It's not fradulent, because there is no certification process to have an 'emotional support animal'. If there was, and they claimed it falsely, it would be fraud.
@@monkfishy6348 what are you babbling about? yes there is a process to have an ESA (in housing, no longer on planes), yuo need a letter from the doctor you are regularly seeing (not a letter you buy online) and be LEGIT disabled. if you falsely claim an ESA to avoid fees, that is fraud...HUD declared online letters not legally sufficient.
They didn’t bring up how to hold people accountable when they say that their obviously untrained pit bull is a “service dog”. There has to be a more official way of designating what is and is not a service dog so that it is easily to distinguish.
I feel sorry for your not understanding other people's needs. That is definitely part of this world today. By the way I don't have a service animal but have compassion
@@haweater1555 They are pets, but they are pets specifically for disabled people in no pets housing, and they are important. Studies show they are VERY beneficial. It's actually non disabled frauds who are the real problem.
People are not allergic to wheelchair, or walker, or oxygen tank. Owner should have a right to decline a guest he is not comfortable with. At least have extra fee to clean all pet allergens.
People can be allergic to anything. I suffer from allergies. Couple of the things I am allergic to r things that at least half of the human population and businesses touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell on a near daily basis. But my allergies r not their responsibility. My allergies r my responsibility. I can't force businesses to illegally discriminate against half of the human population or tell businesses what they can and can not touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell. That is not how allergies works. And yes, there r allergies to certain medical items as well. People's lives depend on their medical equipment. That is why there r laws to protect them. Owner is responsible to take their allergies into consideration BEFORE choosing to open a business to the general public. Them not doing so is NOT the service dog team's fault. And no, u don't get to charge extra all because someone has a service dog. That is also discrimination. Besides u r supposed to be thoroughly cleaning after every use anyways, regardless if there was a service dog there or not. Again that is part of owning a business. If u r not ready for all the responsibilities and laws that come with running a business, then u r not ready to open a business to begin with.
All these people who have tried to skirt rules by saying their animal is an ESA have really made it difficult for people who have legit service animals.
What is making it difficult is businesses refusing to educate themselves on service animal teams and the laws and rights that surround them. Per those laws (that apparently no one reads) esas don't have public access rights. So someone told a business that their animal is an esa and the business still let them in (when the business is not pet friendly) and the esa causing a problem, then that fault goes back on the business for allowing the esa to come in when it wasn't supposed to be there by law.
@@carriehollyland3596 - Did you hear about the blind man who was kicked out of a restaurant in Seattle with his guide dog? Talk about a business not educating themselves.
@@grumpyoldlady_rants yes I did. I also follow that guide dog team's UA-cam page. The staff member from that business definitely screwed up and broke the law, and the way he mocked the blind handler about his blindness was even more disgusting.
This is like the disabled hang tags on vehicles. All selfish people have to do is find someone (doctor, therapist) who will ok it and they get to indulge their inner entitlement.
That's why IDs won't work. What you have to do is fine them. Then it will make them prove in court that they are really disabled, and their dog is trained. But even in the states that have laws to fine the fakers, the law is NEVER enforced. Ever.
@@Ch-yz4yt the host wouldn't be allergic to diabetic supplies, in residential housing, if its a room rental, the landlord usually does NOT HAVE TO allow service animals...should be the same for airbnb rentals if the host is present and sharing common areas with the guest....
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE The landlord has no say. Only the actual resident does. And Airbnbs HAVE to allow service dogs access. You don't know what you are talking about.
It's stupid how so many animals are out there, it's not okay how many are out there and that legally you can't ask to see papers so all the no legal animals are having a negative impact.
Wrong, Karen. A business open to the general public, which includes Airbnb's, does NOT have a right to illegally discriminate against service dog teams. Also, Karen it's called a seizure alert service dog, NOT support dog. Educate yourself. Also, Karen service dog teams do NOT have to tell them ahead of time that they have a service dog. At the time they enter the business, the business may ask the two allowed questions by law,.... Is it a task trained service dog needed for a disability and what task is it trained to perform, that the handler at that time must then answer. But a handler doesn't have to say anything ahead of time (meaning prior to arriving and being asked those two questions). And no other questions outside of those two questions r allowed either. Go read the ada.
as a service dog handler it is getting harder and harder to go anywhere without having people turn me away. I was even informed to leave my service dog at home by my boss after being hired knowing I have one. I have worked there for almost a year and went to work everyday with her. I have not been able to get a lawyer to take any legal action against them.
I see people bringing their pet dogs into the GROCERY STORE. I don't want your dog pee and hair near my food. I have my own dog pee and hair to worry about. I feel sorry for people who need service dogs. Leave your emotional support/therapy/random pet home.
I don’t want pity because I use a guide dog I want to be able to do the every day tasks others do like going to the store and it’s my right under the law to be allowed to do so with my mobility aid in this case my guide dog in other peoples cases it’s a service dog for other health concerns
What this will wind up leading to is those who are disabled and have a service dog, will be forced to jump through additional hoops, such as the animal having an official ID of some sort. And the vests should be specific colors, styles, etc for the different modalities ie; ptsd is one color/style and so on, also security markings on the vest so it can't be counterfeited and only issued through an accredited licensed service dog training company. Several years ago I saw on Amazon service animal vests and patches. These special vests need to be issued with the dog and at no charge or a very minimal charge to the disabled person. Faking a service dog is just as bad as parking in handicap parking spots when the person has no plate or placard. And those that do either one should be ashamed of themselves..... And "emotional support animal" should NEVER have been made a thing. I hope she is able to bring much needed attention to making this easier for the disabled to live a normal life, as much as we can......
Ur bs id vest crap won't ever happen because it would break other laws, example like HIPAA laws. A BS piece of plastic or a vest is NOT what makes an animal a service animal. U apparently don't understand what all goes behind service animals, nor do u understand what all would have to go behind the ba crap u r asking for. What needs to happen people need to EDUCATE themselves and OBEY the LAWS. Lol, and parking placards r nothing like service animals, nor do they even stop people from parking illegally in those spots or even stealing/misusing those placards. 🤣 What makes things easier is if u people would just educate yourselves already.
@@Ausgar-yc1yl hhmmmm.... Don't believe I said they were. I said people faking a service animal will lead to those with real service dogs needing a vest.... I guess y'all didn't actually read what I wrote.
@@littlebitofhope1489 also didn't apparently read what I wrote. Never once did I say they should have to. I'm disabled and shouldn't have to explain why. If you read what I wrote you will realize I was saying that people faking a service animal is going to make it harder for those who have real ones or those trying to get one.
WRONG. There is no proof for service animals from the federal government for u nosey nazo Karen's to see. If u think u need to see "proof" to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with. A BS "proof" is NOT what makes a dog a service dog. Also parking placards r not medical equipment. Service animals r medical equipment. They r NOT the same thing. And u don't need "proof" for other medical equipments like wheelchairs, oxygen tanks, crutches, EpiPens, canes, etc... Also, whether or not someone has "proof" (which is just a parking placard or plate that no one else in the general public (including businesses) can even check anyways, doesn't stop people who don't have it or someone who is misusing/stealing one from parking on those spots. So ur bs "proof" crap just backfired in ur face.
Driving is a privilege that can be taken away. Using medical equipment is a Right. I have a better idea. Since it is you non disabled frauds causing this, lets ID YOU and make you show it wherever you go. Leave disabled people alone.
Maybe dogs should just be more integrated into daily life. In many places they are. l lived in the Netherlands where well behaved dogs were welcome just about everywhere, including many restaurants. They often had hooks outside of grocery stores to leave your dog while shopping. They were allowed on public transport like trams, trains, and city buses. Because of this dogs were well socialized and part of life , there was rarely any trouble. On the rare occasion where two male dogs were unhappy about each others proximity, the person who just got on the tram would have to get off and wait for the next one. This is not a problem of people cheating, its an attitude problem society has adopted.
I wish, but right now most of American society can't do it. We have a problem here where people refuse to properly train their dogs - they see it as too expensive or "cruel" and they are so emotionally unbalanced about their dogs (seeing them as "babies" that can do no wrong) that the dogs become even worse. They refuse to let their dogs be dogs. You can't put those dogs near other dogs. You can see this in the ESA "movement" where these "emotional support dogs" are ATTACKING service dogs. Many service dogs have had to be retired, some have died. Disabled SA handlers do not want MORE pets around their dogs.
WRONG. The government does NOT need to change laws that u never read just because u refuse to educate yourself. Service dog teams do NOT owe u nosey Nazi Karens ANY of their PRIVATE INFORMATION. The fact that u even think they should proves that u don't even know what a service dog even is to begin with. Nothing qualifies u to determine whether or not someone owes u their PRIVATE INFORMATION.
