one person's training
journal
Autism Service Dog FAQ
- What is a "service dog?"
- An SD is trained in tasks that mitigate a person's disability.
In common usage, it also implies mastery of appropriate behavior in
public places.
- Does a service dog need to be certified in the
US?
- No. The ADA does not require certification. It simply requires
that the dog meet the legal definition of a trained service
animal.
- What is a "service dog in training?"
- An SDIT is a dog with basic obedience that is actively being
trained in public access behavior and disability mitigation
tasks.
- Is an SDIT protected under the ADA?
- No. The federal law does not define service animals in
training, or provide any rights to trainers or non-disabled
handlers of a service animal. However, many states and
municipalities have laws which confer legal status to trainers and
handlers of SDITs, similar to what the ADA provides for disabled
partners of trained service animals.
- Is a "psychiatric service dog" considered a service
animal under the ADA?
- There is no such thing as a PSD defined in federal law. From an
ADA standpoint, either a dog is a service animal, or it is not.
Some states and organizations (e.g. bus lines) support a
classification of "emotional support animals," but that's a totally
separate issue.
- What is an "emotional support animal?"
- An ESA provides therapeutic benefit through its presence and
natural behaviors. Generally speaking, an ESA has not been trained
to perform mitigating tasks, and its handler is not entitled to
public access under the ADA regardless of the quality of the dog's
public access behavior. It is, however, worth noting that some
states and municipalities have local laws which grant certain
rights to handlers of emotional support animals. In addition, many
public and private organizations such as bus lines, air carriers,
hospitals, and schools have policies that provide access for
emotional support animals, although these are typically more
restrictive in scope, and are often at the discretion of the
specific organization.
- What is an "alert?"
- An alert in an SD sense is a trained behavior that cues the
*handler* to take a prescribed action. Sometimes a dog's
instinctive responses can be shaped into an alert that occurs
before or during an event, but in most cases training a useful
follow-on task is inherently more useful. For example, having the
SD automatically retrieve a set of dropped keys is more useful than
alerting the handler that keys have been dropped, thereby cueing
the handler to pick them up again.
- What is an "access challenge?"
- An access challenge is a situation where your right to enter a
facility with your service animal is questioned or denied. Some
types of access challenges are allowed by law, but most
confrontational challenges are both illegal and discriminatory. It
is important to know your rights under the law, so that you can
tell which is which, and act accordingly.