Herbivore poop doesn't stink anywhere near as bad as omnivore/carnivore poop - yes horse/cow poop stinks, but so little compared to cat/dog poop it doesn't even register on a scale.
The article's last sentence says that training is still required, so in order for this news to have any effect with respect to service horses on planes, the answer to your question is impliedly a yes.
I went to law school with a woman who had a service miniature horse. It was able to give her more physical/balance support than a dog. It was about the size of a large dog but a bit stockier. It was never a problem in the hallway or in classes or anything and didn't smell.
The only time it was an issue was in the ladies room. The bathrooms were ADA compliant, at least in theory, but small.
There were three stalls total - 2 "standard" and 1 wheelchair accessible - but a woman + a horse are a bit wider than a wheelchair and the horse wasn't quite as agile a dog and couldn't maneuver well in the small space.
I regret that I didn't ask her where she kept the horse in Boston - did it live in her apartment? Outside? No idea how that would work.
There are legitimately much higher costs in shipping a pet than, say, the same weight in luggage. Why should passengers be subsidizing others people's pets?
I travel a lot, and I know what a huge burden it would be for me to have a pet, so I don't have one. I have drought-tolerant houseplants which can recover from a week going without water. Too many people have pets and then expect others to make unreasonable accommodations for them, when owning a pet is a choice that they made.
The flipside is that these actions can also be cruel to animals. I've sat next to one very very miserable non-trained service "comfort" dog on a long flight, who unfortunately got sick (vomiting) mid-flight.
Worth noting though that if the dog has to fly, this is by far the most humane option. Eg, crating them into the belly where horrible things have already happened (trapped on Arizona tarmac for an hour in full sun comes to mind) shouldn't even be an option.
Unfortunately, due to what you mention it seems it's most humane to drive your pet across country rather than a relatively short flight.
Maybe they should do occasional special "pets allowed" flights where you can bring your pet with you in the cabin. It'd be great for people moving cross-country with their pets, and the flights wouldn't need to be that often.
As a benefit, this would avoid exposing people with allergies to pets on random flights; if you book the weekly pet flight, you know what you're getting into.
My family drove 21 days and 11,000 km from Canada to Panama because the airline refused to allow our dog. It was July and the flight had a layover in Houston. I could see the problem there with the heat in the hold, but we all risked our lives and went through a lot of trouble because the airline couldn't accommodate a Shiba Inu in the cabin. The dog needed a visa for every country we passed through. With notarized veterinary report duly sanctioned by the embassy of every country. Some expired before we could make it to the border and we had to resort to bribes and other techniques to get through. It was a farce because there were stray dogs, goats, cats, pigs, and other animals crossing as they pleased at many of these borders.
The airline refunded our tickets, but only after we rejected their helpful suggestion to put the dog down and fly without him. Bet you can guess the airline.
There are companies whose sole expertise is moving animals long distances domestically and internationally. I imagine it's not cheap, but it is an alternative. Weird that the airline wouldn't suggest that.
On the other hand, I see some fun & adventure in the three week drive from Canada to Panama.
There's no way I'd fly with my pet dog given the horror stories of those that do. At best, pets seem to get sub-par treatment, at worst, they are abused and die. I'd think pretending they're a service animal so they can fly _with_ you is better than putting them in a cage and in with the luggage, at least for the animal.
Personally, I think people that need service animals deserve that right and should be respected. So I just don't fly with my dog. No real need to, there are plenty of local boarding options, including "doggie daycare" places where he's never locked up.
"I'd think pretending they're a service animal so they can fly _with_ you is better than putting them in a cage and in with the luggage, at least for the animal."
Yeah, but it's really bad for all the people out there with legitimate medical issues who do actually need service animals.
I've seen some pretty poorly behaved, barky, aggressive "service" dogs, that also have accidents. I doubt you'd want to sit next to them for the duration of an entire flight.
Is there some size-threshold where the service/therapy animal must have its own seat? Larger than will fit in a duffel bag at your feet? Encroaching on neighboring passenger's legroom?