Yes, fools woth untrained pets cause problems. HOWEVER fools with untrained pets is NOT a valid reason for BUSINESSES to be IGNORANT of the LAWS and ILLEGALLY take it out on INNOCENT service dog teams who have done NOTHING wrong. U take it out on the fools woth the untrained pets, NOT the innocent service dog teams.
@@carriehollyland3596 On the internet, that's done by using asterisks before and after a word or phrase, at least on something like UA-cam where one can't italicize things.
"A better educated public" would help, says person who is not offering an actual solution to have a better educated public. If the service dog industry would lobby for modifications the law to allow for some sort of certification or proof of service dog training under a government regulated system then the public could be educated and be informed about how to spot a real service dog.
Just because u choose to lack an education on the laws, doesn't mean the laws need to change just to make u nosey Nazi Karens happy. U r NOT privy to PRIVATE INFORMATION. People with disabilities don't owe u anything about themselves or their service dogs. They only have to answer the two allowed questions the law provides. U need to actually READ the LAWS. These laws have been in existence for DECADES. U refusing to read them is no one else's fault but ur own. And u clearly don't even know what a service dog even is. If u think u need to see some bs piece of blank paper to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with. U thinking u need to see someone else's PRIVATE INFORMATION doesn't educate u on the laws any. U would still be lacking an education. If u want to be educated then u need to actually READ the LAWS, karen.
So why did they approve the dog in the first place and then decide the dog wasn’t wanted ⁉️ if I had a service dog and was denied entrance to a establishment you better believe I would report that establishment put the shoe on the other foot and see how they ( the establishment ) would feel if they were denied entrance because of a service dog emotional or otherwise ‼️‼️
@@karenbutler8515 wrong, Karen. The Airbnb owner is the one that failed to read the laws. The guest did not have a pet, so the pet policy did not apply. The guest has a service dog which is under law considered medical equipment, and under law the Airbnb owner must allow service dogs on the property and can not charge any extra fees.
Emotional support animals and service animals are very different. They are NOT the same. Requirements are different... laws are different. I've seen people taking chickens to the grocery store... peacocks on airplanes... all because people are abusing the classification of "service animal". This all started in the early 2000's. You could purchase service animal credentials online even though the animal never had specific service animal training or testing for around $30. And then came this "emotional support animal" trend. I've seen videos online of a woman who takes her chickens to the grocery store and dares anyone to prevent her from doing so. I said then that it was really setting a bad trend for people who actually required legit service animals. They laughed and attempted to intimidate me for standing up for actual service animals. I knew this would happen. It has opened the door for anyone to claim their pet is an emotional support animal and feel they should take them everywhere. As an animal lover, I'd love to take my animals everywhere... but that's not practical and it's not right to do so.
As someone who _is an Epileptic_ , I actually think that the property owner *should have the right* to deny a service animal, if it is for a _medically-related reason_ . Just as people such as myself, and _this woman shown_ should be alotted what is needed ( *that is within reason* ) to navigate everyday life, _so to_ should this other person be given what *they* need due to any medical issues/etc. Maybe a _disclosure_ should be allowed for those who cannot have animals/etc. on their properties due to allergy/respiratory illness/etc. But it is not fair to treat these people like villains because they are looking out for their health and anyone else thinking they're staying at a pet-free property. *They are just as important as you are* .
WRONG NO businesses that is open to the general public is allowed to ILLEGALLY discriminate against service dog teams. Someone else's personal medical condition is NOT a valid reason for a business to discriminate against a service dog team. The law is very clear on that. Businesses owners r responsible to take their own health issues into consideration BEFORE choosing to open a business. Because once the business is open all the laws that come with that MUST be OBEYED. A business owners knew about their own personal medical conditions BEFORE they chose to open a business to the general public. So obviously the business owner thinks that a business being open to the general public is more important than their own personal medical conditions. So there is NO excuse to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY DISCRIMINATING against service dog teams. And rooms at hotels and airbnbs should ALWAYS be thoroughly cleaned after each use. So other customers shouldn't be worrying about their allergies then when renting that room. If a business fails to clean the room correctly then that is on the business. NOT on the service dog team. It is NOT the service dog team's fault that the business failed to do their job. And it is NOT the service dog team's fault that the BUSINESS OWNER FAILED to take their own personal medical conditions into consideration BEFORE opening a business to the general public.
Another thing is, people need to realize that emotional support animals ARE NOT service animals and are not covered by the ADA. I work in a hotel/casino and we get this constantly. A doctor's note doesn't make an ESA a service animal. If you bring your Shihtzu to the desk in a doggie stroller any try to tell us it's a service dog, we know it really isn't.
Actually, smaller dogs make the best hearing dogs. So don't assume it is not a Service Dog. Just ask the two questions, and watch to see how they behave. THAT is how you tell.
@@littlebitofhope1489 Business owners need more than just the word of the person with the animal. If you want greater acceptance then the animal needs to have a certification of some sort that puts the matter to rest. Until then, you can expect to keep having problems with being turned away or given dirty looks.
@@Bob-Fields I have a better idea. Since it is you non disabled FRAUDS causing this problem, lets make YOU carry an ID and make you wait to show it before entering EVERY business you ever visit. Leave Disabled people ALONE. They already have enough to handle.
Then there should be a criminal charge for those faking it and making it harder on everyone! The amount of " service" snakes, birds, fish, and all manner of bs i saw when working retail was staggering and of course it's those people who scream the loudest about discrimination and suing you . smdh
Snakes, birds, fish, etc... r not service animals. Service animals r trained dogs and miniature horses ONLY for those with disabilities who they r trained to help. If a business is knowingly allowing other untrained animals in (because the business failed to educate themselves on the laws) then that is the business's own fault.
@@carriehollyland3596 They used to be before 2010. So this person is telling the truth. Don't tell people they are wrong unless you know what you are talking about.
AND THE LAW SAYS "The ADA does not require covered entities to modify policies, practices, or procedures if it would “fundamentally alter” the nature of the goods, services, programs, or activities provided to the public" if the presence of the dog makes the owner/host to ill to host..THAT IS A FUNDAMENTAL ALTERATION AND THE DOG CAN BE EXCLUDED. big difference between a dog that will be in a store for 5 minutes to an hour and a dog that will be in a home for a day or more...and leave dander on furnishings
The LAW says fur, dander, fear, or allergies r NOT a valid reason to discriminate against service dog teams. Try actually READING the FULL LAW, Karen. Don't like those laws, then don't run a business that forces u to obey the laws. Simple. Also, humans leave dander too, yet u r not 👶Karen😭 over that. 🤡
@@carriehollyland3596 THE LAW ALSO SAYS THE SD CANNOT FUNDAMENTALLY ALTER THE BUSINESS...MAKING THE ON SITE OWNER TOO SICK TO PROVIDE SERVICE FUNDAMENTALLY ALTERSs...AND HAS BEEN EXPLAINED...ITS SIMPLY A MATTER OF THE LAW NOT ANTICIPATING A SITUATION LIKE A PERSON RENTING THEIR HOME FOR VACATIONS....JUST LIKE THE US CONSTITUTION DIDN'T CONSIDER THERE WOULD BE AUTOMATIC WEAPONS USED FOR MASS SHOOTINGS...and now that needs to be regulated...
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE a service dog doing nothing wrong in a place open to the general public that is no different than any other location similar to it (like a hotel room) does NOT fundamentally alter anything there. And AGAIN the LAW already said that allergies is NOT valid for that argument, Karen. Try actually READING the ENTIRE LAW. 🤡
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE and weapons has NOTHING to do with the ada laws for service animals having public access rights. 🤣🤡 The fact that u even tried bringing that up proves that u severely lack an education and r just grasping at anything irrelevant because u think it will help when u fail to realize that it doesn't do anything but make u look even more wrong and foolish in the end.
Trained dogs and miniature horses ONLY. A dogs/miniature horse must be trained in order to be a service animal and be allowed in public access locations (bot pet friendly and non pet friendly). Yea people (including businesses) need educated too. But a dog must be trained in order to be a service animal to help a person with a disability. Fools with untrained pets cause problems for businesses, service animal teams, and the rest of the general public. These untrained pets r especially dangerous to service animal teams due to these untrained pets causing a distraction to a service animal which then puts their handler's life at risk, and or even attacking the service animal or handler which also puts their lives at risk.
@@Bob-Fields then u r out of money and put of a job. Also I can face fines and charges from the government, as well as a lawsuit from the service animal team as well Karen. Don't run a business if u aren't going to follow the laws, Karen.
i think saying that a service dog is just like a wheelchair is incredibly dishonest. are they legally protected in the same way? yes. but you don’t have to worry about a wheelchair shedding hair or attacking you. obviously service dogs don’t attack people, but the uncertainty whether the animal is even a service animal is there. an uncertainty that doesn’t exist with wheelchairs.
