Medicine Hat News

Good dog, bad dog . . . Delta wants to know before you board

- DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS Delta Air Lines says for safety reasons it will require owners of service and support animals to provide more informatio­n before their animal can fly in the passenger cabin, including an assurance that it’s trained to behave itself.

The airline says complaints about animals biting or peeing and pooping have nearly doubled since 2016.

Starting March 1, Delta will require owners to show proof of their animal’s health or vaccinatio­ns at least 48 hours before a flight.

Owners of psychiatri­c service animals and so-called emotional-support animals will need to sign a statement vouching that their animal can behave. But owners will be on the honour system — they won’t have to show, for example, that their dog graduated from obedience school.

The new requiremen­ts don’t apply to pets that stay in under-seat kennels during flights.

Delta’s policy change arrives with the number of animals in the cabin increasing.

John Laughter, the airline’s senior vice-president of safety and security, said there are insufficie­nt rules in place to screen animals for health and behaviour issues. He said Delta sought a balance “that supports those customers with a legitimate need for these animals” while maintainin­g safety.

Delta’s new rules are aimed at two categories: service animals, which receive specific training to help blind or disabled passengers; and socalled emotional-support animals, which require no training at all. Both fly for free and are not required to be caged during the flight.

The emotional-support group has been growing rapidly, and it is the target of most of the new Delta procedures. Last June, a 70pound dog flying as a support animal bit another passenger several times in the face on a Delta plane in Atlanta. The victim was hospitaliz­ed.

Federal regulators have interprete­d a 1986 access-to-travel law to allow support animals in airplane cabins and in apartment buildings that do not allow pets. That has created a cottage industry of online companies that help people establish their pet as an emotional support animal. The classifica­tion spares the owner hefty airline charges.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada