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Under New Proposal, Emotional Support Animals May No Longer Be Welcome In Plane Cabin

a dog with a rope around its head

Airlines would no longer be required to accept emotional support animals under a new proposal the U.S. Department of Transportation announced on Wednesday.

The DOT said it, “wants to ensure that individuals with disabilities can continue using their service animals while also reducing the likelihood that passengers wishing to travel with their pets on aircraft will be able to falsely claim their pets are service animals.” So the Department released a document Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that included the following:

What’s the difference between a service animal and an emotional support animal?

According to the Americans with Disabilities Act, any dog trained to perform specific tasks for a disabled individual that they cannot or have difficulty completing by themselves is a service dog. Examples would be to guide his/her owner who has no or low vision and/or hearing, alert before their owner has a seizure or an episode of dangerously low blood sugar or blood pressure, reach or do things because of their owner’s physical disabilities, calm their owner who is having a PTSD episode, etc. (here’s a list of the 10 most common service dog specializations).

An emotional support animal is one that provides emotional support and comfort to their owners. No individualized special training is involved and emotional support animals are not covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Many emotional support animals know basic obedience because their owners teach them to sit, stay, etc., but because the animals haven’t been formally trained for all circumstances like service dogs are, you’ll encounter animals that are scared in the unfamiliarity of an airport of plane, and they act out. Whereas part of a service dog’s individualized training is to learn appropriate behavior in all public situations, including airports and the confines of planes.

What could the new ruling mean for owners of emotional support animals?

The 94 pages of documentation about this go into a lot (and I mean a LOT) of detail (and yes, I read most of it. Once a health care worker, always a health care worker, even if you don’t work as a health care worker anymore LOL). If it all goes into effect, those with trained service animals should have no worries. Those with emotional support animals? Maybe not so much.

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

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