[NAGDU] FW: [GDUI Chat] Delta Airlines Doubles Down on Ban of Pit Bulls as Service Animals Despite Pushback

Rox Homstad pawpower4me at gmail.com
Thu Sep 26 22:17:38 UTC 2019


Julie,
In most cases "pit bull type dog" includes one of the following:
• Staffordshire bull terrier
• American Staffordshire Terrier
• American Pit Bull Terrier
• American Bulldog
I'm also curious how airline staff will identify these dogs.  Many people mistake pit bull type dogs for boxers or the other way around.  Most folks, upon first guess, assume that Rowan is a boxxer when she is mostly American Staffordshire Terrier-- amstaff-- and American Bulldog with some german shephard..
She has the fur type and markings of an Amstaff, Most of her body is also built much like an Amstaff, but with tall GSD legs.  The only thing about her is she has a very pointy GSD face so even though she has much, much more pit bull type dog in her makeup, most people are going to guess Boxer or GSD long before they guess Amstaff.
Other than relying upon people to be honest, I'm not sure how exactly Delta is going to prove which service dogs are pits and which are not.
I really wish they'd just cooperate with the law.

Rox'E and the Kitchen Bitches
Soleil, Rowan, Phoenix
pawpower4me at gmail.com

> On Sep 26, 2019, at 5:02 PM, Julie Johnson via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> What is a pit bull type dog?  That seems rather vague to me.   And who gets to decide?  Staff can't tell the difference between a well behaved dog and a chaos beast and now they are expected  to do breed identification?
> 
> Julie
> On The Go with Guide-and-Service-Dogs.com
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> -----Original Message----- From: Madison Martin via NAGDU
> Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2019 4:56 PM
> To: 'NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users'
> Cc: Madison Martin
> Subject: [NAGDU] FW: [GDUI Chat] Delta Airlines Doubles Down on Ban of Pit Bulls as Service Animals Despite Pushback
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Lillian Scaife [mailto:lmscaife at charter.net]
> Sent: September-26-19 2:30 AM
> To: chat at guidedogusersinc.org
> Subject: [GDUI Chat] Delta Airlines Doubles Down on Ban of Pit Bulls as Service Animals Despite Pushback
> 
> Delta Airlines Doubles Down on Ban of Pit Bulls as Service Animals Despite Pushback
> https://people.com/pets/delta-airlines-doubles-down-on-pit-bull-ban-service-
> animals/
> 
> via Instapaper
> 
> Delta Airlines Doubles Down on Ban of Pit Bulls as Service Animals Despite Pushback Last month, the Department of Transportation rejected Delta's ban of pit bulls and said the airline must allow any breed of service dog on board By Joelle Goldstein September 26, 2019 Pit Bull
> 
> Pit Bull GETTY IMAGES
> Delta Airlines is maintaining its stance on pit bulls as service animals.
> 
> More than a year after Delta banned pit bull-type dogs from traveling as service or support animals on their flights and subsequently received pushback from the Department of Transportation (DOT), the airline is doubling down on the mandate.
> 
> In a press release issued on Monday, Delta Airlines defended their decision to ban pit bulls and said it came after they noticed "a sharp increase in onboard animal incidents and attacks."
> 
> In particular, the airline said data has shown the breed accounts "for less than 5 percent of the overall dog population but 37.5 percent of vicious dog attacks."
> There have also been more than 40 reported incidents in 2018 alone that involved aggressive animal behavior on a Delta flight, according to the airline.
> 
> Given this information, Delta said they haven't figured out a solution that satisfies both pit bull owners and the airlines' safety requirements so they will uphold their mandate until they figure it out.
> 
> RELATED: Delta Airlines Bans Pit Bull-Type Service and Emotional Support Dogs from All Flights "We will never compromise on safety, and we will do what is right for the health and safety of our customers and employees," Senior Vice President - Corporate Safety, Security and Compliance John Laughter said.
> "We continue to work with the DOT to find solutions that support the rights of customers who have legitimate needs to travel with trained animals."
> 
> "The safety of our people is paramount," added Allison Ausband, Senior Vice President - In-Flight Service. "Our 25,000 flight attendants are my greatest responsibility, and I will do everything I can to keep them safe and send them home to their families in the same condition they came to work."
> 
> RELATED VIDEO: Girl Reportedly Bit by Emotional Support Dog Boarding Southwest Flight Following the announcement, the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society Legislative Fund spoke out about ban and supported the DOT's argument, who demanded in August that the airline must allow any breed of service dog on board because "dogs as a species are accepted for transport."
> 
> Kitty Block, the president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States, said Delta's ban would be harmful to many and sends the wrong message about pit bulls.
> 
> "Delta's decision to maintain its discriminatory ban on pit bull-type dogs as service dogs is misguided and will hurt countless individuals. We continue to offer Delta and all airlines our support to implement alternatives that keep the skies friendly for people and animals alike."
> 
> RELATED: Department of Transportation Rejects Delta Airlines' Ban on Pit Bulls as Service Animals
> 
> "Delta is flouting the Department of Transportation's guidance and setting a barrier for carrying pit bull-type dogs," Sara Amundson, president of Humane Society Legislative Fund, added. "We applaud DOT, which acted in accordance with its regulations by issuing this guidance and we urge all airlines to comply by not excluding pit bull-type dogs."
> 
> In addition to banning pit bull-type dogs, Delta Airlines announced that it would be discontinuing its eight-hour flight limit for emotional support animals, which restricted those animals from riding on flights longer than eight hours.
> 
> The rules on emotional support animals vary between airlines, though many airlines, including Delta, only accept cats, dogs, and miniature horses over the age of 4 months as ESAs.
> 
> 
> By Joelle Goldstein
> 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> 
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