Service Animals in the Workplace Teresa Goddard, M.S., JAN Senior Consultant
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Transcript of Service Animals in the Workplace Teresa Goddard, M.S., JAN Senior Consultant
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JAN is a service of the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Disability Employment Policy.
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Service Animals in the WorkplaceTeresa Goddard, M.S., JAN Senior Consultant
(800) 526-7234 (Voice)
(877) 781-9403 (TTY)
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Established in 1983 as a national, free service. Specialize in job accommodations and the
employment provisions of the ADA. Assist with the interactive process. Give targeted technical assistance. Provide comprehensive resources. Maintain confidentiality. Communicate via telephone, chat, text, TTY, relay,
email, and social networks. 36,000 contacts per year and 3,200,000 webpage
requests per year. Offer live and archived training. Work as your partner.
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Requirements Under Title I of the ADA
Type of Animal
• No specific definition of service animal under title I.
• Therapy or emotional support animals may be considered.
• Service animal to assist with personal needs may be considered.
Reason for Need
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Accommodation Issues
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Policy Modification
Modifying a workplace policy is a form of reasonable accommodation when necessitated by an individual's disability-related limitations, absent undue hardship.
Policy only has to be modified forthe employee with the disability. The employer may continue to apply the policy to all other employees.
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Example
A newly hired teacher with a seizure disorder used a service animal to alert her that a seizure was coming on. The school had a “no animal” policy. The school allowed the teacher to bring her service animal to work and to keep it with her in her classroom. She was also provided breaks to take the service animal outside and given the opportunity to educate coworkers about the use of service animals. The employer reported that the accommodation cost nothing and it was good for the students to see a service animal at work.
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Medical Documentation
Employers can ask the employee to provide documentation or demonstrate:
That an accommodation is needed when the disability or impairment is not obvious.
That the service animal is trained.
That the service animal will not be disruptive.
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Example
An employee with post traumatic stress disorder and anxiety worked in a call center. He requested to bring in his service dog as a support animal. Because the disability was not obvious, the employer requested that the employee provide medical documentation to show that the dog was needed for this purpose. The employee provided a limited amount of medical information to the employer along with a document from the agency that trained the dog.
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Allergies
Responsibility of employer to provide reasonable accommodations when a co-worker is allergic to a service animal?
Eliminate in-person contact
Reduce amount of in-person contact
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Example
A newly hired federal employee requested to bring her service dog into the workplace. After starting, a co-worker informed the employer of a severe allergy to animals. The employer moved one employee’s workstation, provided an air purifier for the employee with the allergy, established separate routes of travel, maintained a regular cleaning schedule, and allowed the employees to communicate in alternative ways in place of face-to-face communication.
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Food Establishments
Employers may not automatically reject a request to use a service animal as a reasonable accommodation in a restaurant or other food service area.
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Example
A prep cook with paraplegia was hired to work in a kitchen. He used a service animal to assist with personal needs and when commuting to and from work. His employer allowed the service animal to be present and provided a designated area for the dog to occupy until the employee needed assistance. The employer also allowed the employee to take periodic breaks to attend to the dog’s basic daily needs.
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Medical Facilities
Employers can be concerned with:
Vaccinations Shot recordsGeneral hygiene
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Example
A social worker with a vision impairment worked in a hospital and used a service animal. The employer was concerned about safety and hygiene issues that could impact patients and wanted to require that the employee provide the dogs shot records. A JAN consultant discussed the situation with the employer and how to approach the employee if there were concerns that the dog might be unhealthy.
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On the Job TravelAdded expenses for care of service animal
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Example
An employee used a service animal for balance and had to travel away from the office to attend monthly meetings. She could not take the dog to some of the meetings because of coworkers with allergies. The employer was able to locate a dog care service that could care for the dog while she attended the meetings. The employer paid for this service as it was an added cost beyond what the employee would normally spend for care of her service animal.
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Other
Basic Daily NeedsInteracting with a Service AnimalLeave Needed for Training
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Example
A newly hired receptionist who was blind requested to have breaks to care for her service animal. The employer allowed the employee to take periodic breaks and discussed providing general disability awareness training to the staff so that they knew how to interact appropriately with the service animal.
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JAN Consultants can be reached M-F 9am-6pm ET by
• Phone - (800) 526-7234 (voice); (877) 781-9403 (TTY)
• Email - [email protected]• Skype - Janconsultants• Text – (304) 216-8189• Chat available online at http://AskJAN.org
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