That's the thing about legal issues, often times it costs more to fight it than you'd get out of it and there are often a lot of misperceptions about what the law really says. In general though, the law should be a last resort to solving a problem rather than a first resort. If you find yourself relying on legal remedies to solve every problem, you probably need to re-examine your ability to play well with others.
On the ADA comment (and I know this is a digression) A service animal has to perform some demonstratable function to be covered under ADA (i.e. if someone with PTSD goes into a flashback, the animal has to recognize it, and perform some task to bring them back to reality). It can't just be a matter of the person saying "this dog relieves my depression". There also usually needs to be some documentation from a medical or psychological professional stating that the animal is necessary. Additionally, a therapy animal is not always a service animal under ADA. A therapy animal is any animal used for psychological or physical therapy, and can include things like horses, fish, rodents, dolphins, etc. I work on a college campus and we deal with this particular issue a lot (although nobody has asked to keep a porpoise in a dorm room). I also have a partner at home with significant PTSD from his service and while our dogs are "therapy dogs" in that they help him out, they do not qualify as service animals under ADA because they don't perform a demonstratable action.....yet.
On the ADA comment (and I know this is a digression) A service animal has to perform some demonstratable function to be covered under ADA (i.e. if someone with PTSD goes into a flashback, the animal has to recognize it, and perform some task to bring them back to reality). It can't just be a matter of the person saying "this dog relieves my depression". There also usually needs to be some documentation from a medical or psychological professional stating that the animal is necessary. Additionally, a therapy animal is not always a service animal under ADA. A therapy animal is any animal used for psychological or physical therapy, and can include things like horses, fish, rodents, dolphins, etc. I work on a college campus and we deal with this particular issue a lot (although nobody has asked to keep a porpoise in a dorm room). I also have a partner at home with significant PTSD from his service and while our dogs are "therapy dogs" in that they help him out, they do not qualify as service animals under ADA because they don't perform a demonstratable action.....yet.