Oroville Mercury-Register

New rules for animals allowed on US planes

- By David Koenig

The days of pets flying with their owners in airplane cabins are coming to an end.

The Transporta­tion Department issued a final rule Wednesday covering animals on airlines. It decided that only dogs can fly as service animals, and companions that passengers use for emotional support don’t count.

The rule aims to settle years of tension between airlines and passengers who bring their pets on board for free by saying they need them for emotional help. Under a longstandi­ng department policy, all the passengers needed was a note from a health profession­al.

Airlines argued that passengers abused the situation to bring a menagerie of animals on board including cats, turtles, pot-bellied pigs and, in one case, a peacock.

The agency said Wednesday that it was rewriting the rules partly because passengers carrying unusual animals on board “eroded the public trust in legitimate service animals.” It also cited the increasing frequency of people “fraudulent­ly representi­ng their pets as service animals,” and a rise in misbehavio­r by emotional-support animals, ranging from peeing on the carpet to biting other passengers.

The new rule will force passengers with emotionals­upport

animals to check them into the cargo hold — and pay a pet fee — or leave them at home. The agency estimated that airlines will gain up to $59.6 million a year in pet fees.

Under the final rule, which takes effect in 30 days, a service animal is a dog trained to help a person with a physical or psychiatri­c disability. Advocates for veterans and others had pushed for inclusion of psychiatri­c service dogs.

Airlines will be able to require owners to vouch for the dog’s health, behavior and training. Airlines can require people with a service dog to turn in paperwork up to 48 hours before

a flight, but they can’t bar those travelers from checking in online like other passengers.

Airlines can require that service dogs to be leashed at all times, and they can bar dogs that show aggressive behavior. There have been incidents of emotional-support animals biting passengers.

Airlines for America, a trade group for the biggest U. S. carriers, said the new rule will protect passengers and airline employees while helping people travel with trained service dogs.

The Transporta­tion Department stood by an earlier decision to prohibit airlines from banning entire

dog breeds as service animals. That is a setback for Delta Air Lines, which banned “pit bull type dogs” in 2018, a move that was criticized by disability advocates.

Delta, however, is giving no indication of backing down. In a statement, a Delta spokeswoma­n said the airline is reviewing the new rule but, “At this time, there are no changes to Delta’s current service and support animal policies.”

The Transporta­tion Department proposed the new rule back in January. It received more than 15,000 comments, many of them complainin­g about emotionala­nimals.

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 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A service dog named Orlando rests on the foot of its trainer, John Reddan, while sitting inside a United Airlines plane at Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport during a training exercise in Newark, N.J., on April 1, 2017.
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A service dog named Orlando rests on the foot of its trainer, John Reddan, while sitting inside a United Airlines plane at Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport during a training exercise in Newark, N.J., on April 1, 2017.

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