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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
The Chow Hall
Veteran must surrender emotional support dog
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<blockquote data-quote="tistan" data-source="post: 15835399" data-attributes="member: 26495"><p>“Every pet that needs to go suddenly morphs into an ESA [emotional support animal],” she said. “It’s the same old routine.”</p><p></p><p>In all fairness, I have to agree with this statement. With quacks diagnosing everyone as defective in some way, it isn't hard to get your pet labeled as an emotional support animal. It is just another way around the rules. If your community doesn't allow dogs over 35# then don't get a dog that is going to be over 35#, or move into community where it is allowed. I can't stand a dog that barks continuously. I have a 1 and a 3 year old dog, if my dog bark for more than a minute or two I am out the door to find out why. At this point my dogs rarely require me getting up. If there is extended barking it means I need to get up and see why. If I lived in a condo and my neighbors dog barked a lot, I would lose my shit. Most cities have ordinances against barking dogs. Also, the weight limit is there to prevent large dogs from disturbing the people living in an apartment or condo below from hearing the dogs running and banging around.</p><p></p><p>Another thing the story doesn't say is how long the owner has lived in the condo. It does say that his children were raising the dog until they were cited by their association. As of a year ago, this wasn't an emotional support dog while the children were caring for it, but in 2015 it was? What did this guy do while his children were caring for the dog? Did he not need the support anymore?</p><p></p><p>"Orlando Veteran Administration psychologist Matthew Waesche wrote in an October 2015 letter that Brady was under his care and that the dog appears to help keep his owner’s mental health issues in remission."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tistan, post: 15835399, member: 26495"] “Every pet that needs to go suddenly morphs into an ESA [emotional support animal],” she said. “It’s the same old routine.” In all fairness, I have to agree with this statement. With quacks diagnosing everyone as defective in some way, it isn't hard to get your pet labeled as an emotional support animal. It is just another way around the rules. If your community doesn't allow dogs over 35# then don't get a dog that is going to be over 35#, or move into community where it is allowed. I can't stand a dog that barks continuously. I have a 1 and a 3 year old dog, if my dog bark for more than a minute or two I am out the door to find out why. At this point my dogs rarely require me getting up. If there is extended barking it means I need to get up and see why. If I lived in a condo and my neighbors dog barked a lot, I would lose my shit. Most cities have ordinances against barking dogs. Also, the weight limit is there to prevent large dogs from disturbing the people living in an apartment or condo below from hearing the dogs running and banging around. Another thing the story doesn't say is how long the owner has lived in the condo. It does say that his children were raising the dog until they were cited by their association. As of a year ago, this wasn't an emotional support dog while the children were caring for it, but in 2015 it was? What did this guy do while his children were caring for the dog? Did he not need the support anymore? "Orlando Veteran Administration psychologist Matthew Waesche wrote in an October 2015 letter that Brady was under his care and that the dog appears to help keep his owner’s mental health issues in remission." [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
The Chow Hall
Veteran must surrender emotional support dog
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