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Landlord Says 'Neigh' to Mini-Horse in Apartment
Diasbled woman bought pint-sized pinto pony to pull her wheelchair.
This story has been around a while.
Montpelier, Vt. (AP) -- Patty Cooper's landlord normally welcomes tenants who use animals to help them get around, such as guide dogs for the blind.
Parrots for the Mime.
So after the disabled woman bought a 32-inch-tall miniature horse to pull her wheelchair, she asked to keep the animal in her home. When her landlord rejected the request, she filed a human rights complaint.
I wonder what kind of harness she will use? What happens if the horse spooks?
Cooper, 50, paid $1,000 for the 1-year-old gelding named Earl, expecting to use it for trips to the bus stop and into town.
The bus-stop? How's the horse gonna get on the bus?
The agency that owns the apartment complex in Waitsfield denied her proposal, citing concern about horse droppings, hay storage and lack of grazing space.

Cooper insists the 100-pound tobiano pinto can be house-trained and said it "just makes me so happy whenever I'm around him. I'm not lonely anymore."

The landlord has told Cooper the horse would have to be kept elsewhere — not in the 4-by-6 stall she designed in her living room. For now, Earl is staying at a farm owned by a friend in neighboring Warren, where Cooper visits and trains him.

The case has drawn national attention since The Associated Press reported on it last month as an example of disabled people using animals other than guide dogs for the blind.
Wait'll the Animal Rights Kooks get wind of this.
Cooper, 50, has celiac disease, a disorder in which exposure to a protein called gluten destroys the ability of the small intestine to absorb nutrients and can cause brittle bones. Cooper, who broke her back for a second time four years ago, uses a wheelchair most of the time.

Preston Jump, executive director of the Central Vermont Community Land Trust, which owns the apartment building, acknowledged that using miniature horses as service animals is accepted practice for many disabled people. But the agency is weighing the specifics of Cooper's request, particularly whether Earl could be trained to relieve himself only when taken outside every three hours.
Doubtful.
Also, the apartment complex has no place to graze a horse, according to operations manager Michael Lorraine, who cited advice from the Kittrell, N.C.,-based Guide Horse Foundation, which suggests guide horses stay outside when they are not working.

Cooper said she has filed a complaint with the Vermont Human Rights Commission charging that the land trust has denied her the "reasonable accommodation" she's due by law as a disabled person.
Horsepookey!
Rather hinges on the definition of 'reasonable', and we all know how human rights activists define that word: anything they think it should be.
Robert Appel, executive director of the Human Rights Commission, would not say whether such a complaint was filed. Complaints are confidential unless the panel finds grounds to believe that discrimination occurred.

Janet Burleson, head trainer with the Guide Horse Foundation, said she knew of five blind people who use horses instead of dogs to guide them. "It's just like using a guide dog," she said Monday. "The horse serves the same function — guides the person around obstacles, alerts the person to changes in elevation and oncoming traffic. Horses can be trained to do all that," Burleson said.

But she said such work horses normally are quartered outside. "I definitely think she should have the right to choose," Burleson said. "I would just have some concerns that it may be difficult to keep that horse in an apartment and maintain the proper level of cleanliness."
They shed much worse than a dog. Horses need to be outside. It's amazing how much even a small horse can poop. They drink much more water than dogs, too.
I'm sure the miniature horses can be useful. But as the lady says, you don't keep them indoors in an apartment complex.

Posted by: Deacon Blues 2007-11-21
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=208570