That's because u severely lack an education. Service dogs r considered medical equipment. So is a wheelchair chair. By law u can not illegally discriminate against someone and beny them access all because they have a wheelchair in a public access location. Just like u can't illegally discriminate against someone all because they have a service dog in a public access location. And service dogs don't attack anyone, they legally r not allowed to. People however can attack other people. It unfortunately happen quite often. And service dogs r also kept well groomed. Can't say the same for most people. Also people with pets at home r going to have pet hair on them. Heck humans themselves have hair on them. Yet I don't see u 👶 Karen 😭 over any of that.
The letter/email said She "violated the House Rules". So, whats the problem? They dont allow animals, sad but true. The RENTER is responsible for reading the fine print. Peroid. No sympathy from me. I rent from AirBnb all the time when I travel, & there are rules for every different property. Its on the RENTER, not the OWNER to get it right.
The business owner is responsible for reading and obeying the LAWS. And PER those LAWS, pet policies do NOT apply to service dogs, and businesses open to the general public (which by law includes hotels and airbnbs) MUST ALLOW service dogs and can NOT charge them extra fees. The Airbnb owner BROKE the LAWS, and that is why the court charged and fined the Airbnb owner for breaking those laws.
An Air BNB is a place of public access, which falls under the ADA, and MUST by law be accessible to people with disabilities and whatever medical equipment they have. If you don't like it, get a new business.
that is why you carry the paperwork you have to show your service dog is real, the people who abuse this are idiots and need to get jail time for claiming a dog is a service dog when it is legally not.
From the ADA (dot gov) service dog regulations page: "In situations where it is not obvious that the dog is a service animal, staff may ask only two specific questions: (1) is the dog a service animal required because of a disability? and (2) what work or task has the dog been trained to perform? Staff are not allowed to request any documentation for the dog, require that the dog demonstrate its task, or inquire about the nature of the person’s disability."
WRONG. There is NO such thing as paperwork from the federal government for service dog teams, NOR is any required, NOR is anyone allowed to ask for any. If u think u need to see some BS piece of paper to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with.
There is no magic paperwork to prove a service dog is legitimate. Under the ADA there are two questions individuals can ask someone with a dog. They can ask if the dog is a service animal required because of a disability, and they can ask what work or task the dog has been trained to perform.
It's alot different then a walker and or a wheelchair it's in private homes and the lady didn't mention she had a service dog before hand people should need actual documentation saying legit service dog I could go buy a vest that says service dog I can't stand when people have there dogs when I'm buying groceries
We should not have to announce that we have a disability. We should be able to gain access to public accommodations just like able bodied persons do. Abled bodied persons can just walk in somewhere and not be questioned about anything. We deserve the same. The disabled community already has so many issues with accessibility, being questioned about our equipment, and if we actually need it. This would be similar to a business asking about someone papsmear or a prostate exam. It is inappropriate and degrading to ask about just to gain access to public accommodations, just like asking for a service dog handler to disclose anything about their health or to jump through more hoops.
@taylorwright958 if its a real disability there should be required to carry something from a state agency saying that the dog with description is a service animal and it doesn't need to say what the disability is ive had nieghbors where they have admitted it's not a service animal and they bought a vest so they could take there pet anywhere they want and it's disgusting when trying to buy fresh produce and you got someone with a dog in there and if it's a real service animal you're already announcing you have a disability
I'm sorry, it's a private home? The story said it was an AirBNB. That is a rental property. Which means the renter is subject to the law, which exempts service dogs from pet policies. If it was a private home there would be no involvement from AirBNB. (You know AirBNB is just a rental platform, right? It's not some magic thing that allows you to rent out your home above the law.) If your little scofflaw neighbors are faking service dogs, that is a different matter. It's obviously wrong they do that. When it comes to service animals tho you're just going to have to suck it up and accept that your desire to pretend grocery stores are sterile environments (lol) isn't more important than a disabled person's right to live their life.
Laws that u never read don't need to be gotten rid of just to make u anti-american Karens happy. Those laws r in place to protect Americans. If u r not ready to take on everything that involves running a business then u don't need to be running a business.
Wrong. First of all, service dogs and esas can be any dog breed. There is no special "list". Secondly esas r not service animals. Those r two completely different things. Esas don't have public access rights. Service animals have public access rights. Thirdly, PER the LAWS, allergies r NOT a valid reason for a business to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY discriminating against service dog teams.
Landlords should be able to ban service dogs IMHO since there can be a flea issue and allergy issue. This is way different than a wheelchair and oxygen. They aren't renting the property on a lease. It's a short term lease like a hotel room. I am highly allergic to cats. If someone has a service cat and stayed there, then that could affect my health if I stayed at the same place.
A "service cat"???? No such thing. If on Airbnb the owner of the property should say no animals because of allergy reasons. A service animal is BY LAW a "medical device" per the ADA. SMDH!!!
If you were so allergic to dogs (there's no such thing as a service cat) that you cannot follow the law, then you cannot have an AirBNB or a rental property. You are not owed the right to be landlord or an AirBNB renter. Disabled people have the RIGHT to their equipment, including their SAs. SAs have to act in a way that is correct, however, if the dog was peeing all over the house (or had fleas -- which, you know, disabled people don't want a flea infested dog around them any more than anyone else, right? It's not a junkyard dog, it's with them 24/7) you would be able to ask it to leave. You are inventing problems that don't exist here to try to make disabled peoples' lives harder. Is that really your aim?
And service animals r medical equipment just like a wheelchair is medical equipment. And yes, tenants rent their homes from landlords and they do have leases, that is how renting works. 🤣🤡 It's not like a hotel. Lol, clearly u never owners a rental property nor have u ever rented from a rental property. Also, cats r not service animals by federal laws. They can be esas though, and esas do have housing rights (this doesn't include hotels though, hotels fall under public access rights which esas don't have). Esas r not service animals. Service animals have public access and housing rights. And ur personal allergies don't matter here when it comes to someone else's personal home (which includes their rented home). And if a tenant moves out of a home they rented from a landlord, then it is the landlords responsible to make sure the place is cleaned before the next renter. Same goes for hotels. So again, ur personal allergies r irrelevant.
@@rondameier8168 airbnbs MUST allow service animals. It doesn't matter if they have allergies. That is PER the LAWS. If they have allergies and they r that worried about them then they shouldn't be running an Airbnb.
Wrong. There r many different types of allergies, dog allergies r NOT the only ones. And service dogs r medical devices PER the LAWS. Allergies r irrelevant to that. And PER the LAWS allergies is NOT a valid excuse to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY discriminating against service dog teams. If the business owner is that worried about their allergies then they need to take their allergies into consideration BEFORE opening a business to the general public. Because once they do open to the general public then they MUST OBEY ALL THE LAWS that come with that. Which I cludes allowing service animals in. If they fail to take their own allergies into consideration BEFORE choosing to run that type of a business then that is THEIR OWN FAULT. They do NOT get to take it out on the service dog teams. I suffer from allergies, the things I am allergic to r things that nearly half of the human population and businesses touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell on a near daily basis. That doesn't mean that I can discriminate against those people or businesses though. My allergies r my own problem. I have to take my allergy treatment course. I limit my personal (meaning my body only) contact to my allergen. I keep up with my personal hygiene, like wash my hands, and wipe things down that I personally want to touch. And if I am that worried still then I can leave the location if I want to. That is how allergies work.
Service Dogs are legally medical devices. And no, you don't go into anaphylactic shock with dog allergies. You take a Benadryl or move away and stop whining.
I get not being able to deny people entry, but that doesnt excuse *any* necessary cleaning fee to remove hair and dander from the space and restore it to pet free. Oxygen tank and wheelchairs dont shed.
U r supposed to clean the room thoroughly after every use anyways. So no, u don't get to charge extra all because someone has a service dog (which is medical equipment). Also, humans have hair and dander, and I don't see u Karen crying over that. Many have pets at home and so likely have pet hair on them when they come in anyways. Again, don't see u Karen crying over that. Wheelchairs can leave marks, and require extra wheelchair accessibilities, like ramps and larger bathrooms and bedroom space and accessible counters. Oxygen tanks u need to ensure there r no open flames or things that can regularly create sparks. The list goes on and on for all medic devices. However people with disabilities rely on these medical devices to be able to live their lives. That is why u can't charge extra all because someone uses a medical device.
lol people want dogs yes, sure, there are a tasks dogs are maybe best in class at, like smell, guiding cardiac alert - would not some kind of heart monitoring technology be better suited? epilepsy seizure detection, could there not be something more effective out there that is able to give medics more information on whats going on than a dog pressing a button and barking? feel there has to be something more effective, cheaper to maintain, but maybe the allure of a dog you can take anywhere is a motivation - what do I know though
Machines can not do everything a dog can do. Nor r those machines even available to everyone. A service dogs do a lot more than just press a button or bark. What would be much more effective is if u educated yourself.
