10 things a handler wants you to know about their service animal
Posted by Stephanie on July 17, 2021
From Director, Jennifer Petre:
A year ago we were contacted by an ambitious senior from Kensington Woods High School. Cheyenne Honey was interested in doing her required senior project on Stiggy’s Dogs. The project was to be conducted over a year, she did fundraising and help spread awareness on how Shelter dogsimageare trained as service dogs and how they help our veterans.
Cheyenne came and interviewed Donna Fournier (Director of training and development) and I. She conducted herself very professionally and asked great questions to keep it short, “we were impressed”. Six months later I was invited and went to listen to her presentation. I was amazed at the maturity of such a young woman. At the end of presentation she handed out a flyer she had put together with the Top 10 things handlers want you to know about their service animal. Not only did she do research on service animals, but she also did extensive research on invisible wounds such as PTSD.
For the next 10 days we will be posting each thing she came up with. Thank you Cheyenne for your willingness to learn and your creative insight to help build awareness!
Lesson #9 There Is No Certification Required
There are no papers, documentation, ID, certification, or other required information of any kind for me to have my partner in public with me. Not only is there no documentation necessary, but it’s illegal for you to ask for any. If you’re a business owner and you’re not certain my partner is a Service Dog, then you may ONLY ask two questions: if my partner is a Service Dog, and what work my partner does for me. That’s all. You can’t ask for my private medical information, request “paperwork” or do anything except ask me those two questions.
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Re: Service dogs at Public places. I am curious to know if the Service person would have papers/authorization to have a Service Dog. In as much that anyone can take a dog into a private or public place if just on say so. The info you noted “If you’re a business owner and you’re not certain my partner is a Service Dog, then you may ONLY ask two questions: if my partner is a Service Dog, and what work my partner does for me.”. Wouldn’t an official authorized simple document (with picture) stating the dog is a Service Dog be sufficient ? I do not know what all is provided to the Service Dog owner to prove the authorization, so I submit this question/concern. Thanks for your attention. Bill.