The Palm Beach Post

Delta tightening rules for support animals in flight

- By Kelly Yamanouchi Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

In the wake of a horrific mauling of a Delta passenger by another traveler’s emotional support dog last year, Delta is tightening restrictio­ns on emotional support animals in flight.

To travel with an emotional support animal, starting March 1 Delta Air Lines will require a “confirmati­on of animal training” form signed by the passenger indicating the animal can behave and proof of health or vaccinatio­ns submitted online 48 hours in advance. The new rules are in addition to the current requiremen­t of a letter from a doctor or licensed mental health profession­al.

Atlanta-based Delta said the change is due to “a lack of regulation that has led to serious safety risks involving untrained animals in flight.”

The mauled passenger, Marlin Jackson of Daphne, Ala., retained an attorney after the incident last year.

According to his attorney Ross Massey of law firm Alexander Shunnarah & Associates, Jackson is “still in recovery as facial wounds require time to determine the extent of permanent scarring.”

“Our investigat­ion into what went wrong and our desire to see a change in policy persists,” Massey wrote in an e-mail to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

The issue has grown as passengers order doctor’s letters and vests online to validate their pets as emotional support animals and avoid fees for traveling with a pet. Emotional support animals also do not have to be kept in a kennel during a flight, while pets do.

It’s recognized as a problem: The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion convened an advisory committee to address the issue. Yet the panel failed to come to a consensus on a solution.

At issue is a struggle to strike a balance between the privacy and rights of disabled passengers to travel with the assistance they need without being unduly challenged, versus the risks of being too permissive and allowing abuse of the system that puts passengers at risk and only increases skepticism of disabiliti­es.

Delta said it carries about 700 service or support animals daily, or nearly 250,000 annually — up 150 percent since 2015.

“Customers have attempted to fly with comfort turkeys, gliding possums known as sugar gliders, snakes, spiders and more,” according to Delta. The airline has seen an 84 percent increase in animal incidents since 2016, including “urination/defecation” and biting. Last year, Delta said its employees reported more barking, growing, lunging and biting from service and support animals, “behavior not typically seen in these animals when properly trained and working.”

“The rise in serious incidents involving animals in flight leads us to believe that the lack of regulation in both health and training screening for these animals is creating unsafe conditions across U.S. air travel,” Delta’s senior vice president of corporate safety, security and compliance, John Laughter, said in a statement.

Delta is also creating a “service animal support desk” to verify documents are received. The company said it “does not accept exotic or unusual service or support animals.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 ?? A service dog strolls through the aisle inside a United Airlines plane at Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport in April.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 A service dog strolls through the aisle inside a United Airlines plane at Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States