Could there be a fee for service animals? It seems unfair for a host to have accept an animal, and worse, without forewarning and then deal with the animal's hair left behind. Be fair now - could one argue that the host indicated that they had a problem with animals by stating they were not pet friendly? Why force a reservation with them?
NO. ByAW there is to be NO extra fee charged all because someone has a service dog. Service dogs r medical equipment. That would be the equivalent to trying to charge someone extra all because they have a wheelchair, oxygen tank, EpiPen or crutches, etc... And by law they do not have to forewarn them. Upon arrival the business can ask two questions that a handler at that time must then answer.... Is it a task trained service dog needed for a disability and what task is it trained to perform for the disability. NO other questions allowed. If a business never asks those questions, then legally a handler is not required to provide any information regarding their service dog. They don't have to say a word then. And service dogs r not pets. Pet policies in public access locations (which includes Airbnbs) do NOT apply to service dogs, PER the LAWS.
@@carriehollyland3596 Though medical equipments, service dogs are still animals. At the very least, a host should be able to charge a cleaning fee for hair left behind. No different if a landlord were to have a tenant pay for modifications and wheelchair-related repairs per The Federal Fair Housing Act. I do agree that, by law, the woman had the right to just show up with a service dog and force the host to accept the service dog, though, in my opinion, I find such action discourteous and would not want someone to do the same to me and, unless there was a "no-other-option" reason for a reservation with THAT host, the woman comes off as a troublemaker.
@@adesuwao.7307 again, PER the LAWS, business can NOT charge extra fees for cleaning all because they have a service dog. And landlords can NOT make someone with a wheelchair pay extra all because they have a wheelchair. Businesses open to the general public r required to be ada compliant. That is part of owning a business. If u don't want to do that then u don't get to own a business. Simple.
@@adesuwao.7307 just because u severely lack an education and maturity and u go around demanding Americans give up their American rights does NOT make people with disabilities the ones who r trouble makers.
and she didn't notify the host before she got caught with it? and if this is a place where the owner is present, MORALLY they should be allowed to refuse a service animal
WRONG, Karen. First of all she doesn't have to notify them ahead of time. Secondly Karen, businesses r NOT allowed to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY DISCRIMINATING against service dog teams. And there is NOTHING moral about businesses breaking those laws.
@@carriehollyland3596 ACE< I AM NOT TALKING ABOUT THE LAW, I AM TALKING ABOUT MORALS AND NOT BEING AN ENTITLED BRAT. ONLY A NARCISSIST WOULD DEMAND THAT A HOST WHO LIVES IN THE HOME BEING RENTED BE FORCED TO ALLOW DOGS. THAT IS JUST RUDE AND INCONSIDERATE OF THE HOSTS MEDICAL ISSUES. AND NOTIFYING COULD BE AS SIMPLE AS VERIFYING IT IS A SD UPON ARRIVAL..JUST LIKE THEY WOULD HAVE TO DO AT A REGULAR HOTEL. EVEN UNDER ADA, BUSINESSES ARE ALLOWED TO ASK IF ITS A SD FOR A DISABILITY AND WHAT TYPE OF TASK DOES IT DO (ie medical alert, mobility aid, etc). There are plenty of airbnb's where the host does not live in the home (and therefore will have to deal with lingering allergens after). EMPATHY dictates that the person with the SD does consider the need of others. In HOUSING under FHA, a service animal can be denied if a nearby tenant in another apartment has an allergy.....the same consideration should be shown in an airbnb with the owner present.
@@carriehollyland3596 but clearly you don't know what MORALS are....its like the transgender people having no consideration for people's religious rights to not want to share a locker room with someone born the opposite gender...its IMMORAL to dismiss and invalidate other peoples legitimate concerns and rights.
The law does not apply to one's private property. I am not a business just because I use a third party business to rent out my private property. AirBnb rentals are not public spaces. If AirBnb was a company that owned and rented out the properties, then yes the law would apply. I do not see how we're supposed to be okay with people being so entitled that they can violate another person's rights. Sorry, but you have to be upfront about bringing an animal into someone else's home regardless of the purpose of the animal. Edit: Honestly sounds like the problem is that the law is vague in these situations because they did not predict things like ride share or short term rentals.
@@Crazykirkman but I am not a business just because I rent my home, AirBnb is the business. Does one need to register their home as a business to rent out their home on AirBnb?
WRONG If u r running a business (doesn't matter if it is third party or not it is still a business) on ur property that is open to the general public (like and Airbnb) then u MUST OBEY ALL THE LAWS that come with that. U do NOT get a choice in the matter. That is how the LAW works. If u don't like that then u don't get to run a business on ur property then. Simple.
@@michellehawkins1027 can you show me in the law where it states charging money for something makes you a business? Cause I'm pretty sure that's not the definition of a business.
As someone who doesn't look like I'm disabled, I would never go anywhere esp. By myself, without my sd. She gives me the confidence to go out in public. However, I seldom do go out still, bc of my disability and not wanting to explain things to people. It just isn't worth it anymore.
People abuse this on the bus system as well.
People fraudulently declare a dog an "Emotional Support Animal" just so they can take a pet on airplanes without the pet handling charge.
or not have to pay a fee when renting apartment.
Emotional support animals are no longer allowed in plane cabins and you must buy a pet ticket.
ACAA stopped including ESAs a few years ago
It's not fradulent, because there is no certification process to have an 'emotional support animal'. If there was, and they claimed it falsely, it would be fraud.
@@monkfishy6348 what are you babbling about? yes there is a process to have an ESA (in housing, no longer on planes), yuo need a letter from the doctor you are regularly seeing (not a letter you buy online) and be LEGIT disabled. if you falsely claim an ESA to avoid fees, that is fraud...HUD declared online letters not legally sufficient.
FINALLY someone brought this up. It's time to start holding people accountable.
this is why I hate that there is no accountability for faking a service animal
They didn’t bring up how to hold people accountable when they say that their obviously untrained pit bull is a “service dog”. There has to be a more official way of designating what is and is not a service dog so that it is easily to distinguish.
If u read the laws then u will already have the answer to ur question.
The law is already official.
Read it.
Wow. Amazing. Emotional support animals have ruined it for these proper certified animals.
There is no such thing as "certified" service animals.
Certifications doesn't exist.
"Emotional Support Animal" is the dictionary definition of "pet".😊
I feel sorry for your not understanding other people's needs. That is definitely part of this world today. By the way I don't have a service animal but have compassion
@@haweater1555 They are pets, but they are pets specifically for disabled people in no pets housing, and they are important. Studies show they are VERY beneficial. It's actually non disabled frauds who are the real problem.
@@margaretyoung1240 You don't have compassion for the people 'emotional support animals' negatively impacts I see. Cut the holier-than-thou attitude.
People are not allergic to wheelchair, or walker, or oxygen tank. Owner should have a right to decline a guest he is not comfortable with. At least have extra fee to clean all pet allergens.
People can be allergic to anything.
I suffer from allergies.
Couple of the things I am allergic to r things that at least half of the human population and businesses touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell on a near daily basis.
But my allergies r not their responsibility.
My allergies r my responsibility.
I can't force businesses to illegally discriminate against half of the human population or tell businesses what they can and can not touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell.
That is not how allergies works.
And yes, there r allergies to certain medical items as well.
People's lives depend on their medical equipment.
That is why there r laws to protect them.
Owner is responsible to take their allergies into consideration BEFORE choosing to open a business to the general public.
Them not doing so is NOT the service dog team's fault.
And no, u don't get to charge extra all because someone has a service dog.
That is also discrimination.
Besides u r supposed to be thoroughly cleaning after every use anyways, regardless if there was a service dog there or not.
Again that is part of owning a business.
If u r not ready for all the responsibilities and laws that come with running a business, then u r not ready to open a business to begin with.
@@carriehollyland3596 Wow Karen, you’re seriously emotionally invested in hating others. That’s obvious from your troll comments.
@@NomenClature-o8s projecting yourself is pathetic.
Learn the law or go to prison
@@NomenClature-o8s the only Karen here is you for thinking you're above the law.
All these people who have tried to skirt rules by saying their animal is an ESA have really made it difficult for people who have legit service animals.
What is making it difficult is businesses refusing to educate themselves on service animal teams and the laws and rights that surround them.
Per those laws (that apparently no one reads) esas don't have public access rights.
So someone told a business that their animal is an esa and the business still let them in (when the business is not pet friendly) and the esa causing a problem, then that fault goes back on the business for allowing the esa to come in when it wasn't supposed to be there by law.
