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When I went to the uber assist event a while back, they said you are not allowed to ask any questions. If someone says it's a service dog, you have to take their word for it.

I have no problem taking a legit service dog. Pets are annoying.
They're incorrect then. You can also asks the specific tasks the animal is trained to perform. It's on the ADA website.

If they can adequately answer that question, then you have to take their word for it.
 

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They're incorrect then. You can also asks the specific tasks the animal is trained to perform. It's on the ADA website.

If they can adequately answer that question, then you have to take their word for it.
Though i agree with you, every company enforces it's own policies on top of that. I'm just saying don't be surprised for deactivating people over this.
 

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You should be able to deny them for safety issues such as no restraint. No one wants a 40 lb projectile flying into the back of your neck in a accident. I find many people with service dogs as the worst people on this planet. They ruin it for the truly disabled.
Im sorry was I the only one who laughed uncontrollably when reading this...
 

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Of course not, but they can enforce stricter rules. They can't do less than the law requires, but they can always do more. "Higher standards"
Makes sense, but I don't see why uber would have a policy stricter than what the ADA guidelines allow. I'd like to see that in writing. Maybe you heard incorrectly?

But then again, I wouldn't put anything past uber. Nothing they do would surprise me anymore. I don't think there is a written law they wouldn't break for their own good.
 

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In order to weed out the fakes ask if it's a companion dog, once they answer yes you can deny their ride. People with true service animals will quickly correct you by saying he/she is a service animal.
 

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Makes sense, but I don't see why uber would have a policy stricter than what the ADA guidelines allow. I'd like to see that in writing. Maybe you heard incorrectly?

But then again, I wouldn't put anything past uber. Nothing they do would surprise me anymore. I don't think there is a written law they wouldn't break for their own good.
It's simply convenient for them to impose this type of thing on drivers, like the expectation of water, chargers, gum. "Uber even transports dogs!"

No, it was pretty clear. If someone tells you it's a service dog, they want you to take their word for it. I am just repeating what I heard from the speaker at the uber assist event. Dude was in a wheel chair, good patient guy. Some ignorant idiot who was standing at the back, no observational skills, I wanted to slap him. He yells for him to stand up in the rudest of tones, "stand up, i can't hear you".. The room cringed so hard. Again, this is at the uber assist event. The guy realized what he did, started sinking into the floor. Quite the 5 star experience.
 

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No others just thought most are rented or leased. I do agree that a lot of companion animals out ther arent legit service animals
It really depends on the company. I got into this business driving a taxi and always owned my cars. All the drivers did. Bought the car, the meter and radio, stickers, paid for the inspections, repairs, etc. For some you rent and for some you own.
 

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A company's policies don't trump state and federal laws though.
A company can make it MORE restrictive and tell you not to ask any questions if they want. IF you're an employee of course. But this is Uber so they make their own rules.

Walmart is perfectly free to tell employees not to ask anything if someone says their dog is a service dog. They CAN'T tell them to ask any more than federal law allows.

Uber is just doing what it does. Personally, if a dog looks clean and we'll behaved I'll just take it whether it's a pet or service dog. If it's not under control then I'm not obligated to regardless. But it would have to be really acting up for me to refuse if I really believed it was a service dog. I can't really imagine one behaving really badly unless something scared it or it was injured.

But then I'd take it anyway...I've picked up dogs hit by cars and put them in my car before. But I'm a big softie. Just not for people. I pretty much despise a lot of people.
 

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You realize most taxi drivers are independent contractors too, right? Most are not employees. And to blow your mind even more, you're just as much of a taxi as any other taxi on the road. You do the same exact job. Your car just doesn't have stickers on them, but you're a taxi.

And all someone has to do is complain to uber and you're deactivated. So no more $4 rides with no tip for you.
Don't worry you are not blowing my mind since I did work as a Taxi driver and I know exactly how it is. Do you know the huge diference between taxi and Uber,besides the city permits, stickers and all that? That you are using you PERSONAL vehicle, so if a dog rag my cab with odor, vomit, poop, hair etc I still get to put my daughter in my own personal vehicle and take her to school in a clean car while my taxi is getting clean up. I can't do that with Uber since I use the same vehicle, like Uber says " be your own boss, drive when it is convenient for you" So if I deside that one ride isn't convenient for me, well I am just following Uber's adverticement, the one that lead me to offer my company's services to Uber in the first place ;)

I am just trying to make a point here since like I said in my last post I even have bought pampers for dogs and I keep then in my car, to be honest dogs don't bother me unless they are to big for my car, what it bothers me is that they want to make you do stuff like if you were an employee for them when they use every posible way to demonstrate that you are not, that is all.
 

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What the ADA needs to do is get off their hineys and get laws passed, then start "licensing" "training" "authorizing" or whatever they need to do so that service dogs are easily identified.

Anyone then caught violating the rules by falsely claiming a service animal should be fined $10,000 and or jailed for minimum 3 months.
 
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