If going barefooted at the local grocery store or Wal-Mart is unsafe and unhealthy for those doing it and the customers around them, we must address the subject of service animals. They almost always go bare pawed/hooved/footed and yet no one complains about the health and safety ramifications of this practice.
Before I go any further, I must adamantly state that I believe it is appropriate and right to allow service animals to accompany the disabled wherever they need to go. This blog entry is solely for the purpose of exposing ignorant managerial policy of many businesses that require human customers to wear footwear.
Ann Edie and her guide miniature horse, Panda, check out at a Staples.
(Photo courtesy: Angelinoview.com)
(Photo courtesy: Angelinoview.com)
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) allows for service animals to accompany disabled people nearly wherever they go. On its Web site, the ADA puts it this way:
"Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), privately owned businesses that serve the public, such as restaurants, hotels, retail stores, taxicabs, theaters, concert halls, and sports facilities, are prohibited from discriminating against individuals with disabilities. The ADA requires these businesses to allow people with disabilities to bring their service animals onto business premises in whatever areas customers are generally allowed."So the ADA allows for the animals without considering any sort of health or safety ramifications? Well, not exactly. Farther down the page there is a caveat:
"(A business) may exclude any animal, including a service animal, from (its) facility when that animal's behavior poses a direct threat to the health or safety of others. For example, any service animal that displays vicious behavior towards other guests or customers may be excluded."I added the bold for emphasis.
While the ADA's site addresses the issue of "maintenance" or a "cleaning fee" in the event that a service animal makes a mess (in one way or another), no mention is made regarding the business' responsibility to keep the establishment safe or healthy for the service animal. If we are to assume -- because we barefooters are told this -- that a business' floor is unsafe for our feet due to the possibility of stepping on broken glass, sharp objects, germs or any various kinds of spilled items, then we must assume that the same holds true for the exposed paws of service animals.
Interestingly enough, the ADA's FAQ page linked above never addresses a question about whether a business can require service animal to wear booties or footwear. (Doggie shoe photo courtesy: Neopaws.com) So I called by phone the ADA's "Disability Rights Section." After holding for only a brief couple of minutes, a specialist quickly answered, "No," when I asked if businesses may request or require that service animals put on such footwear. A disclaimer: The ADA's phone system recording made it very clear that information given over such a call is not binding legal advice or opinion, however I have to think that these employees know what they're talking about.
So where does that leave us? It leaves me with the realization that I have fewer rights than many dogs. It tells me that the federal government of the United States of America believes that the floors of businesses should be generally safe enough for a service animal's bare paw/hoof/foot insomuch that said businesses may not request footwear to "protect" them.
It makes me think that businesses need to give up several outdated excuses and let me and others go barefooted if we so choose. Service animals already do it, so it seems silly that we humans can't.
Owners and managers certainly have an obligation to protect their own interests. Yes, glass breaks sometimes. But, we should remember that when a jar of spaghetti sauce shatters at the grocery store, somebody quickly cleans it up as well as they can. What's left is typically negligible and is no more a risk to my bare feet than a product display tipping over.
You could argue that service animals shouldn't go barepawed/hooved/footed into a business -- and that's your prerogative and a whole other discussion -- but the law is what it is and most people never second-guess the cleanliness or safety of a business' floor when a service animal comes in. Why, then, should they second-guess my ability to stay safe while barefooted in a restaurant, grocery store, retailer or other establishment? Most only have a fleeting thought about what a service animal may be tracking onto the floor of the business, yet many are quick to assume that my bare feet are slathering the floor with disgusting sweat, bacteria and disease.
Honestly, folks, so long as we keep our "paws" generally clean and off of the merchandise, it's perfectly reasonable for us barefooters to be allowed to go unshod in a business.
* - Thanks to "Rascal" for the idea for this blog entry!
NOTE: All this week I am "rewinding" this blog to repost some of my earlier entries that many readers may have missed. Much of this information holds true even today and I hope you enjoyed it. This post was originally published on Oct. 21, 2009. The content above was NOT edited from its original entry, so please ignore any typos or less than perfect grammar as I got my writing feet underneath me. What do you think of this post? Please leave your comments below.
YOur Very Welcome, I was hopping this issue would be addressed.
ReplyDeleteRascal AKA. Adam.
I'm starting to think that a lot of our perceived discrimination is just that: our perception. Allow me to explain.
ReplyDeleteI used to frequently put on shoes to go into stores with signs saying I had to... many gas stations, fast food restaurants, stores, etc. You know the ones.
But recently I read something that encouraged me to just throw caution to the wind completely.
I read about a guy whose girlfriend (an avid barefooter) challenged him to go barefoot everywhere except work, until he got thrown out of somewhere for being barefoot. Not commented to, made fun of, given dirty looks, or asked to wear shoes next time. Actually asked to leave, and come back with shoes.
It took three weeks.
He describes going to movie theaters, many stores, restaurants, even the dreaded McDonald's, and... I think it bears repeating:
It took three weeks.
So, I just started doing the same. It's been four weeks. Now, granted, I mostly go to the same places I've always gone barefoot.. my local Walgreens, Subway, Dairy Queen, Dunkin Donuts, all of which have never had any issue. But I've also ventured into K-Mart, the Post Office, Target (which actually I got -many- curious looks from staff, always followed by a bemused smirk or a shrug, never a comment or challenge or even a dirty look. Go Target!)
Nothing yet. Now... to be fair, I -have- been thrown out of stores for being barefoot. And I've focused on those incidents in the past, as many of us do, railing and ranting about how prejudiced this country is, and how obsessed with shoes.
But thinking back, it's really only happened three times. Ever. Once in Giant Eagle, and once each in two different Wal-Marts.
Now, I've been going barefoot almost everywhere I thought I could get away with it for about fourteen years now, either whenever I could screw up the courage, or more recently, at all times. So I think three actual incidents of being asked to leave a store for my bare feet, is actually remarkably low.
Granted, it shouldn't happen at all, but honestly if we all just stop being afraid of it, and stop -focusing- on the rare problems we run into, and just start going barefoot -everywhere-, all the time, we'll be going a long, long way toward promoting acceptance of our lifestyle.
One small caveat for my previous comment...
ReplyDeleteEvery one of those three times I was actually kicked out for being barefoot, I was also wearing shorts. Is this a pattern? Maybe. Bare feet are certainly a lot more noticable when wearing shorts. In jeans or other long pants, presumably most people (keep in mind most people don't look at feet much, or think about them much at all, so just flick their eyes to them if that, or use peripheral vision), so most people probably just assume I'm in flip flops. In shorts, it's painfully obvious.
I still think a lot of our fears are just fears, unfounded and unneeded, but I thought that bore commenting about.
Dogs are also naked. No pants for us! Let our genitals fly!
ReplyDelete