@@carriehollyland3596 - Did you hear about the blind man who was kicked out of a restaurant in Seattle with his guide dog? Talk about a business not educating themselves.
@@grumpyoldlady_rants yes I did.
I also follow that guide dog team's UA-cam page.
The staff member from that business definitely screwed up and broke the law, and the way he mocked the blind handler about his blindness was even more disgusting.
@@carriehollyland3596 They make it difficult because there is no easy way to identify a real service dog vs and ESA.
This is like the disabled hang tags on vehicles. All selfish people have to do is find someone (doctor, therapist) who will ok it and they get to indulge their inner entitlement.
That's why IDs won't work. What you have to do is fine them. Then it will make them prove in court that they are really disabled, and their dog is trained. But even in the states that have laws to fine the fakers, the law is NEVER enforced. Ever.
I'd ask the Host beforehand if they would be OK with taking along any service dogs and get the reply in writing.
You don't ask if you can bring your diabetic supplies....
@@Ch-yz4yt the host wouldn't be allergic to diabetic supplies, in residential housing, if its a room rental, the landlord usually does NOT HAVE TO allow service animals...should be the same for airbnb rentals if the host is present and sharing common areas with the guest....
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE The landlord has no say. Only the actual resident does. And Airbnbs HAVE to allow service dogs access. You don't know what you are talking about.
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE what you just said is absolutely incorrect per federal law and the ADA a landlord MUST allow a service animal
@@Ch-yz4ytIt’s not the same. The dog isn’t a medical device. Stop being crazy.
It's stupid how so many animals are out there, it's not okay how many are out there and that legally you can't ask to see papers so all the no legal animals are having a negative impact.
The owner has the right not to allow animals in general. She can take her seizure support dog elswhere and be upfront next time.
Wrong, Karen.
A business open to the general public, which includes Airbnb's, does NOT have a right to illegally discriminate against service dog teams.
Also, Karen it's called a seizure alert service dog, NOT support dog.
Educate yourself.
Also, Karen service dog teams do NOT have to tell them ahead of time that they have a service dog.
At the time they enter the business, the business may ask the two allowed questions by law,.... Is it a task trained service dog needed for a disability and what task is it trained to perform, that the handler at that time must then answer.
But a handler doesn't have to say anything ahead of time (meaning prior to arriving and being asked those two questions).
And no other questions outside of those two questions r allowed either.
Go read the ada.
Actually they have no such right and if they try they won't have a business anymore for violating federal law
wrong
refusing animals and refusing service animals is 2 different things
The ENTIRE reason people abuse disability rights is due to a loss of personal accountability and responsibility.
as a service dog handler it is getting harder and harder to go anywhere without having people turn me away. I was even informed to leave my service dog at home by my boss after being hired knowing I have one. I have worked there for almost a year and went to work everyday with her. I have not been able to get a lawyer to take any legal action against them.
Notice how they always go to nice houses which say no pets or service animals and then complain of denial of service 😞
Notice how u failed to read and comprehend the federal and state LAWS that protect service dog teams.
Notice how those signs hold no authority. Go ahead let them try to deny service the government will shut their business down in a heartbeat 😂
service dogs aren't considers pets
I see people bringing their pet dogs into the GROCERY STORE. I don't want your dog pee and hair near my food. I have my own dog pee and hair to worry about. I feel sorry for people who need service dogs. Leave your emotional support/therapy/random pet home.
Individual people do not use therapy animals.
I don’t want pity because I use a guide dog I want to be able to do the every day tasks others do like going to the store and it’s my right under the law to be allowed to do so with my mobility aid in this case my guide dog in other peoples cases it’s a service dog for other health concerns
What this will wind up leading to is those who are disabled and have a service dog, will be forced to jump through additional hoops, such as the animal having an official ID of some sort. And the vests should be specific colors, styles, etc for the different modalities ie; ptsd is one color/style and so on, also security markings on the vest so it can't be counterfeited and only issued through an accredited licensed service dog training company. Several years ago I saw on Amazon service animal vests and patches. These special vests need to be issued with the dog and at no charge or a very minimal charge to the disabled person. Faking a service dog is just as bad as parking in handicap parking spots when the person has no plate or placard. And those that do either one should be ashamed of themselves..... And "emotional support animal" should NEVER have been made a thing. I hope she is able to bring much needed attention to making this easier for the disabled to live a normal life, as much as we can......
Ur bs id vest crap won't ever happen because it would break other laws, example like HIPAA laws.
A BS piece of plastic or a vest is NOT what makes an animal a service animal.
U apparently don't understand what all goes behind service animals, nor do u understand what all would have to go behind the ba crap u r asking for.
What needs to happen people need to EDUCATE themselves and OBEY the LAWS.
Lol, and parking placards r nothing like service animals, nor do they even stop people from parking illegally in those spots or even stealing/misusing those placards. 🤣
What makes things easier is if u people would just educate yourselves already.
Service dogs are NOT required to wear any vest.
So you want people to have to disclose their medical condition to the ENTIRE world just to have medical equipment? Are you NUTS?
@@Ausgar-yc1yl hhmmmm.... Don't believe I said they were. I said people faking a service animal will lead to those with real service dogs needing a vest.... I guess y'all didn't actually read what I wrote.
@@littlebitofhope1489 also didn't apparently read what I wrote. Never once did I say they should have to. I'm disabled and shouldn't have to explain why. If you read what I wrote you will realize I was saying that people faking a service animal is going to make it harder for those who have real ones or those trying to get one.
If you need proof to park at handicapped spots, you should have proof that your service dog is legit. Like some form of service dog identification.
WRONG.
There is no proof for service animals from the federal government for u nosey nazo Karen's to see.
If u think u need to see "proof" to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with.
A BS "proof" is NOT what makes a dog a service dog.
Also parking placards r not medical equipment.
Service animals r medical equipment.
They r NOT the same thing.
And u don't need "proof" for other medical equipments like wheelchairs, oxygen tanks, crutches, EpiPens, canes, etc...
Also, whether or not someone has "proof" (which is just a parking placard or plate that no one else in the general public (including businesses) can even check anyways, doesn't stop people who don't have it or someone who is misusing/stealing one from parking on those spots.
So ur bs "proof" crap just backfired in ur face.
Driving is a privilege that can be taken away. Using medical equipment is a Right. I have a better idea. Since it is you non disabled frauds causing this, lets ID YOU and make you show it wherever you go. Leave disabled people alone.
Service dogs cost thousands of dollars, some as much as 30 thousand or more. If you start registering them it had better be free.
as a handler, I agree, but it needs to be FREE. that's the problem 😭
"Seizure alert service dog" She qualifies according to Florida statutes. Host violated the law.
Steve-O helped promote this awful trend, he brought light to how anyone can turn their stupid untrained pet into a "service dog".
I bought a emotional support pickle 😅
Oh yeah, well, I bought an emotional support poo!💩😂
😂😂😂
People should not be allowed to do that
Maybe dogs should just be more integrated into daily life. In many places they are. l lived in the Netherlands where well behaved dogs were welcome just about everywhere, including many restaurants. They often had hooks outside of grocery stores to leave your dog while shopping. They were allowed on public transport like trams, trains, and city buses. Because of this dogs were well socialized and part of life , there was rarely any trouble. On the rare occasion where two male dogs were unhappy about each others proximity, the person who just got on the tram would have to get off and wait for the next one. This is not a problem of people cheating, its an attitude problem society has adopted.
I wish, but right now most of American society can't do it. We have a problem here where people refuse to properly train their dogs - they see it as too expensive or "cruel" and they are so emotionally unbalanced about their dogs (seeing them as "babies" that can do no wrong) that the dogs become even worse. They refuse to let their dogs be dogs. You can't put those dogs near other dogs. You can see this in the ESA "movement" where these "emotional support dogs" are ATTACKING service dogs. Many service dogs have had to be retired, some have died. Disabled SA handlers do not want MORE pets around their dogs.
Not everyone likes dogs. They're unsanitary.
The gov needs2 provide people with the ability to have and show PROOF that said dog is trained and QUALIFIED for the title of SERVICE DOG
WRONG.
The government does NOT need to change laws that u never read just because u refuse to educate yourself.
Service dog teams do NOT owe u nosey Nazi Karens ANY of their PRIVATE INFORMATION.
The fact that u even think they should proves that u don't even know what a service dog even is to begin with.
Nothing qualifies u to determine whether or not someone owes u their PRIVATE INFORMATION.
Genuinely quite funny how Elizabeth does not care about her host's medical rights or if he 'dyes'
he's not guna die sneezing you muppet.
Yes, fools woth untrained pets cause problems.
HOWEVER fools with untrained pets is NOT a valid reason for BUSINESSES to be IGNORANT of the LAWS and ILLEGALLY take it out on INNOCENT service dog teams who have done NOTHING wrong.