The article does say "airlines are still allowed to reject certain approved animals if they're deemed too large, too dirty, or too dangerous"
Yea I’ve see people slap fake service vests on dogs. They will yell at you and tell you that you can’t legally ask them if they are disabled. Also seen people in apartments get letters from therapists when they have large or aggressive breeds that aren’t allowed.
The other day I was in a coffee shop. They asked someone to remove her dog and she started a fit about how it’s her service animal. I laughed pretty hard and got a mean look. They went outside to sit and I doubt her tea cup chihuahua was a trained service animal.
"They will yell at you and tell you that you can’t legally ask them if they are disabled."
This isn't true, by the way. Businesses aren't allowed to verify the legitimacy of a service animal because that's seen as discrimination, which is most of the problem in itself as it allows any random person to buy a $10 vest from Amazon and use it as a "bring animal everywhere free" card.
But there's nothing prohibiting random people like you or me from questioning the legitimacy of a service animal, and if someone gets super defensive about that question, odds are good that it is indeed a fake service animal.
In what way is verifying the service animal is legitimate discrimination by any metric? Said person has already announced their disability by bringing the animal, the business is clearly willing to serve them, I don’t see a remote argument to the contrary.
> (6) Inquiries. A public accommodation shall not ask about the nature or extent of a person's disability, but may make two inquiries to determine whether an animal qualifies as a service animal. A public accommodation may ask if the animal is required because of a disability and what work or task the animal has been trained to perform. A public accommodation shall not require documentation, such as proof that the animal has been certified, trained, or licensed as a service animal. Generally, a public accommodation may not make these inquiries about a service animal when it is readily apparent that an animal is trained to do work or perform tasks for an individual with a disability (e.g., the dog is observed guiding an individual who is blind or has low vision, pulling a person's wheelchair, or providing assistance with stability or balance to an individual with an observable mobility disability).
Seems to me that there should be a corresponding responsibility not to knowingly misrepresent an animal as a service animal. Seems like something that should be criminal, to me.
> Investigation of fraud. A public accommodation may investigate the potential misuse of accessible seating where there is good cause to believe that such seating has been purchased fraudulently.
I don't know if there are any remedies available beyond civil tort and contract money damages, nor what the applicable criminal statute would be, if any. Seems like a complex area of law, but from reading bits of legal commentary dredged up with Google I get the impression that the government is deliberately erring on the side of reducing friction for the legitimately disabled and are well aware of the unintended consequence of increased fraud.
This happens in the concert scene. I was in a fan community where there was a spill of drama over someone feigned a disablement to get disabled seating tickets. They were outed and it was messy.
"and if someone gets super defensive about that question, odds are good that it is indeed a fake service animal."
Or maybe they don't want to defend their right to a service animal to every single person that asks and thinks their animal is fake? This strategy might unveil some fakers, but it is also incredibly derisive to those with these animals to be lumped into the same group as fakers.
many places don't care to exclude pets at all. they don't care. many places might decide its not worth caring about if its a real service animal or not. they don't care. the only places that care are the places that would want to actively exclude non service animals.
Love it when people say "Odds are..." based off anecdotal information and no data whatsoever.
I have a service animal, and honestly it's emotionally exhausting to have random people start yelling at you. Even when I drop everyone to go digging through my phone for documentation, half the time they kick us out anyway.
It's a weird experience when your well trained service animal is kicked out of a NYC McDonald's that has people openly shooting up in the bathroom. Like, which of these is the bigger public health issue.
For those with poorly trained animals, or people just pretending, we do need a better system though.
They also limit the number of pets per flight. Or, they used to. Once it became fashionable to pretend pets are service animals my wife and I opted to drive or not bring the dogs with us, so I'm not sure if those rules still exist but I would assume they do. Prior to that it was actually great. Most people rarely even knew they were with us. Oh well.
