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I'm at this point too. Was in a small independent store last week and a lady comes in with two dogs. There is barely room for people, let alone dogs. Then, one of them is trying to get into bags I'm carrying. I was about to say something, but I just jerked the bags away.
I hate not being able to walk alone on a beach at sunrise or early in the morning without some dog running up. Really sucks. But, it's no surprise. We treat dogs better than children in this country. |
DP but it's not hypocritical. Just because I have a dog doesn't mean I'm excited when other people's dogs run up to me off leash, jump or lunge at me, lick me, block the sidewalk, block my access to my house, etc. I don't think the dog is disgusting but I am disgusted by the poor behavior of other dog owners who don't bother to train, control, or leash their dogs, or who take them all kinds of places I would never bring my dog. |
| All the outrage about children in public places is so misdirected. People who treat their dogs like children are the real problem. |
Have you seen how people handle dogs and where they bring their four legged? Obviously you have not. If you did know, you would not ask that question. |
Was it between the hours of 3 and 5am? You can call Animal Control because apparently non-emergency police "will not send out" during noise ordinance hours when workers are talking out on the road" in residential areas so why would they try to do something about a barking dog. |
| Pepper spray. |
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Posted this on another thread in this same forum.
Maybe some of us are just old but never have I seen furry friends allowed inside medical or dental practices clinics. Someone brought their furry friend to a dental office. Aren't clinics supposed to be free of this? Another practice had water bowls inside by the front door. Definitely not going back to that practice. |
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Here is another thread about shopping at the TJ Maxx in NoVa and how one poster who shops there uses an app to deter dogs out of the store. Could it work at other venues too? Fingers crossed.
Check it out: https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/45/1261908.page |
Vote with your dollars, sure. That said, well-trained service animals are legally allowed anywhere their owners are. A dental clinic is an inherently stressful environment for many people, and even more so for those with intellectual and/or emotional difficulties. The dog may also have been a medical alert dog, or provide any number of service tasks for its person. Not all disabilities are visible. You could ask the practice what their policy is, try to determine if it's truly a "pet friendly practice" or if they just know that Steve who's scheduled today has a seizure alert dog so they set out a bowl. You know, if you wanted to be understanding. Or you can just find a new practice. That's always your right. But what you probably shouldn't do, as a decent person, is pass judgment on a stranger whose circumstances are completely unknown to you. We're not required to carry signs saying "Yes, I really am disabled. And yes, this really is a medically-necessary 'actual' service dog" to appease judgmental jerks. |
Why this shift in allowing dogs in medical settings? Sis you see this 5 or 10 years ago. 40 years ago the only service dog we saw were for those that were blind. |
My only answer would be that more people have service dogs now. Regardless, it's not "allowing". They're allowed already; it's law. You can't keep them out. Legitimate service animals are allowed in all settings their owners are allowed to inhabit, including medical/dental offices, grocery stores, etc. |
| Dogs do not belong where food is. Unless it’s a service dog, your animal does not belong at any restaurant, cafe, grocery store, ice cream shop. It’s disgusting and other people deserve to be in this place without dogs. |
There's grocery pick up yay |
It isn't always free, and a delivery/personal shopper fee (and tip!) is basically a tax on the disabled. Also, some people like to pick their own purchases rather than rely on a stranger's judgment. |
You, of course, are welcome to pay for the privilege of not having to potentially encounter someone's service animal while grocery shopping. So, in that case, good point. |