U take it out on the fools woth the untrained pets, NOT the innocent service dog teams.
Stop shouting.
@@scottcharney1091 not shouting, Karen.
@@carriehollyland3596 That's what it means to type a word in all capital letters.
@@scottcharney1091 not necessarily, Karen. 🤣🤡
Did u never hear the term "emphasis"?
@@carriehollyland3596 On the internet, that's done by using asterisks before and after a word or phrase, at least on something like UA-cam where one can't italicize things.
"A better educated public" would help, says person who is not offering an actual solution to have a better educated public. If the service dog industry would lobby for modifications the law to allow for some sort of certification or proof of service dog training under a government regulated system then the public could be educated and be informed about how to spot a real service dog.
Just because u choose to lack an education on the laws, doesn't mean the laws need to change just to make u nosey Nazi Karens happy.
U r NOT privy to PRIVATE INFORMATION.
People with disabilities don't owe u anything about themselves or their service dogs.
They only have to answer the two allowed questions the law provides.
U need to actually READ the LAWS.
These laws have been in existence for DECADES.
U refusing to read them is no one else's fault but ur own.
And u clearly don't even know what a service dog even is.
If u think u need to see some bs piece of blank paper to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with.
U thinking u need to see someone else's PRIVATE INFORMATION doesn't educate u on the laws any.
U would still be lacking an education.
If u want to be educated then u need to actually READ the LAWS, karen.
So why did they approve the dog in the first place and then decide the dog wasn’t wanted ⁉️ if I had a service dog and was denied entrance to a establishment you better believe I would report that establishment put the shoe on the other foot and see how they ( the establishment ) would feel if they were denied entrance because of a service dog emotional or otherwise ‼️‼️
They didn't "approve* it up front. It was disclose after they were already there. "Service Dogs" don't have to be "approved".
They did't-she didn't read the rules. No dogs.
@@karenbutler8515 wrong, Karen.
The Airbnb owner is the one that failed to read the laws.
The guest did not have a pet, so the pet policy did not apply.
The guest has a service dog which is under law considered medical equipment, and under law the Airbnb owner must allow service dogs on the property and can not charge any extra fees.
Emotional support animals and service animals are very different. They are NOT the same. Requirements are different... laws are different. I've seen people taking chickens to the grocery store... peacocks on airplanes... all because people are abusing the classification of "service animal". This all started in the early 2000's. You could purchase service animal credentials online even though the animal never had specific service animal training or testing for around $30. And then came this "emotional support animal" trend.
I've seen videos online of a woman who takes her chickens to the grocery store and dares anyone to prevent her from doing so. I said then that it was really setting a bad trend for people who actually required legit service animals. They laughed and attempted to intimidate me for standing up for actual service animals. I knew this would happen. It has opened the door for anyone to claim their pet is an emotional support animal and feel they should take them everywhere. As an animal lover, I'd love to take my animals everywhere... but that's not practical and it's not right to do so.
Emotional support animals are not service animals and CAN be denied.
About time restaurant's grocery stores bars anywhere near food products no dog's no cats no animals
Still can't deny Service Animals.
@@littlebitofhope1489 We need to get rid of those laws.
@@Bob-Fields No, we need to get rid of non disabled frauds.
0:37 I hope her husband didn’t lose too many modeling gigs over this issue.
As someone who _is an Epileptic_ , I actually think that the property owner *should have the right* to deny a service animal, if it is for a _medically-related reason_ . Just as people such as myself, and _this woman shown_ should be alotted what is needed ( *that is within reason* ) to navigate everyday life, _so to_ should this other person be given what *they* need due to any medical issues/etc. Maybe a _disclosure_ should be allowed for those who cannot have animals/etc. on their properties due to allergy/respiratory illness/etc. But it is not fair to treat these people like villains because they are looking out for their health and anyone else thinking they're staying at a pet-free property. *They are just as important as you are* .
WRONG
NO businesses that is open to the general public is allowed to ILLEGALLY discriminate against service dog teams.
Someone else's personal medical condition is NOT a valid reason for a business to discriminate against a service dog team.
The law is very clear on that.
Businesses owners r responsible to take their own health issues into consideration BEFORE choosing to open a business.
Because once the business is open all the laws that come with that MUST be OBEYED.
A business owners knew about their own personal medical conditions BEFORE they chose to open a business to the general public.
So obviously the business owner thinks that a business being open to the general public is more important than their own personal medical conditions.
So there is NO excuse to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY DISCRIMINATING against service dog teams.
And rooms at hotels and airbnbs should ALWAYS be thoroughly cleaned after each use.
So other customers shouldn't be worrying about their allergies then when renting that room.
If a business fails to clean the room correctly then that is on the business.
NOT on the service dog team.
It is NOT the service dog team's fault that the business failed to do their job.
And it is NOT the service dog team's fault that the BUSINESS OWNER FAILED to take their own personal medical conditions into consideration BEFORE opening a business to the general public.
@@carriehollyland3596 You are right. But it is still bullshit.
How about follow the law or have your business closed down permanently
@@Bob-Fields nope it's not but please keep crying Karen 😂
major volume issues with this video lol
Another thing is, people need to realize that emotional support animals ARE NOT service animals and are not covered by the ADA. I work in a hotel/casino and we get this constantly. A doctor's note doesn't make an ESA a service animal. If you bring your Shihtzu to the desk in a doggie stroller any try to tell us it's a service dog, we know it really isn't.
Very tiny dogs CAN be a service dog and they CAN be in a stroller if that is hiw you must use them.
Actually, smaller dogs make the best hearing dogs. So don't assume it is not a Service Dog. Just ask the two questions, and watch to see how they behave. THAT is how you tell.
@@littlebitofhope1489 Business owners need more than just the word of the person with the animal. If you want greater acceptance then the animal needs to have a certification of some sort that puts the matter to rest. Until then, you can expect to keep having problems with being turned away or given dirty looks.
@@Bob-Fields I have a better idea. Since it is you non disabled FRAUDS causing this problem, lets make YOU carry an ID and make you wait to show it before entering EVERY business you ever visit. Leave Disabled people ALONE. They already have enough to handle.
Then there should be a criminal charge for those faking it and making it harder on everyone! The amount of " service" snakes, birds, fish, and all manner of bs i saw when working retail was staggering and of course it's those people who scream the loudest about discrimination and suing you . smdh
Snakes, birds, fish, etc... r not service animals.
Service animals r trained dogs and miniature horses ONLY for those with disabilities who they r trained to help.
If a business is knowingly allowing other untrained animals in (because the business failed to educate themselves on the laws) then that is the business's own fault.
@@carriehollyland3596 They used to be before 2010. So this person is telling the truth. Don't tell people they are wrong unless you know what you are talking about.
0:49 that is not what "motto" means
AND THE LAW SAYS "The ADA does not require covered entities to modify policies, practices, or procedures if it would “fundamentally alter” the nature of the goods, services, programs, or activities provided to the public" if the presence of the dog makes the owner/host to ill to host..THAT IS A FUNDAMENTAL ALTERATION AND THE DOG CAN BE EXCLUDED.
big difference between a dog that will be in a store for 5 minutes to an hour and a dog that will be in a home for a day or more...and leave dander on furnishings
The LAW says fur, dander, fear, or allergies r NOT a valid reason to discriminate against service dog teams.
Try actually READING the FULL LAW, Karen.
Don't like those laws, then don't run a business that forces u to obey the laws.
Simple.
Also, humans leave dander too, yet u r not 👶Karen😭 over that.
🤡
@@carriehollyland3596 THE LAW ALSO SAYS THE SD CANNOT FUNDAMENTALLY ALTER THE BUSINESS...MAKING THE ON SITE OWNER TOO SICK TO PROVIDE SERVICE FUNDAMENTALLY ALTERSs...AND HAS BEEN EXPLAINED...ITS SIMPLY A MATTER OF THE LAW NOT ANTICIPATING A SITUATION LIKE A PERSON RENTING THEIR HOME FOR VACATIONS....JUST LIKE THE US CONSTITUTION DIDN'T CONSIDER THERE WOULD BE AUTOMATIC WEAPONS USED FOR MASS SHOOTINGS...and now that needs to be regulated...
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE a service dog doing nothing wrong in a place open to the general public that is no different than any other location similar to it (like a hotel room) does NOT fundamentally alter anything there.
And AGAIN the LAW already said that allergies is NOT valid for that argument, Karen.
Try actually READING the ENTIRE LAW. 🤡
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE and weapons has NOTHING to do with the ada laws for service animals having public access rights. 🤣🤡
The fact that u even tried bringing that up proves that u severely lack an education and r just grasping at anything irrelevant because u think it will help when u fail to realize that it doesn't do anything but make u look even more wrong and foolish in the end.