I guess every generation has their own ways of coping with anxious situations. I remember sitting next to and old catholic lady who spent 10 minutes praying on her rosary beads before takeoff. A bit more compact than a horse I guess.
I think there is a legal difference between a service animal and an "emotional support animal" with the latter having far less stringent requirements and also little to no legal obligation for people to accommodate
Yup. Apparently we need to amend HIPAA, or ADA, whatever it is. If you have a need, it should be documented. And then an appropriately-trained airline (or grocery store, or..) staff person should be able to look at your documents.
They don't have to know what your disability is. You shouldn't have to suffer the indignity of every single passer-by on the street asking you if you really have a need and what it is.
But some kind of basic common-sense framework would curb abuses, which hurt everyone -- the legitimately disabled people the most!
The other day I saw a HUGE pitbull with a service dog vest (or whatever they are called) at a Costco. It was right next to me in the line and it was clear that the owner was in no way disabled.
I was not happy for those few very long minutes in the line. And there was no way in hell that I was going to ask that owner if his service dog was legitimate.
Fair enough. But do you need a bloody pit bull as a service dog? Can't you have an animal that is less likely to harm other humans, especially kids.
Edit: My issue with pit bull is not about their reputation, since I have no way to verify that. It's more about their size and their ability to cause bodily harm.
Service animals are chosen from particular breeds, from particular breeders and highly trained. It's a totally different thing than a random dog with a "service" vest.
I'm sick and tired of the rampant aggressive judgmental attitude of under-qualified hyper-opinionated loud mouths on these flights complaining about everyone else and not minding their own business.
Who the hell are you to say whether a person is in need of something or not? I live in a country where disabled people are left to rot because their particular disability is not transparent enough; Employees are afraid to leave their house while recovering after major surgery in case someone thinks they look healthy enough to be working.
If our current understanding of equality for the disabled force airlines to let miniature horses on (which i very much doubt) then they should be forced to do this in a safe and non-interruptive way or be heavily fined.
If people think that animals in the workplace are unprofessional because people may have allergies or fear dogs, then surely public transport applies even more.
It is also a security loophole. Imagine if 5 hijackers each brought a trained “emotional support” Rottweiler. A trained Rottweiler would be much more dangerous than the pocket knives that are currently banned.
I understand all the indignation about people who lie about having a service animal. But are people so rage-filled about this issue that they're not even the least bit fascinated by the fact that the ADA explicitly includes miniature horses as permitted service animals?
Dogs and miniature horses--that's it. There's clearly some hidden history and science here. Come on, this is HN! Shouldn't there be several ranchers and at least one legitimate miniature horse service animal owner-operator eager to explain to us the world of miniature horse service animals? What are the relative strengths and weaknesses of miniature horses as compared to dogs? How small can the horses get?
I think part of the reaction here is the very idea of a horse. A horse! On a plane.
To read your link though, it says "reasonable" accommodation. It specifies that part of the assessment of reasonable accommodation is if the horse must be house broken.
Can you imagine having a non-housebroken miniature horse in your row with you? I find this hilarious and I hope it happens to me just for the story.
(i)Miniature horses.
(1)Reasonable modifications. A public entity shall make reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedures to permit the use of a miniature horse by an individual with a disability if the miniature horse has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of the individual with a disability.
(2)Assessment factors. In determining whether reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedures can be made to allow a miniature horse into a specific facility, a public entity shall consider -
(i) The type, size, and weight of the miniature horse and whether the facility can accommodate these features;
(ii) Whether the handler has sufficient control of the miniature horse;
(iii) Whether the miniature horse is housebroken; and
(iv) Whether the miniature horse's presence in a specific facility compromises legitimate safety requirements that are necessary for safe operation.
(3)Other requirements. Paragraphs 35.136(c) through (h) of this section, which apply to service animals, shall also apply to miniature horses.
> I think part of the reaction here is the very idea of a horse. A horse! On a plane.
