Posted on Oct 27, 2016
Combat vet sues American Airlines for rejecting her service dog
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Posted 8 y ago
Responses: 3
Thanks for making us aware SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL that Former Army CPT Lisa McCombs is suing American Airlines "for exacerbating her post-traumatic stress during a two-day ordeal in which members of their Manhattan, Kansas, crew refused to honor her tickets and publicly humiliated her multiple times, according to a lawsuit filed this week in her home state of Mississippi.'
I was struck that she felt humiliated "at the Dallas/Forth Worth airport, when an entourage greeted her on the jet bridge with a wheelchair, calling out for a "disabled veteran" and insisting on escorting her to her next flight."
It strikes me as strange:
1. that she didn't seem to have paperwork for her service dog. [If she did I expect this would have cleared up right away at the airport.]
2. that she felt humiliated by being referred to a disabled veteran and being offered a wheelchair with escort.
Of course we live in an increasingly litigious society, it is sad when people are not treated with respect and also sad if people don't carry the right paperwork.
I was struck that she felt humiliated "at the Dallas/Forth Worth airport, when an entourage greeted her on the jet bridge with a wheelchair, calling out for a "disabled veteran" and insisting on escorting her to her next flight."
It strikes me as strange:
1. that she didn't seem to have paperwork for her service dog. [If she did I expect this would have cleared up right away at the airport.]
2. that she felt humiliated by being referred to a disabled veteran and being offered a wheelchair with escort.
Of course we live in an increasingly litigious society, it is sad when people are not treated with respect and also sad if people don't carry the right paperwork.
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SPC Chas Carr
Not all of the Airlines have the same procedures for checking in service dogs, the paperwork can vary from airline to airline. Or at least it did, the new changes in the Air Carriers Act has tried to address this although there are still some areas where it could be improved.
What can get you checked through at the counter might not have been what the airline was telling her she would need to submit latter on.
Also just because she is a disabled veteran does NOT necessitate the need for a wheelchair and an escort. That is presumptive of the airline. They should have had one of the flight attendants ask her if she requested assistance and if not then the attendant could have relayed that to the entourage and they could have left. There was absolutely no need for them to verbally call out for it. Not everyone needs to know that McCombs has a disability. That sort of information falls under privacy. Yes, she’s accompanied by a service dog but even still she doesn’t have to tell everybody she encounters that she has a disability. All she would have to say is that to a random stranger that ask is that it is a service dog and that it’s permitted to accompany her. End of discussion.
The airlines is a bit different as she would need to let them know that she has a disability and that the dog is a trained service dog needed to help mitigate that disability.
What can get you checked through at the counter might not have been what the airline was telling her she would need to submit latter on.
Also just because she is a disabled veteran does NOT necessitate the need for a wheelchair and an escort. That is presumptive of the airline. They should have had one of the flight attendants ask her if she requested assistance and if not then the attendant could have relayed that to the entourage and they could have left. There was absolutely no need for them to verbally call out for it. Not everyone needs to know that McCombs has a disability. That sort of information falls under privacy. Yes, she’s accompanied by a service dog but even still she doesn’t have to tell everybody she encounters that she has a disability. All she would have to say is that to a random stranger that ask is that it is a service dog and that it’s permitted to accompany her. End of discussion.
The airlines is a bit different as she would need to let them know that she has a disability and that the dog is a trained service dog needed to help mitigate that disability.
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