Delta renewed their supportive animal's policies and now ban the travel "bulldog" with customers.
Several cases followed, including breeds and other animals, were decided. Airlines listed Delta's employees and customers' "security and security" as the main motivation for deciding.
Delta Air Lines announced Wednesday that "Bulldog" will no longer be recognized as owner of a service or emotional support animal accompanying airline, further restricting its latest supportive animal policy. Changing the policy involves limiting each client's emotional support animals. These changes will take effect on 10th July.
This news was announced after complaints of defecation and urination at Delta, and delta waiters being bitten by bulldog. According to the data of Delta, since June 2016, incidents including such emotional support dogs have increased by 84%. According to the "Atlanta Constitution" report, in June last year passengers were plagued by other passengers' "Chocolate Laboratory Pointer Mixture". At the window seat, you need to stitch the face 28 Stitch
In a statement Wednesday's Chief Operating Officer Gil West said, "Delta people and our customers' safety and security are always our top priorities." "We constantly review and strengthen our policies and procedures to ensure that Delta is still the leader in the field of security."
Service Animal training will help people with disabilities such as blindness and hearing loss. Meanwhile, spiritual support animals are mental health experts who identify the interests of disabled people. Both animals fly freely in the delta
The airline now requires passengers to submit complete, well-trained service animal files 48 hours before flight departure. The document must be within one year and includes a mental health expert's proof that animal support is needed during flight. It must also include animal vaccination records
In a statement to the business insider, Delta has kept a new policy. "In the process of boarding a Delta 295 flight from Atlanta to Narita, the two employees were bitten by the customer's emotional support animals.This site is undergoing medical treatment and customers and animals are excluded from flight The safety of customers and employees is always a top priority. "
Delta spokesman Ashton Kang confirmed that the animal cited in the statement above is a bulldog
Delta Air Lines has changed passenger's animal care policy before, and there are passenger dogs who died in a United Airlines cabin.
However, the new rules not including bulldog, thought to be service or emotional support animals, allowed some pet owners to divert their social media in the wrong way.
Delta Air said on Friday, "You must be on the safe side" in a statement. "Recently, two Delta employees last week kept a bulldog as an assistant dog, we strive to extend the ban to serve animals and to know the customers with legitimate needs "This is a potential safety issue." Regina Lizik, Director of Communication and Financing at the Bangall Animal Farm Foundation in New York, says: "Bulldogs are random labels - there is no standard definition of what makes a dog bulldog." Service dogs are available to a variety of disabled people. Gilbert 's Bulldog trained there.
Delta Air said that "Bulldog" is no longer popular because it provides services or supports animals in the cabin on domestic flights. However, because dozens of varieties are often incorrectly identified as bulldogs, airlines have made it difficult for owners to know whether their dogs are excluded. Delta Airlines' change will take effect on 10th July. Airline companies are widely believed that they must accept animals that everyone has acknowledged that they are providing services and support, but airlines are still subject to the airline access law, not the more general ADA It is. Airlines may prohibit service animals that pose a threat to the crew's health and safety, which are thought to be overweight, or cause guest room confusion.
For various reasons, certain laws and complete bans on Bulldog varieties are almost always controversial. Obviously, all dogs do not threaten others as dogs are also their product of their environment and growth. Just as many dogs show offensive behavior that is not a bulldog, there are lots of friendly and sullen bulldogs. Furthermore, it is not easy to identify what kind of dogs are classified as bulldogs, especially in mixed races.