Well this is all very interesting.
Now a few new questions:
This one is geared towards Fran, but obviously anyone can answer.
What do you do if the dog you are hoping becomes an SD, fails? I assume you don't want to get 'rid' of the dog, but I would imagine with all the money and time it takes to train this dog, failing would be pretty hard. Is it common for dogs to 'fail'?
As has been stated, some people keep the washout, some people place the dog in a different home where the dog is better suited. Even going with a dog who seems perfect, they can still wash out. Enzo is technically an ESA, but we own our home, and I feel like getting her that label to fly with her would be a big mistake because she can flip out in public and doesn't do well if I'm not doing well. When I'm good, she's brilliant, but that's the opposite of the point lol. She performs specific tasks brilliantly at home, but in public will fall apart. Especially if I'm coming undone. Knox was a SD prospect, gotten specifically for SD work. He also washed out.
Also, if you 'get' an SD, but do not NEED an SD, is it still legal to take the dog places? Or if the dog is trained for a certain disability, such as responding to a person who is in a wheelchair, and is now owned by someone who has a disability such as.... Austism. What should happen to the dog in that situation? Is it re-trained or should the new owner focus on getting an SD that is better suited to his/her needs?
Sometimes the dog can be retrained, especially a young dog. I think as an owner trainer, if I was offered a washout from a program, depending on the reason the dog washed, (and the program, lol) I'd jump at the chance to take over training and have the dog work with me. There really are very very few programs that will work with autism though, and none I've found will train the tasks I need. I've done most of the work myself, and while there are a few things I can't do/don't have the skill to do, I've hired a trainer who is better than I am to complete the work.
Ideally SDs behaved excellently and do not bark/bite/misbehave. However, if someone/thing is bit by an SD, is it treated like a normal dog bite?
Yes it would be. Likely the dog would be washed out after that though, SDs should be bombproof dogs, and ideally will never bite. There is some sort of grey area "in defense of the handler" but this a huge grey area and evaluating the dog after the bite for work I think would be necessary.
What if you are in an area with your SD and someone is uncomfortable with dogs? Like a phobia or allergic or something serious? Or the awful realization that....some people don't like dogs! :yikes: (Wish that worked with some children. Yikes.)
This has been answered, but generally I ignore it. Enzo had been invited/given permission at a few places to join me, when she was in training, and it happens. People "drive by pet" bark at the dog, ect. It's annoying, and if speaking to a manager about the conflict doesn't help, I'll leave, and not come back. That's never happened though.
It just seems like it would be so difficult to create many regulations. Is there more being done to verify actual SDs? Some of the reasons I've heard for people having an SD is a bit ridiculous. Everyone has issues and dogs, especially YOUR dog is bound to make you feel better. I KNOW most SDs are not just "Oh you make me happy" dogs. But it is a bit of 'some bad apples ruin the whole bunch'.