back, and I've always liked you. You may or may not
remember me. 

-----Original Message-----
From: NAGDU [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Julie Johnson via
NAGDU
Sent: Thursday, June 22, 2017 6:26 AM
To: Buddy Brannan via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Julie Johnson <julielj402 at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [NAGDU] Ethics, Law, & Your Public Comments: Was Retired Dogs &
Rent

Buddy is correct I do currently have two working guides.  That wasn't
exactly my plan, but life happens.

Monty was having some difficulties.  On the way to work he was going super,
super snails pace slow.  He's always been a fast dog.  He would also stop
randomly and for no apparent reason.  He was showing signs of being
stressed.  I decided to start another dog.  Remember I owner/private train,
so the time line is different.

I sent Jetta off to live and train with Meghan for a year.  She came back to
me at 14 months old with excellent obedience, socialization and a solid
foundation in guide skills.  Still she was only 14 months old and I was
hesitant to have her work full time.  I was concerned about her mental
maturity and experience level.  I wanted to take it easy with her for 6 to
12 months while I gently eased her into full time guide work.  During that
time I planned on easing Monty into retirement.  Good plan...didn't work out
though.

Instead I ended up leaving my job after much financial and programmatic
drama, nothing to do with blindness, just politics and grant funding.  
Jetta came in August, job ended in November. That winter into spring Jetta
developed a fairly serious dog reactivity issue.  I pulled back her work to
pretty much training only.

Monty was doing most of the actual guide work.  Interestingly his pace
picked up to normal.  He totally quit the stopping at random places.  It was
my job he hated, not his.  Over the next year Monty 110% bounced back to his
former self.  He loves to guide and does a completely safe and solid job of
it.

I spent a year working through every training technique I knew of and some
new ones in an attempt to get Jetta past her nonsense. In January of 2016 I
had pretty much decided I was done and she was not going to ever work as a
guide.  I own my home and can have multiple dogs with no 
legal issues.   After taking a total break with her, I didn't even take 
her on a walk for a month, I tried one last technique to address the dog
issues and got results.

So for about the last year or so I've had two guides that are capable of 
working at any given moment.   It ended up being pretty crazy, but it's 
my life.  I'm really very comfortable with changing the working/retired/in
training status of a dog if the situation warrants it.  However I don't
rent, so there are no legal issues with my housing.  My city allows for
multiple pets in private homes, so even if they are both retired/in training
I'm still legal.  My state laws have provisions for dogs in training. So it
works out.

And to answer the question everyone is wondering, I do stick with my dogs
through thick and thin.  I don't give up easily.  Maybe it's nearing the
point of insanity, but it's my life and I get to choose.

