Anonymous wrote:"The Food and Drug Administration's Food Guide lays down the law: with few exceptions, live animals of any kind are not permitted on the premises of a grocery store, a restaurant or other food establishment. The prohibition applies to dogs, cats, birds and other animals.
Animals are unsanitary, and the law protects the national food supply from contamination from dog drool, urine, feces and other material that dogs carry on their coats and paws and might leave behind on store shelves or counters."Anonymous wrote:"The Food and Drug Administration's Food Guide lays down the law: with few exceptions, live animals of any kind are not permitted on the premises of a grocery store, a restaurant or other food establishment. The prohibition applies to dogs, cats, birds and other animals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
If the store allows dogs, your DC should stay home.
+1
I disagree. A parent may need to bring a child to a store - maybe they don't have childcare and can't leave a child home alone safely. Pet owners can leave a pet at home. The default should be that the pet stays at home. I don't remember seeing random pets in stores and supermarkets when I was growing up. Somehow, pet owner expectations have changed and no one has thought through whether these new expectations are reasonable. Is the pet-friendly store liable if a elderly customer trips on a leash in a narrow store aisle? What if the dog bites someone? Or someone slips after stepping on a puddle of dog urine?
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
If the store allows dogs, your DC should stay home.
+1
I disagree. A parent may need to bring a child to a store - maybe they don't have childcare and can't leave a child home alone safely. Pet owners can leave a pet at home. The default should be that the pet stays at home. I don't remember seeing random pets in stores and supermarkets when I was growing up. Somehow, pet owner expectations have changed and no one has thought through whether these new expectations are reasonable. Is the pet-friendly store liable if an elderly customer trips on a leash in a narrow store aisle? What if the dog bites someone? Or someone slips after stepping on a puddle of dog urine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
If the store allows dogs, your DC should stay home.
+1
I disagree. A parent may need to bring a child to a store - maybe they don't have childcare and can't leave a child home alone safely. Pet owners can leave a pet at home. The default should be that the pet stays at home. I don't remember seeing random pets in stores and supermarkets when I was growing up. Somehow, pet owner expectations have changed and no one has thought through whether these new expectations are reasonable. Is the pet-friendly store liable if an elderly customer trips on a leash in a narrow store aisle? What if the dog bites someone? Or someone slips after stepping on a puddle of dog urine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
If the store allows dogs, your DC should stay home.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
If the store allows dogs, your DC should stay home.
Anonymous wrote:My dog only goes to PetSmart, where you should expect to see dogs. It’s a big deal for him because he doesn’t get to go other places.
Anonymous wrote:DC has allergies to dogs. Please leave dogs at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is extremely difficult to train a dog to sit at your side and remain there while in a store, rather than wander around sniffing.
But I don't disagree that animals should either be that well trained, or stay out of the store.
It isn't difficult, it just takes time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is extremely difficult to train a dog to sit at your side and remain there while in a store, rather than wander around sniffing.
But I don't disagree that animals should either be that well trained, or stay out of the store.
It isn't difficult, it just takes time.
Dog owner here. Yeah, no. It can be very difficult with certain dogs. Which is why MOST dog owners don't let their pets into stores... We're not going to compound the problem we know we have!