Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a grocery store, but I frequently see dogs inside HomeGoods at Bailey's Crossroads. In fact one pooped on the floor in the next aisle while I was Christmas shopping.
The poop is terrible. But dogs are actually legit allowed in HomeGoods stores. They’re also allowed in Old Navy, Nordstrom, many bookstores, Gorjana, Lush, Anthropologie, LL Bean and a number of other stores. They are not allowed in grocery stores. I did see a dog at Harris Teeter the other day. I don’t personally care at all as long as they are leashed. I sometimes have my dog with me and find myself needing to run an errand. I always call ahead and verify the policies and follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a grocery store, but I frequently see dogs inside HomeGoods at Bailey's Crossroads. In fact one pooped on the floor in the next aisle while I was Christmas shopping.
The poop is terrible. But dogs are actually legit allowed in HomeGoods stores. They’re also allowed in Old Navy, Nordstrom, many bookstores, Gorjana, Lush, Anthropologie, LL Bean and a number of other stores. They are not allowed in grocery stores. I did see a dog at Harris Teeter the other day. I don’t personally care at all as long as they are leashed. I sometimes have my dog with me and find myself needing to run an errand. I always call ahead and verify the policies and follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Not a grocery store, but I frequently see dogs inside HomeGoods at Bailey's Crossroads. In fact one pooped on the floor in the next aisle while I was Christmas shopping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm dog obsessed and love my dogs more than anything but my DH. But I would never take them into a grocery store -- that is a damn health hazard. (Service dogs should, of course, be welcome, and it makes sense as they are needed by their people, and highly trained animals that you can count on to not get into the food, go to the bathroom in the store, etc.)
I also would never take my dog in a grocery store and don't want anyone to, but genuinely, how is a leashed dog on the ground more of a health hazard than all the gross people who don't wash their hands or sneeze in the open etc?
Anonymous wrote:Do they have a sign that says all dogs are allowed in, or you have just taken your dogs inside and no minimum-wage workers have kicked you out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps we can start a list of food service places that allow (non service animal) dogs inside, so the dog obsessed know where to take their dogs, and those of us that find it disgusting can stay away.
Anyone care to share and shout out some local businesses?
I'll contribute:
Fresh Baguette in Old Town
Trader Joe's in Old Town
Harris Teeter in Old Town
Trader Joe's in Springfield
Chipotle in Potomac Yards
How exactly is this legal?
OP here. Because they don't enforce it. It's disgusting.
Seriously people, if there are food establishments where you've seen people bring their dogs inside and nothing is done, please add them.
And it's incredibly obvious which animals are real service animals trained to perform medical tasks, and someone's pet dog.
How can you tell?
The service dog handler I know, who has a small breed alert dog, has been told repeatedly that small dogs can't be service dogs, or dogs that sometimes are carried can't be service dogs, or dogs that you train yourself can't be service dogs. His dog is all three of these things, and very much a service dog.
What medically necessary task is his dog trained to perform?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm dog obsessed and love my dogs more than anything but my DH. But I would never take them into a grocery store -- that is a damn health hazard. (Service dogs should, of course, be welcome, and it makes sense as they are needed by their people, and highly trained animals that you can count on to not get into the food, go to the bathroom in the store, etc.)
I also would never take my dog in a grocery store and don't want anyone to, but genuinely, how is a leashed dog on the ground more of a health hazard than all the gross people who don't wash their hands or sneeze in the open etc?