The ADA does not say that and if any business tries to do that they will be closed down.
I am fine with any animal and their person, even the fakes, just walk away...its humans that need training not dogs.
Trained dogs and miniature horses ONLY.
A dogs/miniature horse must be trained in order to be a service animal and be allowed in public access locations (bot pet friendly and non pet friendly).
Yea people (including businesses) need educated too.
But a dog must be trained in order to be a service animal to help a person with a disability.
Fools with untrained pets cause problems for businesses, service animal teams, and the rest of the general public.
These untrained pets r especially dangerous to service animal teams due to these untrained pets causing a distraction to a service animal which then puts their handler's life at risk, and or even attacking the service animal or handler which also puts their lives at risk.
@@carriehollyland3596 If I were business owner I'd shut down my shop before allowing a horse of any kind in my shop.
@@Bob-Fields then u r out of money and put of a job.
Also I can face fines and charges from the government, as well as a lawsuit from the service animal team as well Karen.
Don't run a business if u aren't going to follow the laws, Karen.
@@carriehollyland3596Wow, you’re a troll on every comment. Get psychiatric help fast.
i think saying that a service dog is just like a wheelchair is incredibly dishonest. are they legally protected in the same way? yes. but you don’t have to worry about a wheelchair shedding hair or attacking you.
obviously service dogs don’t attack people, but the uncertainty whether the animal is even a service animal is there. an uncertainty that doesn’t exist with wheelchairs.
That's because u severely lack an education.
Service dogs r considered medical equipment.
So is a wheelchair chair.
By law u can not illegally discriminate against someone and beny them access all because they have a wheelchair in a public access location.
Just like u can't illegally discriminate against someone all because they have a service dog in a public access location.
And service dogs don't attack anyone, they legally r not allowed to.
People however can attack other people.
It unfortunately happen quite often.
And service dogs r also kept well groomed.
Can't say the same for most people.
Also people with pets at home r going to have pet hair on them.
Heck humans themselves have hair on them.
Yet I don't see u 👶 Karen 😭 over any of that.
The letter/email said She "violated the House Rules". So, whats the problem? They dont allow animals, sad but true. The RENTER is responsible for reading the fine print. Peroid. No sympathy from me. I rent from AirBnb all the time when I travel, & there are rules for every different property. Its on the RENTER, not the OWNER to get it right.
The business owner is responsible for reading and obeying the LAWS.
And PER those LAWS, pet policies do NOT apply to service dogs, and businesses open to the general public (which by law includes hotels and airbnbs) MUST ALLOW service dogs and can NOT charge them extra fees.
The Airbnb owner BROKE the LAWS, and that is why the court charged and fined the Airbnb owner for breaking those laws.
An Air BNB is a place of public access, which falls under the ADA, and MUST by law be accessible to people with disabilities and whatever medical equipment they have. If you don't like it, get a new business.
that is why you carry the paperwork you have to show your service dog is real, the people who abuse this are idiots and need to get jail time for claiming a dog is a service dog when it is legally not.
From the ADA (dot gov) service dog regulations page: "In situations where it is not obvious that the dog is a service animal, staff may ask only two specific questions: (1) is the dog a service animal required because of a disability? and (2) what work or task has the dog been trained to perform? Staff are not allowed to request any documentation for the dog, require that the dog demonstrate its task, or inquire about the nature of the person’s disability."
WRONG.
There is NO such thing as paperwork from the federal government for service dog teams, NOR is any required, NOR is anyone allowed to ask for any.
If u think u need to see some BS piece of paper to tell u the difference between a highly trained service dog team and some fool with an untrained pet then u r NOT even LOOKING at the dog and owner right in front of u to begin with.
There is no magic paperwork to prove a service dog is legitimate. Under the ADA there are two questions individuals can ask someone with a dog. They can ask if the dog is a service animal required because of a disability, and they can ask what work or task the dog has been trained to perform.
@@clairwilliamson164 "There is no magic paperwork ," there should be.
It's alot different then a walker and or a wheelchair it's in private homes and the lady didn't mention she had a service dog before hand people should need actual documentation saying legit service dog I could go buy a vest that says service dog I can't stand when people have there dogs when I'm buying groceries
suck it up
We should not have to announce that we have a disability. We should be able to gain access to public accommodations just like able bodied persons do. Abled bodied persons can just walk in somewhere and not be questioned about anything. We deserve the same. The disabled community already has so many issues with accessibility, being questioned about our equipment, and if we actually need it. This would be similar to a business asking about someone papsmear or a prostate exam. It is inappropriate and degrading to ask about just to gain access to public accommodations, just like asking for a service dog handler to disclose anything about their health or to jump through more hoops.
@taylorwright958 if its a real disability there should be required to carry something from a state agency saying that the dog with description is a service animal and it doesn't need to say what the disability is ive had nieghbors where they have admitted it's not a service animal and they bought a vest so they could take there pet anywhere they want and it's disgusting when trying to buy fresh produce and you got someone with a dog in there and if it's a real service animal you're already announcing you have a disability
Ah shoot I better get a licence for my damn wheelchair too huh? No that is ridiculous.@@Tracy-m3n
I'm sorry, it's a private home? The story said it was an AirBNB. That is a rental property. Which means the renter is subject to the law, which exempts service dogs from pet policies. If it was a private home there would be no involvement from AirBNB. (You know AirBNB is just a rental platform, right? It's not some magic thing that allows you to rent out your home above the law.) If your little scofflaw neighbors are faking service dogs, that is a different matter. It's obviously wrong they do that. When it comes to service animals tho you're just going to have to suck it up and accept that your desire to pretend grocery stores are sterile environments (lol) isn't more important than a disabled person's right to live their life.
We need to get rid of these laws period. It's entirely too expensive and we shouldn't bear the cost. I'm the with AirBnB host on this.
Laws that u never read don't need to be gotten rid of just to make u anti-american Karens happy.
Those laws r in place to protect Americans.
If u r not ready to take on everything that involves running a business then u don't need to be running a business.
Notice how the Airbnb host is currently bankrupt for thinking's they're above the law.
cleaning a bit of fur up I the end of the world Ci sidering you should already do a thorough clean between visits
There are a list of dog breeds can be a service/support dog. But I do know, some people really are allergic to dogs.
Wrong.
First of all, service dogs and esas can be any dog breed.
There is no special "list".
Secondly esas r not service animals.
Those r two completely different things.
Esas don't have public access rights.
Service animals have public access rights.
Thirdly, PER the LAWS, allergies r NOT a valid reason for a business to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY discriminating against service dog teams.
There is NO list. ANY breed if dog can be a service animal.
Yes, and the list is this: EVERY SINGLE BREED OR MIX.
@@Ausgar-yc1yl I like my list better. lol
Landlords should be able to ban service dogs IMHO since there can be a flea issue and allergy issue. This is way different than a wheelchair and oxygen. They aren't renting the property on a lease. It's a short term lease like a hotel room. I am highly allergic to cats. If someone has a service cat and stayed there, then that could affect my health if I stayed at the same place.
A "service cat"???? No such thing. If on Airbnb the owner of the property should say no animals because of allergy reasons. A service animal is BY LAW a "medical device" per the ADA. SMDH!!!
If you were so allergic to dogs (there's no such thing as a service cat) that you cannot follow the law, then you cannot have an AirBNB or a rental property. You are not owed the right to be landlord or an AirBNB renter. Disabled people have the RIGHT to their equipment, including their SAs. SAs have to act in a way that is correct, however, if the dog was peeing all over the house (or had fleas -- which, you know, disabled people don't want a flea infested dog around them any more than anyone else, right? It's not a junkyard dog, it's with them 24/7) you would be able to ask it to leave. You are inventing problems that don't exist here to try to make disabled peoples' lives harder. Is that really your aim?
WRONG.
U people who refuse to obey the laws should be banned from this country then.
And service animals r medical equipment just like a wheelchair is medical equipment.
And yes, tenants rent their homes from landlords and they do have leases, that is how renting works. 🤣🤡
It's not like a hotel.
Lol, clearly u never owners a rental property nor have u ever rented from a rental property.
Also, cats r not service animals by federal laws.
They can be esas though, and esas do have housing rights (this doesn't include hotels though, hotels fall under public access rights which esas don't have).
Esas r not service animals.
Service animals have public access and housing rights.
And ur personal allergies don't matter here when it comes to someone else's personal home (which includes their rented home).
And if a tenant moves out of a home they rented from a landlord, then it is the landlords responsible to make sure the place is cleaned before the next renter.
Same goes for hotels.
So again, ur personal allergies r irrelevant.
@@rondameier8168 airbnbs MUST allow service animals.
It doesn't matter if they have allergies.
That is PER the LAWS.