I got the impression that people were glossing over the details and assuming that it's just an extreme example of airlines being required (if at all--lots of misconceptions abound) to unquestionably accept people's eccentric, ridiculous, and [arguably] illegitimate accommodation requests, such as the recent peacock incident that made the rounds.
Granted, the news reporting has done an exceptionally poor job at distinguishing service animals from therapy animals, and the sources of and justifications for various regulations and policies. But the ambiguity and seeming absurdity is precisely what caused me to dig further and discover that miniature horses are distinguishable. But that only leads to even more questions.
The article states that miniature horses live 35 years or longer, whereas dogs have a much shorter lifespan. Presuming both are equally difficult to train, this is an obvious advantage.
It's affluenza, "victimhood"-exploiting, pseudo-disability BS. My elderly and frail grandparents never had a disability placard, yet their neighbors had one for at least 30 years without a real disability; the neighbor had one because they were slightly disabled (low %) per compulsory military service discarge. That's understandable, but what's not is this "special-needs" living security blanket that gives others allergic reactions and creates a nuisance to others.
If the animal can't behave, there oughta be away to give feedback on the customer/animal such that they won't be able to fly with their fluffy nuisance.
I believe horses temperament is already calmer than dogs by nature, and they make good service animals. They are also too small to ride and are unlikely to be pets; the horse are actually helpful.
I understand some people need emotional support animals and service animals. I get that. But it poses an interesting problem. If you call an airline and tell them you have a peanut allergy, they’ll remove all peanuts from the plane.
But if you tell them you have a dog allergy, they’ll tell you that other persons right to their service animal trumps your allergy.
I'm allergic to cats to the point that when I was an infant they didn't have a number on their scale to quantify it. When I'm exposed to cats, my eyes run and swell shut, my skin gets itchy, but above all that my asthma goes well into problem territory. I imagine there are people allergic to dogs in a similar way, and being in an enclosed space with a dog for multiple hours may, in fact, be a threat to their life.
Is there supposed to be a contradiction here? No one is negatively affected by not eating peanuts for an in-flight snack. I doubt that holds for legitimate trained service animals. This means that there's at least some tangible cost on both sides that the airline needs to balance.
I’m wondering if you or someone else can point me to some data about the relative difference in risk from allergic reactions to peanuts vs dogs (for example). We certainly hear a lot more about anaphylaxis from food / medicine allergies than we do about dogs or cats. And at the extreme, it seems like everyone I know is mildly allergic to dozens of kinds of tree pollen, but nobody ever freaks out about that. My intuition leads me to believe that some allergies are super popular and not that severe, while others might be more rare and wildly severe.
That's a very apples to oranges comparison. Dog allergies aren't deadly and there are interchangeable snacks (most flights nowadays have pretzels in my experience), is not like you could give someone a different hypoallergenic dog and be okay.
It's kind of disturbing that we've got 7+ billion human beings but we're so disconnected from each other that people are increasingly resorting to animals for comfort and friendship.
This isn't a new thing. There have always been people who prefer the company of animals to people, even centuries ago when people were more "connected to each other". If it's more frequently seen now, you can just as easily attribute that to there now being 7+ billion people, so if X% of the population prefers animals to people, X will be a greater number as the population increases.
The new thing might be that some people who would otherwise prefer the company of people over animals can't get it and settle for a pet instead. Articles on the "loneliness epidemic" get posted quite frequently on HN:
I'm also tired of how easy it is to abuse these regulations. I own rental properties that don't allow pets. A surprising number of tenants will get a pet anyways, then when they are caught, a week later they've got some papers they printed off some site claiming that it's a therapy great dane. I would have been happy in most cases to just charge a pet fee, but once they break out the paperwork, there are only 2 options, evict them, or ignore it.
Kind of, but in every case I've seen they won't have any success. Their service dog can't be disturbing my other tenants, and that's always how they get caught. We get reports of dogs barking 24/7.
It can be, my other half's psychiatrist put it in a letter for our new apartment. I think it's usually something about Emotional Support Animals. They aren't traditional support animals but they help with certain issues.
