Delta bans pit-bull-type dogs while more U.S. localities move to end breed discrimination

By on September 25, 2019 with 7 Comments

This week, Delta Airlines announced it will discontinue its ban on emotional support animals on flights longer than eight hours. However, in a retrogressive move, the airline said it will continue to prohibit pit-bull-type dogs on its airplanes.

Delta’s decision fails to acknowledge what scientists and animal experts have now agreed upon for years – that there is no evidence supporting the assertion that a dog poses a direct threat because of his or her breed. Even the federal Department of Transportation recently issued guidance to airlines asking them to not prohibit service dogs based on their breed or physical appearance – guidance Delta appears to have completely ignored.

With advances in science and our increased understanding about a dog’s DNA and its relationship to appearance and behavior, we now know that determination of a dog’s breed is a complex issue that does not neatly translate into predictive behavior patterns. Dogs of all shapes, sizes and breeds serve as support animals. Delta is discriminating not just against the animals but also against individuals with disabilities who rely on these animals to help them perform routine daily tasks, including getting from place to place.

Airlines have discretion in how pets fly, but they should make reasonable accommodations for service and emotional support animals regardless of breed, and they also have the responsibility to make appropriate accommodations for owners with larger size animals. Most relevant for the current debate, however, is that animals should be treated as individuals, and that if airline personnel determine that an animal—service animal or otherwise— is displaying unsafe behavior or is too stressed to fly, they have the ability to recommend that such an animal not accompany their owner on the flight.


Read next: BREAKING NEWS: Dept. of Transportation moves to end breed discrimination on airlines


The airline is also bucking a nationwide trend where entire states, counties and localities have moved decisively in recent years to prohibit or overturn laws that discriminate against dogs who look a certain way. Right now, our staff members in Maryland are preparing to help overturn a decades-old breed-specific policy in Prince George’s County. The county is the second most populated locality in the United States, after the Miami-Dade County in Florida, that now discriminates against certain dogs based on their appearance.

If Prince George’s does repeal its ban – and we will be pushing for this with all of our might — it will join more than two dozen localities that have thrown out breed-specific legislation in just the last 18 months, including Kansas City, Kansas. Earlier this year, Washington became the 22nd state in the nation to prohibit its towns from passing breed-specific legislation.

What county lawmakers should have realized by now is that breed-specific bans are cost-prohibitive, difficult to enforce, and do nothing more than create a scary situation for some residents, while driving away others. Gerrard Sheppard, an NFL football player who was formerly with the Baltimore Ravens, says he worries that each time he even drives through Prince George’s County with his dogs Ace and Zoe, they could be taken away from him simply because of how they look. He says he cannot imagine anything happening to them – “I pour my heart into these dogs.”

Sheppard will be at a rally we are organizing in the county on October 1 to make the case for the repeal, along with our coalition partners Best Friends Animal Society, Humane Rescue Alliance, Prince George’s SPCA, and Show Your Soft Side, a public service campaign that works with young people to end animal abuse.

Joining us will also be Matthew White, a Purple Heart recipient who was wounded in Afghanistan when an IED explosion blew off his leg below the knee. White adopted Nike, his pit-bull-type dog, from the Washington Humane Society (now Humane Rescue Alliance). The two are inseparable, with the dog helping the man manage his post-traumatic stress disorder. Matthew was offered free housing in Prince George’s County through a private program that provides housing to wounded veterans, but he refused it because of his commitment to Nike. He now lives in Virginia and, alongside Sheppard, advocates to end breed discrimination as a spokesman for Show Your Soft Side.

There is no evidence that breed-specific legislation keeps communities — or airlines — safer. But what it does do is cause tremendous hardships to animals and their owners. We urge Delta CEO Ed Bastian to reconsider the airline’s decision, and our offer to implement more effective approaches to ensuring passengers and pets stay safe on planes still stands. We will also be pushing to overturn the ban in Prince George’s County. If you live in the county, please contact your council member and ask him or her to support the repeal. And if you live in a community with breed-specific legislation, download our advocacy toolkit to learn how to repeal such legislation.

Categories
Companion Animals, Public Policy (Legal/Legislative)

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7 Comments

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  1. Martha Constantine Paton says:

    There is no such thing as an inherently aggressive or vicious dog. I have had many different breeds of dogs and interacted frequently with many more in what is now becoming a reasonably long life. All have been very social including the 5 German Shepherd dogs I have owned. All could bark loudly, even my small ones, but all, including my current two shepherds are very friendly and wagging their tails when anyone approaches them calmly, speaking normally. Even when I am with them in near busy streets or with crowds they will look around avidly but with no barking and usually, with tails-wagging when anyone approaches them speaking normally. Viciousness in any domesticated animal is induced by fear due to lack of affection, and lack of socialization when young, and of course neglect and cruelty!

  2. linda badham says:

    Ridiculous. Educate yourselves. HUMANS ARE TO BLAME ALWAYS !!

  3. Regina Ulan says:

    I will be contacting my legislators and encouraging them to support harsher penalties for vicious dogs and their owners.

  4. Linda Begovich says:

    A dog does not pose a direct threat because of his or her breed. What is true is a person poses a threat to a dog when he is trained by his owner to be aggressive. I know many Pit bulls who are big babies because they were raised with love. Common sense tells me It’s the person who neglects the dog choosing to make him aggressive that needs to be dealt with so don’t ban any dog with breed discrimination For anything. Bring about legislation that will find it a FELONY for ANIMAL ABUSE.

  5. Graceann says:

    No one should have the right to band breed color I thought we went through this shit years ago it’s all how you rise them and everything in life can change even you I will not fly with your airline I have a blind friend
    Just like cops get dogs and sum of them are lost because of behavior the courts should make them retrain so they can live and be loved they didn’t choose that life that was given but yes we all the the right for a 2nd chance to be loved and have a family go out to all living things

  6. auriel says:

    thats my dog

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