Utah Admin. Code R608-1-17 - Assistance Animals
A. General
1. Pursuant to the Utah Fair Housing Act and
the federal Fair Housing Act, this rule defines the circumstances in which an
individual with a disability is entitled to an assistance animal as a
reasonable accommodation in a dwelling that would otherwise restrict or
prohibit the presence of an animal. The term "assistance animals" as used in
this rule means animals that assist, support, or provide service to persons
with disabilities and may include or otherwise be referred to as service
animals, emotional support animals, assistive animals, or therapy
animals.
2. The assistance animal
must be necessary to afford the individual an equal opportunity to use and
enjoy a dwelling or to participate in the housing service or program. This
requires a demonstrable relationship between the individual's disability and
the assistance the animal provides.
a. Housing
providers are entitled to verify the existence of the individual's disability
as well as the need for the assistance animal as an accommodation for that
disability if either is not readily apparent. Accordingly, an individual
proposing an assistance animal as a reasonable accommodation for a disability
may be required to provide documentation form a physician, psychiatrist, or
other qualified healthcare professional that the animal provides support that
alleviates a symptom or effect of the disability.
b. Housing providers need not permit an
assistance animal as an accommodation to a person with a disability if the
provider demonstrates that allowing the assistance animal would impose an undue
financial or administrative burden or would fundamentally alter the nature of a
housing facility, program or service.
c. Housing providers are not required to
provide an accommodation that poses a direct threat to the health or safety of
others. Thus, if a particular assistance animal has a history of dangerous
behavior, if the animal is out of control and its handler does not take
effective action to control it, the housing provider is not required to accept
the assistance animal.
B. Relationship of this rule to other laws
addressing service animals.
1. The federal
Fair Housing Act, the Utah Fair Housing Act and this rule establish the
standards for assistance animals as a reasonable accommodation in
housing.
2. This rule does not
apply to use of service animals in public areas, common carriers, public
conveyances, public accommodations or places of amusement, which are governed
by standards set forth in Utah Code Ann. Section
62A-5b-101 et seq., "Rights
and Privileges of a Person with a Disability."
Notes
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