Course, we would never bring our cats anywhere they would inconvenience other people. The larger one does travel fairly well though, he mostly just flops down and falls asleep. The other one though... he yowls and I would be furious if I was stuck on a plane with him. (I am driving them both cross country next week)
All that said - Im annoyed at people that falsify these sort of things. There's all manner of services online that will print fake documentation for a nominal fee. It's insulting for people with actual issues.
Emotional Support Animals aren't a regulated thing in most states, and even the few where it is semi-regulated so far it's mostly more "homeopathic medicine / food product" ("generally regarded to be safe") than "FDA regulated" (scientifically tested, strictly licensed).
Yes, Their service dog can't be disturbing my other tenants, and that's always how they get caught. We get reports of dogs barking 24/7. It doesn't matter what legal status their pet has if it's causing a disturbance.
If the dog is perfectly well behaved, then I would absolutely be breaking the law if I evicted them for it.
I also did some googling and reached broadly the same conclusion as you. However I don’t know that I’d use the word "any”. It sounds like life-threatening animal allergies are, at the very least, much rarer than life-threatening food / medicine allergies. Though I wasn’t super satisfied with any of the sources I found, so I’d love to see some data about it.
The animal doesn't fit underneath the seat. It's clearly taking up leg room of the passengers next to it.
I understand making accommodations for people with disabilities. But there's a trend in this country:
Group A has X problem. Group A proposes a solution that violates Group B's life and liberty. Group B complains. Everyone gets angry at Group B, because 'how else could Group A get a solution'. The answer is simple: It's not Group B's problem.
Why people think their problem (emotional support needs) should be my problem (100 pounds of animal falling on me, having it invade my space or the need to breath air which many people can't if it has animal hair)
I'm truly wandering if this isn't a case of some news organization believing an onion article. It really seems like a picture from an onion article.
I have no problems with this as a physically disabled person in the process of getting a service dog. Miniature horses are recognized service animals by the ADA as long as they are house broken, can be controlled by the owner, and the facility can accommodate the animal’s size without compromising safety. My only concern would be that last point, if the animal’s size puts people at risk of not accessing the emergency exits then I think airlines are well within their right to remove the animal.
I do have problems with the people who get fake certifications for their “service” animals to bring them on board. Service animals are highly trained and these fake service animals really give true service animals a bad look.
Airplanes have replaced old-school wooden ships as the main means of transportation so before you complain about sitting next to a miniature horsie for 14 hours, remember, it could have been 6 months.
Now imagine sitting next to a gassy, malodorous dog. Pugs and bulldogs are very guilty of this
What's next? Sitting next to a "service python" that's 6' long, whose owner has fallen into a slumber, and the lady three aisles back starts screaming as the snake wraps itself around her calf and thigh, throwing the passengers into a panic.
I find the concept of pets on flights really bewildering. Is this entirely an american thing, because I fly relatively often and I have never seen anyone bring an animal on a plane. We don't let pets in a vast majority of indoor venues, so why should planes be an exception?
I just think bringing a "comfort pet" on a flight is very childish and extremely inconsiderate not only to the rest of the passengers on the plane but to the animal itself as well.
I've even seen videos of people with dog allergies getting kicked out of a flight because of a person with a comfort dog, which to me is beyond absurd.
Maybe the issue is not really about allowing animals to fly as service animals, but allowing animals to fly simply as passengers. Why can't I pay for a seat for my pet?
I also understand people's frustrations with unruly pets on planes, but frankly I don't remember ever seeing this. I've only ever seen well-behaved pets on planes. I do remember numerous unruly children on planes, though.
You can. Rent a private jet with a bunch of other exotic pet owners.
Or form an airline with this intent.
But for the love of everything that is holy, please don't sit next to me in a cramped tin can for 6 hours with your horse's behind in my face.
This is public transportation.
