by Swan » Mon Mar 02, 2015 12:04 am
As a former Guide Dog user (Guide Dogs for the Blind, San Rafael) I'll say this about home-trained service dogs...
Try NOT to.
It is best to get a dog from a recognized school or trainer CERTIFIED to train service dogs. Sometimes it's necessary to train a dog at home, but the average person does NOT have the skills to recognize a good candidate for training. It's MORE than looks.
Also, as has been said above... persons selling the collars, vests and "identification" cards over the internet are too often FAKES.
Why does this matter? Because there are TOO MANY people who decide that little Fi-Fi... who barks and tears up the furniture when Mommy is gone... NEEDS to come EVERYWHERE with Mommy... and the best way to do tHAT is turn Fi-Fi onto a "service dog" with a vest and collar... when the poor un- or under-trained dog misbehaves... it makes it a LOT harder for truly disabled persons with legitimately home-trained animals OR those from schools or organizations... to get public access!
Here's the thing... people do NOT know that the laws permitting service animals entry are LIMITED. And they SHOULD be. If a Guide Dog or a Seeing-Eye dog (TM) (Morristown NJ) is noisy, smelly, disruptive or aggressive, they MAY be legitimately denied access. Some people think "My service dog can go EVERYWHERE!" NOT true. And EVERY door that is closed to service animals limits us. What can I say if, accompanied by my Guide Dog, I am told "You can't come in here. The last dog we had here peed all over the rug!"?
For those who do home-train, properly... BRAVO! But know that Guide Dogs for the Blind, which has a selective and exclusive breeding program, genetics studies and fifty years of research, produces only six out of every ten puppies as successful guides! Not EVERY dog can pass muster and THEY are professionals at determining which dogs will "make it".
Also... an improperly trained dog or one that is not temperamentally suited to the work CAN endanger the life of the handler. I knew a woman who was killed when her professionally trained service dog was distracted and she fell down an elevator shaft. The REASON that the seeing Eye, Guide Dogs for the Blind and other schools now have breeding and sperm-sharing programs is because they found out that shelter or donated dogs were simply too unreliable a source. Since the cost of a fully trained dog (in 1994) was around $30,000.00 USD the failure rate was unacceptable.
EDIT. Just checked the GDftB website and the cost is currently $42,000.00. YIKES! And the dogs are provided *without cost* to blind and legally blind persons!
Anyway, I'll put my soapbox away, now.
Swan
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." -- Arthur C. Clarke, "Profiles of The Future", 1961 (Clarke's third law)