| 'Phany,'
blind woman share bond, trust
By MELISSA McEVER/Valley Morning
Star
April 13, 2008 - 10:43PM
Two-year-old black Labrador retriever Phantom lays
under his owner’s chair at a Harlingen restaurant.
Nora Ramirez is legally blind and has had trouble
with some business owners allowing the guide dog into
their establishments.
Nora Ramirez says
she can't imagine life without her guide dog, Phantom.
The 2-year-old, black Labrador retriever, known affectionately
as "Phany," protectively walks a few steps
ahead of Ramirez wherever she goes. He helps her negotiate
steep curbs. He knows when it's safe for her to cross
the street. He knows where "home" is, and
escorts Ramirez there without missing a beat.
"It's not
the same as a pet - I'm trusting this dog with my life,"
said Ramirez, who has been legally blind since age 15.
"And I trust him so much."
Ramirez, a Harlingen
resident, relies on Phany to guide her when she runs
errands, goes out to eat or visits the grocery store.
Problem is, not all businesses seem to understand that
the dog is a service animal and not a pet, she said.
On a few occasions,
business owners have tried to turn away Ramirez and
Phany, although they've never been escorted off the
premises, Ramirez said.
"It's just
a matter of educating them about my rights," she
said. "Most people and businesses know about guide
dogs. But those that don't know, really don't know."
Under the federal
Americans with Disabilities Act, all privately owned
businesses, as well as public buildings, must grant
access to people with disabilities who have trained
service animals. A "service animal" is a guide
dog or any other type of animal that is particularly
trained to assist someone with a disability, says the
U.S. Department of Justice.
Seeing-eye dogs
are the most common type of service animal, but there
are many other types of animal guides, said Dennis Driggers,
an attorney for the South Texas Region of Advocacy,
Inc., an organization that offers legal services to
people with disabilities.
Each year, Driggers
sees a few cases of people with service animals who
are denied admission to businesses.
"What we find
is a lot of people know that seeing-eye dogs are allowed
in businesses, but they don't know that other service
animals are allowed as well," Driggers said. "There
are animals who assist a person who is deaf, or animals
who help detect seizures. Any animal that meets the
definition of ‘service animal' is permitted in
a public area."
Most city, county
and state employees seem to be aware of ADA regulations,
Driggers said. It's the smaller, "mom and pop"
businesses that might not know the law, he said.
"I think business
owners need to be made aware of what federal law requires,"
he said.
Food-service businesses
are often the most skittish about letting in animals,
because usually animals are illegal in restaurants and
grocery stores, Driggers said.
Ramirez said a
local grocery-store manager was reluctant to let her
in the first time she went there, although once she
told the manager about the law, she was allowed in.
A couple of restaurants also were worried about the
dog's presence, she said.
At H-E-B stores,
employees are told they aren't allowed to turn away
people with guide dogs, said Carlos Contreras, public-affairs
manager for H-E-B in the border region.
City and county
officials say they also comply with federal law and
would not turn away service animals.
"We know what
the policy is, and we certainly wouldn't deny anyone
access," said Gabriel Gonzalez, Harlingen assistant
city manager.
However, the issue
rarely comes up in the Valley, local officials say.
"I haven't
seen many assistance animals here ... so I think it's
possible some people might not be aware," said
Shannon Harvill, Harlingen senior animal-control officer.
Ramirez said she
carries a card with her that lists her rights under
the Americans With Disabilities Act, and tries to explain
that Phany is not a pet.
"Sometimes,
people have said that I don't look like I'm blind, and
that's why they think he's a pet," Ramirez said
with a laugh.
Maybe that's because Phany does his job so well, she
said.
"He makes
my life easier," Ramirez said.
Fuente: http://www.valleymorningstar.com
Nota Enviada por Viviana Nealon-Criadero
Summerhill .Muchas Gracias Viviana!!
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