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SERVICE ANIMALS
Suffolk University recognizes the importance of Service Animals to individuals with disabilities
and has established the following policy regarding Service Animals. This policy ensures that
people with disabilities, who require the use of Service Animals to provide equal access or as a
reasonable accommodation, receive the benefit of the work or tasks performed by such animals
and/or the therapeutic support they provide. Suffolk is committed to allowing people with
disabilities the use of a Service Animal on campus to facilitate their full-participation and equal
access to the University’s programs and activities, in accordance with the rules set forth below.
Set forth below are specific requirements and guidelines concerning the appropriate use of and
protocols associated with Service Animals.
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, Service Animals are permitted in
University facilities for persons with disabilities. Access for Service Animals in university
buildings, residence halls and/or at university events does NOT require documentation of
disability.
Students with disabilities in the College of Arts and Sciences or the Sawyer School of Business
who have questions should contact the Office of Disability Services. Students in the Law School
who have questions should contact the Law Dean of Students Office. Employees should contact
Human Resources. Visitors to Suffolk’s campus seeking further information regarding Service
Animals should contact the coordinator of the program or event that they will be attending.
Suffolk University reserves the right to amend this policy as circumstances require.
Definition of a Service Animal:
A "Service Animal" is a dog that has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for
the benefit of an individual with a disability. In some cases, a miniature horse may be permitted
as a Service Animal. Other animals, whether wild or domestic, do not qualify as Service
Animals.
Examples of such work or tasks include, but are not limited to guiding a person with impaired
vision, alerting a person with a hearing impairment, pulling a wheelchair, alerting and protecting
a person who is having a seizure, reminding a person with mental illness to take prescribed
medications, calming a person with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) during an anxiety
attack, and/or performing other duties. Service Animals are working animals, not pets. The work
or task a Service Animal has been trained to provide must be directly related to the person’s
disability. Dogs whose sole function is to provide comfort or emotional support do not qualify as
Service Animals.
Health and Well-being of a Service Animal
Identification, License, and Tags:
The Service Animal should wear a harness, identification tag
or other gear that identifies its working status. If there is not a visible tag, University officials
may ask the handler if the Service Animal is a working animal. All Service Animals must have
an Owner identification tag. If the Service Animal is a dog, it must be licensed from an approved
training program or have current license tags from local authorities.