I hope this company gets nailed and has to shall out what
they end up being fined for.
Guide/assistance dogs are not pets: they are our
independence, an extention of us and wor for us all year around.
People don't have a clue what we go through on a daily
basis when it comes to our partners, continuing the training we've learned so
our partner stay on focus and the cost we must pay to keep them healthy
and taken care of.
Just my thoughts on this one.
Bibi and son Odie
Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2014 8:04 AM
Subject: [nagdu] Canada: MVSH denies blind senior to reside with
guide dog
Canada: MVSH denies blind senior to reside with guide dog
Tuesday, Feb 18, 2014
http://www.sundreroundup.ca/article/20140218/SUN0801/302189976/-1/sun0801/mvsh-denies-blind-senior-to-reside-with-guide-dogBY
PATRICIA RILEY
An 82-year-old blind resident of Sundre has been denied
a request for his guide dog to reside with him at the Foothills Lodge, after he
applied to rent a unit there in recent weeks.
Jack Mortimer doesn't go
anywhere without his guide dog, a black lab named Rufus, who he has owned for 10
years. The dog is a certified Seeing Eye dog
trained through the
International Guide Dog Federation.
"If I drop something on the floor I have
to rub my hand around on the floor to find it," said Mortimer, adding he can
only see a few feet in front of him.
Mortimer applied for a room at the
lodge, owned and operated by Mountain View Seniors' Housing (MVSH), because he
is in need of assistance at his age.
MVSH officials say there is currently no
policy in place to allow guide dogs to reside in any of their buildings but they
will be looking into it. But for now, the ruling stands.
"Currently we have
no policy about Seeing Eye dogs. We do have a policy about
pets.at this time we
don't have a policy on any other animals other than pets," said Sam Smalldon,
MVSH chief administrative officer.
"We're not ignoring it. We just don't have
a policy at the moment and before we say yes we need to make sure we know we
have a policy."
According to Cheryl Chichak, public affairs officer with
Alberta Human Services, as long as the guide dog is trained by a school that is
certified by the International Guide Dog Federation, the dog should be able to
reside anywhere.
She said a person who violates the Alberta Blind Persons'
Rights Act could be fined up to $3,000.
Section 5 (2) of the act reads as
follows:
"No person, directly or indirectly, alone or with another, by
himself or herself or by the interposition of another, shall (a) deny to any
person occupancy of any self-contained dwelling unit, or (b) discriminate
against any person with respect to any term or condition of occupancy of any
self-contained dwelling unit, for the reason that the person is a blind person
keeping or customarily accompanied by a guide dog."
Mortimer and his
neighbour Betty Thomas went to the lodge roughly three weeks ago to apply for a
unit there.
About a week later, Mortimer received a letter from Michele
Langmead, admissions counsellor at Foothills Lodge, stating that Mortimer was
accepted, but not Rufus.
"If you wish to make alternate living arrangements
for the care of your dog
then you would be able to move into the lodge when a
suite becomes available. Your dog would be able to visit you at the lodge for
short periods of time as long as you were able to manage his care during his
visits," the letter states.
Thomas, who is also 82, has been helping Mortimer
with meals and other necessities, but is also having a hard time at her age.
They both currently reside at Pioneer Place.
"Everything seemed to be fine
when we went over there. We told the girl, Michele -- she wrote the letter --
that he was a guide dog and that Jack would be bringing him in with him. And she
never said anything. She didn't say he wasn't allowed to be in there at all,"
said Thomas.
"It was really strange. I couldn't even have believed that she
wrote that letter. It just shocked both of us right out of our minds when we got
that letter because it was just really upsetting," she said.
"He has never
been anywhere without that dog for all those years."
She added that Mortimer
is becoming forgetful, and Rufus has arthritis and
requires
medicine.
"Now I take Jack his medicine because he forgets that he's taken
them," she said.
"Jack goes for walks with him every day and that dog knows
Sundre. Even when he is taking him for walks he will push Jack's legs so that he
will get off the ice and off the snow.
"He has started to want to sleep on
Jack's bed. He is such a wonderful dog.
He sleeps right on the bed, up on his
pillow. And if Jack has to get up in the night the dog is right up there. He
goes with him to the bathroom and everywhere with him."
She said she would
never reside at the Foothills Lodge after this incident.
"My dog, heaven
sakes, I mean he is part of my life," said Mortimer.
"It just gives you an
unwanted feeling. And I wouldn't go there now for one million dollars.
"I
just couldn't face it. I don't understand. Life goes on I guess. And
there
will always be people like that out there trying to hurt you and take advantage
of you it seems."
MVSH board chair Bruce Beattie said staff members at the
lodge would care
for Mortimer, and Rufus would be able to visit him
there.
"We can look after the individual. He doesn't need the dog 24 hours a
day because that's what our staff is there for," said Beattie.
"In the past
we've had issues with people who have had live-in pets and they have created
some problems with the lodges."
He said the issue is going to be brought to a
board meeting to establish a policy regarding guide dogs.
"We haven't dealt
with that because we simply haven't had a request prior to this," he
said.
"But we know there is evidence that there are certainly positive issues
for seniors, well for anybody for that matter, to have a pet
around."