Nevada's Rehabilitation Division
Laws are tricky things. Government
agencies are even trickier. I live in a state that has inconsistent
laws regarding service animals, and I've been trying to navigate
the system to find out what the real story is.
The
Nevada Revised
Statutes contain conflicting information about service animals.
In particular, the 72nd legislative session revised NRS 426.097 to
remove approval by the Rehabilitation Division of the Department of
Employment, Training and Rehabilitation as part of the definition
of "service animal." The revised law brings the definitional
criteria of service animal into closer alignment with the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
However, NRS 651.075(2) states that places "of public accommodation
may require certain proof...[from a school] that is approved by the
Rehabilitation Division of the Department of Employment, Training
and Rehabilitation to train a service animal," which clearly goes
against the legislative intent of the changes to NRS 426.097.
Several calls to the Department have resulted in a vague
understanding that the Department doesn't actually oversee this
function, does not maintain a list of "approved schools," and is in
fact quite surprised by the question. They are currently looking
into the matter, and have promised me a response by the end of the
day.
Because police enforcement of access rights for SD/SDIT teams
relies on local laws (as opposed to federal laws such as the ADA),
clarifying this issue is important. Let's hope the system provides
the answers that I need, and that other advocates make similar
progress elsewhere.