I can tolerate a small emotional support animal that fits in a container that will fit under your seat at take off or landing. That seems like a reasonable compromise. Larger animals can go underneath if they fit, or not join what is essential, a flying bus.
i was amazed at the number of pets i saw on internal US flights. i still remember this one flight with at least 20 dogs/cats. as a european, i simply couldn’t believe it.
saw like 2 pets in total after 100+ flights in europe. saw 0 pets while flying in asia.
not sure if this is a US thing, or if there were 0 pets in general except for the flights i took.
Unpopular opinion: real problem here is unreasonable restrictions on taking pet animals with you. In US it's a particular problem, because you can't make rules based on judgments on the spot. Allow pets in restaurants/planes, people would sue because you denied them service because pet peed all over the place or owner can't control their pet.
So, here we have blank prohibition on any pet anywhere, which is, IMO, worse than service ponies on a plane.
134 comments
[ 5.1 ms ] story [ 229 ms ] threadThe only time it was an issue was in the ladies room. The bathrooms were ADA compliant, at least in theory, but small. There were three stalls total - 2 "standard" and 1 wheelchair accessible - but a woman + a horse are a bit wider than a wheelchair and the horse wasn't quite as agile a dog and couldn't maneuver well in the small space.
I regret that I didn't ask her where she kept the horse in Boston - did it live in her apartment? Outside? No idea how that would work.
I don't want to deal with a dog next to me for an entire flight and I sure as hell don't want to deal with a fucking horse.
Most of the animals I see flying are clearly just pets and not actual service animals, going on how poorly behaved they are.
I travel a lot, and I know what a huge burden it would be for me to have a pet, so I don't have one. I have drought-tolerant houseplants which can recover from a week going without water. Too many people have pets and then expect others to make unreasonable accommodations for them, when owning a pet is a choice that they made.
Unfortunately, due to what you mention it seems it's most humane to drive your pet across country rather than a relatively short flight.
As a benefit, this would avoid exposing people with allergies to pets on random flights; if you book the weekly pet flight, you know what you're getting into.
Airplanes are for people anyway.
The airline refunded our tickets, but only after we rejected their helpful suggestion to put the dog down and fly without him. Bet you can guess the airline.
On the other hand, I see some fun & adventure in the three week drive from Canada to Panama.
Personally, I think people that need service animals deserve that right and should be respected. So I just don't fly with my dog. No real need to, there are plenty of local boarding options, including "doggie daycare" places where he's never locked up.
Yeah, but it's really bad for all the people out there with legitimate medical issues who do actually need service animals.
(Wake up, airlines. You nickel and dime us for everything else, let me pay to sit next to a dog already).
The article does say "airlines are still allowed to reject certain approved animals if they're deemed too large, too dirty, or too dangerous"
The other day I was in a coffee shop. They asked someone to remove her dog and she started a fit about how it’s her service animal. I laughed pretty hard and got a mean look. They went outside to sit and I doubt her tea cup chihuahua was a trained service animal.
This isn't true, by the way. Businesses aren't allowed to verify the legitimacy of a service animal because that's seen as discrimination, which is most of the problem in itself as it allows any random person to buy a $10 vest from Amazon and use it as a "bring animal everywhere free" card.
But there's nothing prohibiting random people like you or me from questioning the legitimacy of a service animal, and if someone gets super defensive about that question, odds are good that it is indeed a fake service animal.
28 CFR § 36.302(c)(6) https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/28/36.302
> Investigation of fraud. A public accommodation may investigate the potential misuse of accessible seating where there is good cause to believe that such seating has been purchased fraudulently.
I don't know if there are any remedies available beyond civil tort and contract money damages, nor what the applicable criminal statute would be, if any. Seems like a complex area of law, but from reading bits of legal commentary dredged up with Google I get the impression that the government is deliberately erring on the side of reducing friction for the legitimately disabled and are well aware of the unintended consequence of increased fraud.
Or maybe they don't want to defend their right to a service animal to every single person that asks and thinks their animal is fake? This strategy might unveil some fakers, but it is also incredibly derisive to those with these animals to be lumped into the same group as fakers.
at the moment anyone can start up a certification business. its like being ordained.
