Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Globe Creature Feature

"Emotional support animals have some uneasy; Support animals become common" by Nestor Ramos, Globe Staff  February 03, 2015

In Boston and beyond, all manner of beasts are accompanying people into places they don’t belong. Sanctioned by notes from doctors and sometimes even wearing official-looking vests, these creatures, known as emotional support animals, or comfort animals, can belong to any species that made it onto Noah’s Ark.

They are different from service animals.

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Confusion about the Americans With Disabilities Act means that comfort animals of all sorts are enjoying the same rights, and tolerance, that are often extended to service animals.

Most emotional support animals are dogs and cats that quietly soothe their owners’ anxieties — for example, making flying left stressful. But the messes that occasionally result from misplaced menageries make life harder for those who rely on animals for help, advocates say.

“Rabbits are frequent. Someone tried a snake,” said Steve Clark, director of government affairs of the Massachusetts Restaurant Association, who said restaurant owners routinely trade horror stories of comfort animals that create chaos in their dining rooms. “The issue itself is kind of a big problem for the industry.”

Although the Americans With Disabilities Act allows service dogs to accompany their owners nearly anywhere the public is welcome — into restaurants and shops, in taxis and movie theaters — emotional support animals have few such protections. Their protections are limited to access under the Fair Housing Act to live in rental housing where pets are otherwise banned, and allowed, according to the Air Carrier Access Act, to ride for free with passengers in the cabin of airplanes.

The only credential their owners require is a letter from a mental health professional that says the pet is part of its owner’s treatment plan. But an appointment and an insurance card are not required; letters are available for a small fee from websites offering online or phone consultations with therapists.

And, however legitimately, the animals are multiplying. A JetBlue spokeswoman said that more than 25,000 of its passengers took to the air with animals in the first 11 months of 2014, 11 percent more than all of 2013.

Most of those trips go smoothly, and the numbers that JetBlue cited include true service dogs. But comfort animals can cause a fair amount of discomfort for their fellow fliers.

Over Thanksgiving, a Connecticut woman boarded a flight with a rather large emotional support pig. Upon boarding, the agitated pig began screaming and defecating in the aisle before hog and human were asked to leave.

Horror stories such as that make it harder for people like Ann Szabla and her golden retriever, Sienna. The specially trained 3-year-old dog nudges Szabla, a 27-year-old video game developer with diabetes, when her blood sugar gets too low or too high.

“The reception we get from people in airlines and businesses is based on the experiences they’ve had before,” she said.

But while the pig who almost flew became a punchline and frequent fliers routinely gripe about emotional support animals, others point out that the role that animals can play in the treatment of mental illness is hardly hogwash.

“Animals provide comfort and stress relief for people,” said Mike Keiley, director of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’s Noble Adoption Center.

He said people occasionally tell staff at the shelter that they were encouraged by their doctors to adopt animals.

Seeing firsthand the positive effects of pets on people with emotional problems is what led Hal Eisenstein to start the website emotionalsupportanimalcenter.com.

Wow, what a surprise the Globe is featuring this.

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Eisenstein acknowledged, though, that one of his therapists had recently signed off on an emotional support alligator for a woman in Michigan.

“We originally denied her request but she wrote a rather intelligent letter making her case for consideration and assured us that her pet really provided her with therapeutic companionship,” Eisenstein said, though it was unclear how a reptile capable of chomping off a finger might be therapeutic.

Regardless, the woman got her doctor’s letter — with the condition that she would not force the 30-inch alligator on an unwilling landlord....

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That helps take a bite out of my backload.