Orlando Sentinel

The Orlando veteran

- By Mary Shanklin Staff Writer

fighting with his condo associatio­n to keep his dog is now serving on its board after being elected to an unconteste­d seat.

An Orlando veteran fighting his condo associatio­n board to keep his dog is now serving on that same board.

Robert Brady, 70, was elected to an unconteste­d seat on the voluntary associatio­n board at the beginning of the year when five candidates were running to fill five open positions on the Orange Tree Village Condominiu­m board.

“They think he’s a vicious dog. But they don’t know Bane,” the retiree said. “They think he’ll attack, but he’s nothing but a play thing. Right, Bane?”

The month before he joined the board, he lost an non-binding arbitratio­n bid to keep the dog he’s had for four years. The associatio­n limits dogs to 35 pounds and Bane weighed more than 40, although his owner said the dog has lost weight on a strict diet during recent months.

Now Brady is pursuing a lawsuit and a fair-housing claim, both against the condo associatio­n, and is hoping to get service-dog training in a bid to to keep Bane.

Peter McGrath, the attorney for the condominiu­m associatio­n, did not respond to requests for comment but in the past has said that the associatio­n must enforce its rules — no matter the circumstan­ces.

With his brown-and-white mottled pet at his side, Brady said his dispute with the board had nothing to do with his decision to serve on the group. He said his late wife was on the board while she was alive and he said he knows the complex on Curry Ford Road well after living there 45 years. If the subject of the dog comes up at board meetings, he said he’ll have to leave the room.

When the Sentinel first reported the condo-associatio­n tiff over the dog in December, readers and pet groups from around the country called the newspaper with offers to give Brady places to live or dogtrainin­g assistance. Service dogs have become an increasing point of contention as they become more common in communitie­s, workplaces and offices. The animals’ success in aiding veterans suffering from post traumatic stress disorder has been refuted by the Department of Veterans Affairs in part because training the dogs can cost more than $30,000.

A preliminar­y study released last month by researcher­s at the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine showed that overall symptoms are lower among war veterans with service dogs. The pilot study was cofunded by the Human Animal Bond Research Institute and Bayer Animal Health.

Brady said Bane has helped him cope with difficult memories. Orlando VA psychologi­st Matthew Waesche wrote in an Please turn to DOG, B3

October 2015 letter that Brady was under his care and that the dog appears to help keep his owner’s mental-health issues in remission.

A dog-training group and veterans offered to take Bane on for a service-animal program that spans seven months. Before he can be accepted, the group has to determine if the dog has the right temperamen­t and is trainable, Brady said.

On the legal front, Brady’s attorney Jonathan Paul has filed a fair-housing complaint being considered by the city of Orlando. The associatio­n failed to consider the disabled military veteran’s protected rights or his documented need for an emotional support animal, Paul said.

Orlando officials had no update on the complaint, saying the city takes fair-housing cases seriously and investigat­es them through its Human Resources office. Details remain confidenti­al until the matter is settled.

Brady’s attorney also filed a Jan. 10 complaint in Orange County Circuit Court stating the associatio­n and property management group Arthur David Properties Inc. discrimina­ted against Brady by refusing to waive the weight requiremen­ts, even though they knew of Brady’s medical conditions related to three tours of duty with the U.S. Army in Vietnam.

“As we sit here today,” Paul said, “we are currently traveling down two roads and hoping one comes to a resolution sooner rather than later.”

 ?? JACOB LANGSTON/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Robert L. Brady and his dog Bane, a 4-year-old mixed-breed, share a cuddle Wednesday. Bane could be trained to become a service dog so he can stay with Brady; a condo associatio­n has ordered him to give up Bane or move out. In a new wrinkle, Brady has been elected to the board.
JACOB LANGSTON/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Robert L. Brady and his dog Bane, a 4-year-old mixed-breed, share a cuddle Wednesday. Bane could be trained to become a service dog so he can stay with Brady; a condo associatio­n has ordered him to give up Bane or move out. In a new wrinkle, Brady has been elected to the board.

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