Anonymous wrote:12:17 is wrong. An emotional support dog is a pet. This is not the same as a service animal that has undergone 1-2yrs of training and been placed with an individual who has been identified and screened as needing a service dog. This is why service dogs have access to places that other animals don't - restaurants, shops, etc.
Our sweet family dog cheers me up on a bad day and snuggles with the kids if they are sick, heck that makes her an emotional support animal.
Anonymous wrote:Emotional support dog is not a service animal you can deny them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- I guess I am more concern about the tenant itself. His finance is good and his gf is also moving in as well. But will he be emotional problem for me?? LOL
Not a landlord, but I manage a team at work and I will say what I would only say anonymously. People with emotional support animals (as opposed to a seeing eye dog or a seizure / blood sugar alert dog) are more likely to be entitled, high maintenance, and emotionally draining.
Should I share this with my son? His best friend was blown up in front of him. He carried the body parts back to their base. He has an emotional support dog and it’s made a huge difference in his PTSD. She is a German Shepherd. Somehow she just knows when he needs her. She climbs onto him and covers him with her body.
He is not entitled, high maintenance, or emotionally draining. He is hurting.
But would he ask for the pet fee to be waived?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- I guess I am more concern about the tenant itself. His finance is good and his gf is also moving in as well. But will he be emotional problem for me?? LOL
Not a landlord, but I manage a team at work and I will say what I would only say anonymously. People with emotional support animals (as opposed to a seeing eye dog or a seizure / blood sugar alert dog) are more likely to be entitled, high maintenance, and emotionally draining.
Should I share this with my son? His best friend was blown up in front of him. He carried the body parts back to their base. He has an emotional support dog and it’s made a huge difference in his PTSD. She is a German Shepherd. Somehow she just knows when he needs her. She climbs onto him and covers him with her body.
He is not entitled, high maintenance, or emotionally draining. He is hurting.
How does he feel about you exploiting his trauma to win arguments on the internet? Gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- I guess I am more concern about the tenant itself. His finance is good and his gf is also moving in as well. But will he be emotional problem for me?? LOL
Not a landlord, but I manage a team at work and I will say what I would only say anonymously. People with emotional support animals (as opposed to a seeing eye dog or a seizure / blood sugar alert dog) are more likely to be entitled, high maintenance, and emotionally draining.
Should I share this with my son? His best friend was blown up in front of him. He carried the body parts back to their base. He has an emotional support dog and it’s made a huge difference in his PTSD. She is a German Shepherd. Somehow she just knows when he needs her. She climbs onto him and covers him with her body.
He is not entitled, high maintenance, or emotionally draining. He is hurting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you can never be totally sure that you’re getting a low-maintenance tenant. I know people with emotional support animals and I don’t think any of them actually *need* them (we aren’t talking veterans), but it’s not like their landlords would ever know anything about their personality. I have been a pain in the ass for my landlords because I’m an attorney (and my husband is too). Outside of somebody being unemployed, being an attorney is probably the biggest red flag out there.
Notorious lawsuit in Boston where law students brought suit against landlord charging discrimination against them. The court ruled that lawyers are not a protected class.
Anonymous wrote:AKC says this. Make him produce the letter.
https://www.akc.org/expert-advice/news/everything-about-emotional-support-animals/
Housing Accommodations for Individuals Who Use Emotional Support Dogs
Individuals who use ESAs are provided certain accommodations under federal law in the areas of housing and air travel. The Fair Housing Act includes ESAs in its definition of assistance animals. Under the act, people cannot be discriminated against due to a disability when obtaining housing. Rules such as pet bans or restrictions are waived for people who have a prescription for an ESA, and they cannot be charged a pet deposit for having their ESA live with them.
Anonymous wrote:12:17 is wrong. An emotional support dog is a pet. This is not the same as a service animal that has undergone 1-2yrs of training and been placed with an individual who has been identified and screened as needing a service dog. This is why service dogs have access to places that other animals don't - restaurants, shops, etc.
Our sweet family dog cheers me up on a bad day and snuggles with the kids if they are sick, heck that makes her an emotional support animal.
Anonymous wrote:OP you can never be totally sure that you’re getting a low-maintenance tenant. I know people with emotional support animals and I don’t think any of them actually *need* them (we aren’t talking veterans), but it’s not like their landlords would ever know anything about their personality. I have been a pain in the ass for my landlords because I’m an attorney (and my husband is too). Outside of somebody being unemployed, being an attorney is probably the biggest red flag out there.