[nagdu] This was interesting

Cindy ray cindyray at gmail.com
Thu Nov 12 00:03:08 UTC 2015


This happens all of the time. I think it would be interesting to have some kind of event, say for Meet the Blind Month, and invite business people to come and see what blind people are doing, how they get about, etc., and one could tell them about the laws. Otherwise, it seems to fall to us to educate them one at a time.


Cindy Lou Ray
Sent from my iPhone

> On Nov 11, 2015, at 3:05 PM, S L Johnson via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hello:
> 
> I had this same experience when I got my first dog in 1976.  I was in 
> college but would help my parents in their small restaurant when I was home. 
> As you said, the health department rules are very strict about the dog not 
> being in or near where food is prepared.  .  I didn't use a crate but my dog 
> would stay in a corner where she could see me.  One health inspector tried 
> to give dad a problem about my dog but, his supervisor promptly made it 
> clear that my dog was fine and the case was also closed.
> 
> Sandra and Eva
> 
> -----Original Message----- 
> From: Abby Bolling via nagdu
> Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2015 11:38 AM
> To: nagdu at nfbnet.org
> Cc: Abby Bolling
> Subject: [nagdu] This was interesting
> 
> So, my family owns a pizza parlor and when I go home for the weekend or on a 
> break, I go work and help my parents   I have a small crate that cricket 
> goes in the corner across from the door.
> We had a customer come in and they saw my pup in her crate and they started 
> telling my father that he wasn't allowed to have dogs in the restaurant  my 
> father calmly told the customer that cricket was a service dog and was 
> allowed to be in the dining room of the parlor
> The customer continued to argue with my father about cricket being there, 
> and my father finally told them that he would hate to lose their business 
> but he was not going to move cricket. He offered that they could order carry 
> out or he would deliver to them, but the customer was adamant about cricket 
> not being in the shop.  My father then both pulled up the laws pertaining to 
> service dogs in public establishments ant told the customer that if they 
> weren't satisfied and wanted to continue arguing, they could leave or my 
> father could call the police and have them removed by the police.
> The customer left but a few days later, my father got a call from the health 
> inspector about a dog in the shop. My father explained that crickets crate 
> was in the dining room only as the health code is strict in its rules of no 
> animal of any kind being allowed in a restaurants kitchen.
> The health inspector was pleased with my fathers answer and the case was 
> closed.
> Now, it's obvious that my father knows the laws, and knows the boundaries of 
> where cricket  is allowed to be and  where she isn't, but that got me to 
> thinking.
> What if this had  happened with another business, and even though the owner 
> saw the laws and new that the dog was not allowed in the kitchen, they might 
> still be wary of allowing people to bring their service dogs into the dining 
> room to avoid this kind of situation. What do you guys think?
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
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> 
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