I have a service animal, and honestly it's emotionally exhausting to have random people start yelling at you. Even when I drop everyone to go digging through my phone for documentation, half the time they kick us out anyway.
It's a weird experience when your well trained service animal is kicked out of a NYC McDonald's that has people openly shooting up in the bathroom. Like, which of these is the bigger public health issue.
For those with poorly trained animals, or people just pretending, we do need a better system though.
1. Require non-service pets to be kept inside a carrier for the duration of the flight.
2. Charge customers that bring a pet, whereas service animals fly free.
I've seen a few non-service pets on flights, but I've seen service pets far more frequently (based on the fact that they were not in carriers).
I can't imagine owning a horse/donkey/mule of any size and not using it as pack animal at every available opportunity.
They don't have to know what your disability is. You shouldn't have to suffer the indignity of every single passer-by on the street asking you if you really have a need and what it is.
But some kind of basic common-sense framework would curb abuses, which hurt everyone -- the legitimately disabled people the most!
I was not happy for those few very long minutes in the line. And there was no way in hell that I was going to ask that owner if his service dog was legitimate.
How good are you at identifying epileptic people who aren't currently having a seizure?
Edit: My issue with pit bull is not about their reputation, since I have no way to verify that. It's more about their size and their ability to cause bodily harm.
https://www.dogsbite.org/
Personally I have an issue with any large dog around me and kids in public spaces.
They are faithful to their owners, not the entire humanity.
But no one is verifying that they are indeed service dogs since it seems businesses can't.
Also, as I said dogs are loyal to their owners not all humans.
Who the hell are you to say whether a person is in need of something or not? I live in a country where disabled people are left to rot because their particular disability is not transparent enough; Employees are afraid to leave their house while recovering after major surgery in case someone thinks they look healthy enough to be working.
If our current understanding of equality for the disabled force airlines to let miniature horses on (which i very much doubt) then they should be forced to do this in a safe and non-interruptive way or be heavily fined.
That said, I would still much rather sit beside a service animal than a poorly behaved child (or adult).
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/28/35.136
Dogs and miniature horses--that's it. There's clearly some hidden history and science here. Come on, this is HN! Shouldn't there be several ranchers and at least one legitimate miniature horse service animal owner-operator eager to explain to us the world of miniature horse service animals? What are the relative strengths and weaknesses of miniature horses as compared to dogs? How small can the horses get?
EDIT: The above link is for a regulation regarding government entities; here's the regulation for places of public accommodation: https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/28/36.302
To read your link though, it says "reasonable" accommodation. It specifies that part of the assessment of reasonable accommodation is if the horse must be house broken.
Can you imagine having a non-housebroken miniature horse in your row with you? I find this hilarious and I hope it happens to me just for the story.
(i)Miniature horses.
(1)Reasonable modifications. A public entity shall make reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedures to permit the use of a miniature horse by an individual with a disability if the miniature horse has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of the individual with a disability.
(2)Assessment factors. In determining whether reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedures can be made to allow a miniature horse into a specific facility, a public entity shall consider -
(i) The type, size, and weight of the miniature horse and whether the facility can accommodate these features;
(ii) Whether the handler has sufficient control of the miniature horse;
(iii) Whether the miniature horse is housebroken; and
(iv) Whether the miniature horse's presence in a specific facility compromises legitimate safety requirements that are necessary for safe operation.
(3)Other requirements. Paragraphs 35.136(c) through (h) of this section, which apply to service animals, shall also apply to miniature horses.
Honestly I have never seen a diaper for a horse.
It's not so much of a diaper, though, and more of a burlap sack that's suspended like a hammock underneath the "business end" as it were.
Note that this only works for poop; I haven't seen any solution for the voluminous amount of pee a horse can produce.
