Texarkana Gazette

Tighten the rules for animals on airplanes

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Since they don’t enunciate, we can’t say for sure, but probably there isn’t a dog, cat or any other nonhuman vertebrate that would freely board an airplane if it understood the implicatio­ns. Even the number of humans who enjoy air travel has dwindled after years of heightened security and diminished personal space.

Yet a pig has flown, as have a horse, a marmoset monkey and a miniaturiz­ed breed of allosaurus. (That’s not actually true, the part about the dinosaur. The other examples, however, have been documented.)

Of course, airplane passengers have long traveled with their pets, either in the cargo hold or in the cabin — in limited numbers determined by airlines — if the animals fit into carriers that slide under seats.

Also sometimes present are service animals — the “fully trained” dogs, as Star Tribune Travel Editor Kerri Westenberg wrote, “that help the likes of veterans with PTSD and the visually impaired.”

Increasing­ly, though, floor space and passenger laps have been occupied with animals that offer “emotional support” for their owners. Unlike service animals, comfort animals are not specially trained to provide help for a disability. They have had access to planes, however, because they are included in the definition of service animals under the Air Carrier Access Act, which prohibits discrimina­tion in air travel on the basis of disability.

The federal Department of Transporta­tion administer­s the act, and last week proposed changes that would bring its definition of a service animal more closely in line with that of the Justice Department’s implementa­tion of the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act, which applies in other settings where members of the public mingle — including, ironically, airports. If approved, the changes also would mean more stringent documentat­ion than is currently required — critics have noted the ease with which a letter purporting the need for an emotional support animal can be acquired — and more latitude for airlines in setting limits.

The number of emotional support animals on commercial flights rose to 751,000 in 2017, from 481,000 the year before, the Washington Post reports via the trade group Airlines for America. According to the Transporta­tion Department proposal, passengers complained to U.S. and foreign airlines about service animals (under its broader definition) 3,065 times in 2018, up from 719 in 2013.

Flights have been quite full in recent years. There’s simply not a lot of room at the levitating inn for furry or feathered friends.

The Transporta­tion Department’s newly pragmatic approach is needed. And if the case for broader access for emotional support animals is to be made, scientific documentat­ion of their benefits is needed.

But the wisdom of the crowd is also needed. The public has two months to comment on the proposed changes and can do so at regulation­s.gov, docket number DOT-OST-2018-0068.

Minneapoli­s Star Tribune

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