Educating Communities. Empowering Handlers. Elevating the Standard.

© 2035 by The Clinic. Powered and secured by Wix
Do you qualify for public access with a service dog under the ADA?
Find out if you meet the legal requirements to handle a service dog in the US
Do you have a physical or mental condition that effects one or more daily life activity?
Does your condition interfere with your ability to complete daily activities like walking, hearing, seeing, caring for yourself, manual tasks, immune system, bowel, bladder, neurological, respiratory, circulatory, endocrine, or reproductive functions?
Is your dog task-trained to mitigate a disability or will you be obtaining a task-trained service dog?
A task is a specific action that a service animal takes to mitigate a person's disability. For example: pulling a wheelchair, alerting to a medical condition, retrieving or carrying items, behavior interruption, assisting with balance, guiding, or another task directly related to your disability.
Service dogs are used to mitigate a disability. If your condition does not impact one or more daily life activities, it doesn't meet the Americans with Disabilities Act's definition of a disability
Emotional support is not a task under the Americans with Disabilities Act
You qualify to handle a service dog
Coming soon: How to get a service dog