Julie
http://www.guide-and-service-dogs.com


> Umm. This may well put me over my limit. (Can I have banked posts since I
haven't posted in ages?) Anyway, yes, what Marion said. If your dog is
definitely for sure retired, representing it as anything else seems to me to
be unethical, especially in a case where the dog really isn't doing the work
anymore.
>
> Having said that, a couple of additional thoughts:
>
> First, when I retired Karl and we rented, our landlord, who was an unusual
sort of guy, absolutely knew that Karl was retired, and he let us keep him
anyway and didn't charge extra. Sure, I'd have paid it if he had, or made
other arrangements if I had to, but I didn't have to, and all the dealings
in this regard were completely above board. Just to tell you how unusual
Kevin is as a landlord, when we bought our house and left his property, he
helped us move. You find me a landlord that would do that.
>
> Second, I also used to think that retirement is retirement is retirement.
Now, I think there are certainly cases where retirement can be a bit more
fluid than that. Julie, for instance, has two working guides, although her
older one likely works a bit less than her younger one nowadays. In my case,
Hilde is my everyday guide. However, Leno still wants to go, and he's still
capable of doing the job. The reasons for retiring him had to do more with
me not wanting to risk him having a seizure too far from home for one, and
Hilde needing the work more for another. So when Hilde was ill for a little
while, I harnessed up Leno, who was happy for the outing, and he did the job
for which he was trained. Yep. I told people that he had come briefly out of
retirement. He was good with it, I was good with it, and even though we
almost got hit by a truck (it wasn't Leno's fault), he worked well and
worked safely. I see no problem with this, but my living situation in regard
to what animals I'm allowed to have is pretty flexible, since we own our
home.
>
> Naturally, we all have to weigh what's right with what's legal, or put
another way, just because you *can* do a thing doesn't mean you *should* do
that thing. I'm in no position to judge what other people do with whatever
situation they have, and at the end of the day, whatever decisions we make,
we have to live with their consequences, unintended or otherwise.
>
> --
> Buddy Brannan, KB5ELV - Erie, PA
> Phone: 814-860-3194
> Mobile: 814-431-0962
> Email: buddy at brannan.name
>
>
>
>
>> On Jun 21, 2017, at 9:17 PM, Cindy Ray via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
wrote:
>>
>> I would have to agree with President Gwizdala on this semi-retired
business.
>> I had a dog who was retired once in about 2006. I retired him during 
>> my first semester at the seminary. I missed him terribly. The school 
>> gave me permission to bring him back to stay at the school with me 
>> because he had been my companion. I kept him there the rest of the 
>> semester, but I learned some interesting and eye-opening things.
>> 1) Since he was retired or even semi-retired, he wouldn't be going to 
>> class with me but, rather, would stay in my room. He was not 
>> destructive, but this fact alone had totally changed the relationship 
>> between him, me, and the school for that matter.
>>
>> 2) If I went to someone's room/apartment because they had a 
>> get-together or a party, they could ask me not to bring him, and I 
>> would need to comply. It would have been wrong for me to argue this
point.
>>
>> 3) There was a pet policy at my seminary. There was a weight limit, 
>> and all of the pets had to live in a certain building. I did not live 
>> in that building, and my dog was larger than the pet limit by spades 
>> no matter where we stayed.
>>
>> 4) People were staying there at the school during the week; then many 
>> went home for the weekend. They missed their pets that couldn't come 
>> along, and there was a little sense of unfairness about it. It 
>> occurred to me just how unfair it was that my dog was there. He 
>> wasn't a guide anymore, he was a pet. So I made the decision to leave 
>> him at home after about six weeks. It had helped me through a 
>> difficult time, but I had risked my relationships with many I think.
>>
>> My current dog is actually retired. One day I had him work me to the 
>> dentist, but I didn't hide the fact that he was actually retired. He 
>> was in harness doing what he was supposed to do. I used him because 
>> with large tree equipment outside I couldn't hear if there was 
>> traffic or not. I'm not sure it was ethical for me to do this; I did 
>> not lie about who he was, and the dentist regarded him as a guide. 
>> This is not something I would make a practice of because I think he 
>> either is retired or he isn't. If I were in a situation where pet 
>> deposits were required,  I would pay it because Fisher is now a pet. 
>> Carrying that further, I suppose I would have to find a new place to 
>> live if there was a size limit on the pet or the pet wasn't allowed 
>> at all, though if I were in a lease situation I might negotiate a 
>> satisfactory way to deal with the remainder of the lease, depending on
the terms of it.
>>
>> Cindy Lou Ray
>> cindyray at gmail.com
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: NAGDU [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of NAGDU 
>> President via NAGDU
>> Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2017 7:10 PM
>> To: 'NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users'
>> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>> Cc: NAGDU President <blind411 at verizon.net>
>> Subject: [NAGDU] Ethics, Law, & Your Public Comments: Was Retired 
>> Dogs & Rent
>>
>> 	In graduate school I was required to take a course in ethics. The 
>> professor defined ethics as "compliance with the unenforceable". I 
>> believe this is as much a matter of ethics as it is a matter of law. 
>> In my opinion, taking advantage of the law by calling a retired service
dog "semi retired"
>> is unethical, as well as illegal.  How is this different than those 
>> who take advantage of the law that provides us access to places of 
>> public accommodation with our service dog by misrepresenting their 
>> pet as a service dog? It is no different when we call our retired 
>> service dog semi retired in order to avoid paying a pet deposit. 
>> Folks, we can't have it both ways! We cannot ask for those who 
>> misrepresent their pets as service dogs to not do so if we are willing to
act the same way.
>>
>> 	I also want to remind everyone that this list is publicly archived 
>> on the internet. What you say and how you represent yourself is here 
>> for the entire world to read. If you are willing to compromise your 
>> integrity by suggesting someone act in a manner contrary to ethics 
>> and law, you are telling the world a lot about yourself. Is this the 
>> way you want others to think of you?
>> Marion Gwizdala, President
>> National Association of Guide Dog Users Inc. (NAGDU) National 
>> Federation of the Blind
>> (813) 626-2789
>> President at NAGDU.ORG
>>
>>
>> The National Federation of the Blind knows that blindness is not the 
>> characteristic that defines you or your future. Every day we raise 
>> expectations because low expectations create barriers between blind  
>> people and our dreams. You can live the life you want! Blindness is 
>> not what holds you back.
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: NAGDU [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Jordan 
>> Gallacher via NAGDU
>> Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2017 6:04 PM
>> To: 'NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users'
>> Cc: Jordan Gallacher
>> Subject: Re: [NAGDU] Retired Dogs & Rent
>>
>> Here is what my instructor said about that.  Semi retire the dog 
>> since you can have two service animals with no problems.  That is what I
would do.
>> Jordan
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: NAGDU [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Nancy 
>> VanderBrink via NAGDU
>> Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2017 4:32 PM
>> To: Nancy VanderBrink via Nagdu
>> Cc: Nancy VanderBrink
>> Subject: [NAGDU] Retired Dogs & Rent
>>
>> Hey folks,
>> So a question was asked on a group i follow and wondered what you guys
knew.
>>
>> So, if you're renting either a house or apartment with your current
guide.
>> I'm going to assume you're not paying a pet fee.
>>
>> Folks that have done this before, after you retire your guide; do you 
>> have to pay a pet fee if you keep your guide, do you have to then pay a
pet fee?
>>
>> Just curious to know what you've experienced.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Nancy
>>
>> Please forgive the typos as this message was most likely generated 
>> using voice dictation Nancy Irwin
>>
>>
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