The Service Dog Banned From School

A record of the problems involved in convincing our local public school to permit our son to attend,accompanied by his service dog. Also included are links to sites on this subject,and information we found along the way,that might be helpful to parents encountering this situation.
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Location: 'middle of nowhere'!, Kansas, United States

Traditional Catholic, married for 18 years. Interested in almost everything I come across,but I work with dogs most. i train my own service dogs,and own a Yahoo group for those disabled who also do the training of their own service dogs: DePorres Service Dogs http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DePorresServiceDogs I also firmly support pro life interests, especially the anti-euthanasia movement.

Friday, January 05, 2007

Deaf student's dog turned away from school - Newsday.com


Cops called when deaf student brings dog to school
BY CARL MACGOWANNewsday Staff WriterJanuary 3, 2007, 11:16 PM ESTA deaf Westbury boy's attempt to bring his assistance dog to school Wednesday resulted in an exchange of harsh words when police were called, the boy's mother said.No arrests were made, but Nancy Cave said her son, John, was shaken by the incident. Still, she is planning to have her son and the dog attend school together today -- with or without permission from East Meadow School District officials."This is emotionally traumatic for him. He doesn't want to go to school," Cave said of her 14-year-old son, who picked up the dog last week from a Massachusetts training center. "All I wanted to do was give my son one more step toward independence."The Caves are locked in a long-running battle with East Meadow officials over whether John can bring the dog, Simba, to W. Tresper Clarke High School, where John attends ninth grade. School officials previously had told the family that John doesn't need the dog to attend classes. The Caves believe John and Simba must bond around the clock so that the dog can work most effectively as an assistance dog, trained to alert a deaf child to potential danger such as fire or smoke alarms and cars.The Caves should obtain permission from the district's committee on special education before bringing the dog to school, East Meadow Superintendent Robert Dillon said Wednesday."There is a process, and there are protocols and we just wish that they would be followed," he said.Nancy Cave and her son wanted to acclimate Simba to the school Wednesday morning before classes started. When they entered the building, Cave said, officials asked her to leave and called Nassau County police."We were sort of verbally accosted by the principal and the assistant principal," she said. She admitted using vulgar language while talking to Principal Timothy Voels."I felt harassed, I felt intimidated, I felt they were stalking me," she said. "Even though I said two bad things, I felt threatened."Dillon declined comment on the incident. A police spokesman confirmed the incident but added, "It's not a police matter."At her request, Nancy Cave said, police researched laws governing assistance dogs, and then she took John and Simba home. State law says public facilities cannot bar disabled people with service dogs, while federal law requires facilities to change policies banning service animals.Simba obeyed orders from John during the visit, Nancy Cave said."He behaved himself impeccably," she said, "which is more than can be said for the adults, including myself, I might add."The Caves received support from students and some teachers, Nancy Cave said. She said she did not tell officials that she planned to return today with Simba.
Copyright 2007 Newsday Inc.