If they have allergies and they r that worried about them then they shouldn't be running an Airbnb.
Air Bnb is a joke.
Medical devices do not cause allergies. A person can go into anaphylactic shock. I hope that dog knows CPR,
Wrong.
There r many different types of allergies, dog allergies r NOT the only ones.
And service dogs r medical devices PER the LAWS.
Allergies r irrelevant to that.
And PER the LAWS allergies is NOT a valid excuse to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY discriminating against service dog teams.
If the business owner is that worried about their allergies then they need to take their allergies into consideration BEFORE opening a business to the general public.
Because once they do open to the general public then they MUST OBEY ALL THE LAWS that come with that.
Which I cludes allowing service animals in.
If they fail to take their own allergies into consideration BEFORE choosing to run that type of a business then that is THEIR OWN FAULT.
They do NOT get to take it out on the service dog teams.
I suffer from allergies, the things I am allergic to r things that nearly half of the human population and businesses touch, use, consume, buy, and or sell on a near daily basis.
That doesn't mean that I can discriminate against those people or businesses though.
My allergies r my own problem.
I have to take my allergy treatment course.
I limit my personal (meaning my body only) contact to my allergen.
I keep up with my personal hygiene, like wash my hands, and wipe things down that I personally want to touch.
And if I am that worried still then I can leave the location if I want to.
That is how allergies work.
Service Dogs are legally medical devices. And no, you don't go into anaphylactic shock with dog allergies. You take a Benadryl or move away and stop whining.
Pet allergies cause sniffles not death
@@littlebitofhope1489 GTFO, I don't care what the law says, If I were allergic to dogs I would no tallow them near me.
I get not being able to deny people entry, but that doesnt excuse *any* necessary cleaning fee to remove hair and dander from the space and restore it to pet free.
Oxygen tank and wheelchairs dont shed.
U r supposed to clean the room thoroughly after every use anyways.
So no, u don't get to charge extra all because someone has a service dog (which is medical equipment).
Also, humans have hair and dander, and I don't see u Karen crying over that.
Many have pets at home and so likely have pet hair on them when they come in anyways.
Again, don't see u Karen crying over that.
Wheelchairs can leave marks, and require extra wheelchair accessibilities, like ramps and larger bathrooms and bedroom space and accessible counters.
Oxygen tanks u need to ensure there r no open flames or things that can regularly create sparks.
The list goes on and on for all medic devices.
However people with disabilities rely on these medical devices to be able to live their lives.
That is why u can't charge extra all because someone uses a medical device.
lol people want dogs
yes, sure, there are a tasks dogs are maybe best in class at, like smell, guiding
cardiac alert - would not some kind of heart monitoring technology be better suited? epilepsy seizure detection, could there not be something more effective out there that is able to give medics more information on whats going on than a dog pressing a button and barking?
feel there has to be something more effective, cheaper to maintain, but maybe the allure of a dog you can take anywhere is a motivation - what do I know though
Machines can not do everything a dog can do.
Nor r those machines even available to everyone.
A service dogs do a lot more than just press a button or bark.
What would be much more effective is if u educated yourself.
@@carriehollyland3596Some people don't like dogs get over it.
@@Bob-Fields the law doesn't care about what you don't like follow it or you won't have a business anymore
@@Bob-Fieldsnot liking dogs isn't a disability so tough shit to them
Could there be a fee for service animals? It seems unfair for a host to have accept an animal, and worse, without forewarning and then deal with the animal's hair left behind.
Be fair now - could one argue that the host indicated that they had a problem with animals by stating they were not pet friendly? Why force a reservation with them?
NO.
ByAW there is to be NO extra fee charged all because someone has a service dog.
Service dogs r medical equipment.
That would be the equivalent to trying to charge someone extra all because they have a wheelchair, oxygen tank, EpiPen or crutches, etc...
And by law they do not have to forewarn them.
Upon arrival the business can ask two questions that a handler at that time must then answer.... Is it a task trained service dog needed for a disability and what task is it trained to perform for the disability.
NO other questions allowed.
If a business never asks those questions, then legally a handler is not required to provide any information regarding their service dog.
They don't have to say a word then.
And service dogs r not pets.
Pet policies in public access locations (which includes Airbnbs) do NOT apply to service dogs, PER the LAWS.
@@carriehollyland3596
Though medical equipments, service dogs are still animals.
At the very least, a host should be able to charge a cleaning fee for hair left behind. No different if a landlord were to have a tenant pay for modifications and wheelchair-related repairs per The Federal Fair Housing Act.
I do agree that, by law, the woman had the right to just show up with a service dog and force the host to accept the service dog, though, in my opinion, I find such action discourteous and would not want someone to do the same to me and, unless there was a "no-other-option" reason for a reservation with THAT host, the woman comes off as a troublemaker.
@@adesuwao.7307 again, PER the LAWS, business can NOT charge extra fees for cleaning all because they have a service dog.
And landlords can NOT make someone with a wheelchair pay extra all because they have a wheelchair.
Businesses open to the general public r required to be ada compliant.
That is part of owning a business.
If u don't want to do that then u don't get to own a business.
Simple.
@@adesuwao.7307 just because u severely lack an education and maturity and u go around demanding Americans give up their American rights does NOT make people with disabilities the ones who r trouble makers.
@@carriehollyland3596 The law should be changed or repealed.
and she didn't notify the host before she got caught with it? and if this is a place where the owner is present, MORALLY they should be allowed to refuse a service animal
WRONG, Karen.
First of all she doesn't have to notify them ahead of time.
Secondly Karen, businesses r NOT allowed to BREAK the LAWS by ILLEGALLY DISCRIMINATING against service dog teams.
And there is NOTHING moral about businesses breaking those laws.
@@carriehollyland3596 ACE< I AM NOT TALKING ABOUT THE LAW, I AM TALKING ABOUT MORALS AND NOT BEING AN ENTITLED BRAT. ONLY A NARCISSIST WOULD DEMAND THAT A HOST WHO LIVES IN THE HOME BEING RENTED BE FORCED TO ALLOW DOGS. THAT IS JUST RUDE AND INCONSIDERATE OF THE HOSTS MEDICAL ISSUES. AND NOTIFYING COULD BE AS SIMPLE AS VERIFYING IT IS A SD UPON ARRIVAL..JUST LIKE THEY WOULD HAVE TO DO AT A REGULAR HOTEL. EVEN UNDER ADA, BUSINESSES ARE ALLOWED TO ASK IF ITS A SD FOR A DISABILITY AND WHAT TYPE OF TASK DOES IT DO (ie medical alert, mobility aid, etc). There are plenty of airbnb's where the host does not live in the home (and therefore will have to deal with lingering allergens after). EMPATHY dictates that the person with the SD does consider the need of others. In HOUSING under FHA, a service animal can be denied if a nearby tenant in another apartment has an allergy.....the same consideration should be shown in an airbnb with the owner present.
@@carriehollyland3596 but clearly you don't know what MORALS are....its like the transgender people having no consideration for people's religious rights to not want to share a locker room with someone born the opposite gender...its IMMORAL to dismiss and invalidate other peoples legitimate concerns and rights.
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE u don't know what the word moral even means.
The LAW is in existence BECAUSE of MORALS.
@@110311DONTWANTCHANNE u want to see a narcissistic entitled brat, then go look in the mirror.
The law does not apply to one's private property. I am not a business just because I use a third party business to rent out my private property. AirBnb rentals are not public spaces. If AirBnb was a company that owned and rented out the properties, then yes the law would apply. I do not see how we're supposed to be okay with people being so entitled that they can violate another person's rights. Sorry, but you have to be upfront about bringing an animal into someone else's home regardless of the purpose of the animal.
Edit: Honestly sounds like the problem is that the law is vague in these situations because they did not predict things like ride share or short term rentals.
If you rent your home out as a business to get money, you have to let them in.
@@Crazykirkman but I am not a business just because I rent my home, AirBnb is the business. Does one need to register their home as a business to rent out their home on AirBnb?
WRONG
If u r running a business (doesn't matter if it is third party or not it is still a business) on ur property that is open to the general public (like and Airbnb) then u MUST OBEY ALL THE LAWS that come with that.
U do NOT get a choice in the matter.
That is how the LAW works.
If u don't like that then u don't get to run a business on ur property then.
Simple.
If you were just inviting them as a guest you are correct, but once you are charging a fee it's business and you have to abide by the ADA laws.
@@michellehawkins1027 can you show me in the law where it states charging money for something makes you a business? Cause I'm pretty sure that's not the definition of a business.
As someone who doesn't look like I'm disabled, I would never go anywhere esp. By myself, without my sd. She gives me the confidence to go out in public. However, I seldom do go out still, bc of my disability and not wanting to explain things to people. It just isn't worth it anymore.