Albuquerque Journal

DISSERVICE ANIMALS

People who falsely pass off pets as service animals frustrate those with real needs.

- BY TOM BELL ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUGUSTA, Maine — People who falsely pass off their pets as service animals — think of the woman in Wisconsin last year who claimed the right bring her kangaroo into McDonald’s — have frustrated people with legitimate needs to such an extent that legislator­s in several states are considerin­g laws to restore the animals’ credibilit­y.

Legislatur­es in Maine, Virginia, Arizona, Hawaii, New York, and Puerto Rico are considerin­g bills that would either establish such a program or penalize people who fraudulent­ly claim to have service dogs.

In Maine, a task force earlier this year issued a report that says well-meaning federal laws designed to protect people with disabiliti­es have instead opened the door to fraud.

“The abuse and confusion are harming everybody,” said Barbara Archer Hirsch, an attorney with the Maine Human Rights Commission and member of the task force. “It’s harming the landlords, and it’s harming the individual­s who need their animals.”

Here’s the dilemma: Under federal law, no papers are required for service dogs in public places. If people want to sneak their pampered Chihuahua into a restaurant, they can simply lie and say it’s a service dog trained to help them with their disability.

Sean McDonough, 51, has a brain injury from a car accident and said he’s noticed people are increasing­ly skeptical that his 5-year-old goldendood­le, Bruno, is a service dog. Bruno is trained to distract McDonough from stress triggers by pressing against him.

Security officers at a courthouse tried to block Bruno at the door recently because of their encounter with a fraudulent service dog, said McDonough, of Lyman, Maine.

“The court people treated me badly because of what other people had done,” he said.

Impostors pose a problem for businesses and landlords because they fear legal action if they clamp down, said Donna Hodges, who owns 100 apartment units in central Maine. She recalled a prospectiv­e tenant who claimed his rambunctio­us pit bull was a service dog.

The dog was leaning out a car window and barking at her while its owner waved a framed, official-looking certificat­e identifyin­g the dog as a service animal. She knew the certificat­e was a fake, she said, because federal law stipulates that service dogs don’t need documentat­ion.

And she knew the dog was a fake, she said, because it was badly behaved.

Federal law applies a different standard for housing. A landlord may ask for a doctor’s letter if a person has a disability and needs to live with an animal. Those animals can include service dogs, as well as emotional support animals — pets that provide comfort but lack the training of a service dog.

An emotional support animal can be any kind of pet approved by a doctor, and public establishm­ents do not have to accommodat­e them. However, businesses must accommodat­e people with service dogs.

In rare cases, a miniature horse may substitute for a service dog — they can be trained to guide the blind and live longer than dogs. But that’s it. The baby kangaroo that a woman carried into the McDonald’s, claiming it was a service animal, does not qualify.

People have also asserted service animal status for pigs, cats, rabbits, turkeys, lamas, snakes and turtles, said Jeanine Konopelski, spokeswoma­n for Canine Companions for Independen­ce, a nonprofit based in California that supplies disabled people with trained service dogs.

In many of those cases, she said, people aren’t lying about their animals but misunderst­and the difference between a service animal and an emotional support animal. “The public is confused,” she said. Florida last year took a hard line on the issue, passing a law that makes misreprese­nting a service animal a crime punishable by up to 60 days in jail.

Maine’s task force recommends that the state launch a public informatio­n campaign on the issue. Donald Marean, a Republican lawmaker, also supports creating a voluntary certificat­ion program for service dogs.

He said lawmakers could weed out fakers by allowing the disabled to obtain a state-issued card that verifies their animal is a service dog or an official patch that can be affixed to their animal’s vest. His proposal is modeled after a Michigan law that went into effect in January.

“I’d like us to do anything we can,” Marean said, “to help people get full use of their dogs.”

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 ?? TOM BELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sean McDonough leaves a restaurant after eating lunch with his service dog Bruno at his side. “Businesses are so fed up with the fakes that those of us with legitimate service dogs are being scrutinize­d and discrimina­ted against,” McDonough said.
TOM BELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Sean McDonough leaves a restaurant after eating lunch with his service dog Bruno at his side. “Businesses are so fed up with the fakes that those of us with legitimate service dogs are being scrutinize­d and discrimina­ted against,” McDonough said.
 ??  ?? Sean McDonough’s dog Bruno wears a patch on his vest identifyin­g him as a service dog, in South Portland, Maine. State lawmakers are debating whether to give people with disabiliti­es the option of obtaining a state-issued patch that can be affixed to...
Sean McDonough’s dog Bruno wears a patch on his vest identifyin­g him as a service dog, in South Portland, Maine. State lawmakers are debating whether to give people with disabiliti­es the option of obtaining a state-issued patch that can be affixed to...
 ??  ?? Sean McDonough eats lunch at the Macaroni Grill in South Portland, Maine, with his service dog Bruno at his side. McDonough suffered brain injuries in a car crash in 2008 and depends on Bruno to keep him calm in public settings.
Sean McDonough eats lunch at the Macaroni Grill in South Portland, Maine, with his service dog Bruno at his side. McDonough suffered brain injuries in a car crash in 2008 and depends on Bruno to keep him calm in public settings.

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