Houston Chronicle

Delta mauling puts focus on rules for ‘support animals’

Airlines not allowed to require training documentat­ion

- By Kelly Yamanouchi

ATLANTA — A harrowing dog attack aboard a Delta Air Lines jet in Atlanta has put a spotlight on the federal law requiring airlines to accommodat­e emotional support animals.

After traveler Marlin Jackson was mauled by a fellow passenger’s lab mix during boarding of a June 3 Delta flight to San Diego, the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion said it wants more informatio­n on the incident. The agency also said it is reviewing input from a committee that last year discussed changing rules for emotional support animals on planes.

Most concerns have involved suspicions that some travelers game the system, bringing regular pets aboard for free and saying they are emotional support animals.

“These days everybody’s saying their dog is an emotional support dog . ... It’s being very abused,” said Alpharetta, Ga., dog trainer Susie Aga, who works with support dogs as well as regular pets. “It’s really sad for people who really need emotional support dogs.”

Ross Massey, an attorney for Jackson, said the Delta incident adds a serious safety concern to the debate.

“You have two completely legitimate public interests,” said Massey, of Birmingham, Ala., firm Alexander Shunnarah & Associates.

There’s “the public interest for people who need support animals to have the support animals. But the other 99 percent of paying customers on that plane have a legitimate public interest as well to know that if they are seated next to a large unrestrain­ed animal, that they can at least feel safe that that animal is trained.”

Jackson, of Daphne, Ala., was attacked as he took a window seat next to another traveler, identified in a police report as Ronald Kevin Mundy Jr. The report said Mundy was a military service member with the Marine Corps who “advised that the dog was issued to him for support.”

According to Massey, Mundy was in the middle seat with the dog in his lap as Jackson edged past them to the window seat. After Jackson was seated the dog lunged twice at his face, inflicting deep bite wounds, the lawyer said.

Jackson was taken by ambulance to a hospital and needed 28 stitches, and the flight was delayed. The dog was allowed to take a later flight with Mundy — but in a kennel in the cargo hold.

Efforts to reach Mundy, who wasn’t charged, have not been successful. Delta won’t comment on what documentat­ion Mundy presented.

But in some ways, airlines’ hands are tied: The federal Air Carrier Access Act requires airlines to accommodat­e emotional support animals, which are lumped into the broader category of service animals.

Letter from a pro

Airlines are not allowed to require documentat­ion showing a service or emotional support animal has been trained, according to the DOT. In the case of support animals, they are only allowed to require a letter from a licensed mental health profession­al asserting a need.

Websites like therapypet.org offer such a letter after a “chat” with one of their licensed therapists, with the pitch: “No More Unfair Airline Fees” and “Therapy Pet helps people get the proper documentat­ion to make their pet an official Emotional Support Animal.”

The website says ESAs can “Help in Many Ways: Feel Better, Sleep Better, Feel More Confident, Better Overall Wellbeing, Feel More Comfortabl­e, Increased Self-Esteem.”

Massey said he believes airlines should still be able to require proof of training or a temperamen­t test because the law says airlines must accept animals except when “the animal would pose a direct threat to the health or safety of others.”

Flying with a regular pet is typically expensive or difficult. Delta is among the airlines that charge $250 round trip for a pet to travel in the cabin, for example, and most carriers restrict the transport of pets as cargo.

Since 2003, the DOT’s definition for service dogs covered by the Air Carrier Access Act has included both those with specific purposes such as helping a blind person and emotional support animals. According to the DOT, “an animal used for emotional support need not have specific training for that function but must be trained to behave appropriat­ely in a public setting.”

Comforting presence

While psychiatri­c service animals are trained for tasks like sensing when the owner will have an anxiety attack and taking action to lessen the effect, an emotional support animal can be a dog or cat whose mere presence is comforting.

Emotional support animals, however, are not recognized under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, which allows people to bring service dogs into public places like restaurant­s and stores.

Massey said there’s still room for airline measures to assure safety. “There are a lot of ingredient­s you could put in place to prevent attacks,” he said, including restrictin­g where the dog and its owner sit or how big the animal is.

But according to the DOT, airlines are not allowed to require that emotional support animals be transporte­d in a carrier “unless there is a safety-related reason to do so.”

For a dog, it “can be very stressful to get on an airplane,” said Aga, the dog trainer. “They’re crammed in there and there’s a person right next to them ... and then being defenseles­s being held in a lap.”

“It’s not an excuse, but it’s a little bit of an explanatio­n,” Aga said. To acclimate a dog to such conditions requires training, she said, “slowly inducing stressful situations, doing a systematic desensitiz­ation of being in close proximity.”

Airlines also cannot require that emotional support or service animals wear a muzzle “unless the carrier determines one is necessary to prevent a direct threat to the health or safety of others,” according to the DOT.

Brad Morris, of Psychiatri­c Service Dog Partners, a nonprofit that advocates for service dog users, sat on the DOT advisory committee last year. He said muzzles can be problemati­c because they “tend to stress animals” and dogs can get out of muzzles. “It gives this illusion of safety,” he said.

‘Appropriat­e definition’

The DOT formed the committee as part of a process to determine “the appropriat­e definition of a service animal” and to establish “safeguards to reduce the likelihood that passengers” can use the designatio­n to bypass fees and restrictio­ns for regular pets.

Airlines advocated to eliminate emotional support animals from the Air Carrier Access Act, in part because of the operationa­l issues they create for flight crews and gate agents. Delta in its comments to the agency said: “Due to recent attempts by customers to bring animals onboard flights with suspect service potential, there is a need for clear guidance” from the DOT on these topics.

The issue splits disability advocates. Some question lumping emotional support animals with service animals. Others aim to protect the privacy and rights of disabled passengers to travel with emotional support animals.

“Where the struggle comes in is if you have one or two sensationa­lized reports, then is that enough for us to put what may be undue burdens in the face of people with disability who genuinely need accommodat­ions?” Morris said.

A proposal from disability advocates on the DOT committee favored requiring that passengers with service animals answer questions and attest “that these statements are true and I am aware that I am committing fraud if I knowingly make false statements here in order to secure federally regulated disability accommodat­ions.”

Some advocates, including Morris, said emotional support animals should travel in carriers, effectivel­y limiting them to smaller animals.

But the exercise yielded no consensus, and the advisory committee on accessibil­ity declined to make a recommenda­tion on the issue in its final report.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? Airlines advocated to eliminate emotional support animals from the Air Carrier Access Act, in part because of the operationa­l issues they create for flight crews and gate agents.
Associated Press file Airlines advocated to eliminate emotional support animals from the Air Carrier Access Act, in part because of the operationa­l issues they create for flight crews and gate agents.

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