I got the impression that people were glossing over the details and assuming that it's just an extreme example of airlines being required (if at all--lots of misconceptions abound) to unquestionably accept people's eccentric, ridiculous, and [arguably] illegitimate accommodation requests, such as the recent peacock incident that made the rounds.
Granted, the news reporting has done an exceptionally poor job at distinguishing service animals from therapy animals, and the sources of and justifications for various regulations and policies. But the ambiguity and seeming absurdity is precisely what caused me to dig further and discover that miniature horses are distinguishable. But that only leads to even more questions.
It's affluenza, "victimhood"-exploiting, pseudo-disability BS. My elderly and frail grandparents never had a disability placard, yet their neighbors had one for at least 30 years without a real disability; the neighbor had one because they were slightly disabled (low %) per compulsory military service discarge. That's understandable, but what's not is this "special-needs" living security blanket that gives others allergic reactions and creates a nuisance to others.
If the animal can't behave, there oughta be away to give feedback on the customer/animal such that they won't be able to fly with their fluffy nuisance.
Obvious joke left as an exercise to the reader.
But if you tell them you have a dog allergy, they’ll tell you that other persons right to their service animal trumps your allergy.
Animal allergies can be just as deadly as peanut allergies.
This isn't a new thing. There have always been people who prefer the company of animals to people, even centuries ago when people were more "connected to each other". If it's more frequently seen now, you can just as easily attribute that to there now being 7+ billion people, so if X% of the population prefers animals to people, X will be a greater number as the population increases.
Some people just don't like people. That's fine.
https://hn.algolia.com/?query=loneliness
Can you insist on "no service animals" in the rental agreement? Or "no therapy animals"?
Course, we would never bring our cats anywhere they would inconvenience other people. The larger one does travel fairly well though, he mostly just flops down and falls asleep. The other one though... he yowls and I would be furious if I was stuck on a plane with him. (I am driving them both cross country next week)
All that said - Im annoyed at people that falsify these sort of things. There's all manner of services online that will print fake documentation for a nominal fee. It's insulting for people with actual issues.
If the dog is perfectly well behaved, then I would absolutely be breaking the law if I evicted them for it.
What you really want to look out for is the state-by-state definitions, like wolves in (I think) Montana.
That also apparently hasn't stopped people from claiming they have one, however.
The animal doesn't fit underneath the seat. It's clearly taking up leg room of the passengers next to it.
I understand making accommodations for people with disabilities. But there's a trend in this country:
Group A has X problem. Group A proposes a solution that violates Group B's life and liberty. Group B complains. Everyone gets angry at Group B, because 'how else could Group A get a solution'. The answer is simple: It's not Group B's problem.
Why people think their problem (emotional support needs) should be my problem (100 pounds of animal falling on me, having it invade my space or the need to breath air which many people can't if it has animal hair)
I'm truly wandering if this isn't a case of some news organization believing an onion article. It really seems like a picture from an onion article.
I do have problems with the people who get fake certifications for their “service” animals to bring them on board. Service animals are highly trained and these fake service animals really give true service animals a bad look.
What's next? Sitting next to a "service python" that's 6' long, whose owner has fallen into a slumber, and the lady three aisles back starts screaming as the snake wraps itself around her calf and thigh, throwing the passengers into a panic.
I also understand people's frustrations with unruly pets on planes, but frankly I don't remember ever seeing this. I've only ever seen well-behaved pets on planes. I do remember numerous unruly children on planes, though.
You can. Rent a private jet with a bunch of other exotic pet owners.
Or form an airline with this intent.
But for the love of everything that is holy, please don't sit next to me in a cramped tin can for 6 hours with your horse's behind in my face.
This is public transportation.
I can tolerate a small emotional support animal that fits in a container that will fit under your seat at take off or landing. That seems like a reasonable compromise. Larger animals can go underneath if they fit, or not join what is essential, a flying bus.
not sure if this is a US thing, or if there were 0 pets in general except for the flights i took.
So, here we have blank prohibition on any pet anywhere, which is, IMO, worse than service ponies on a plane.