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Outside Article Publix To Florida: Do Not Bring Your Pet Dog Inside. Really, Don’t.

Signs like this at a Publix supermarket in Lutz just went up to remind customers that only service animals are allowed inside the stores - which means no more tiny pets in shopping carts or leashed family dogs cruising the aisles.
Signs like this at a Publix supermarket in Lutz just went up to remind customers that only service animals are allowed inside the stores - which means no more tiny pets in shopping carts or leashed family dogs cruising the aisles. [ BILL VARIAN | Times ]

By: Sue CarltonTimes staff

Published Aug. 18
Publix — a supermarket as much a part of Florida culture as Disney World, sunshine and snowbirds — is taking a stand on dogs.

As in, unless they are service animals, no pet dogs perusing the produce aisle, no pups riding high in grocery carts, no dogs tucked into shopping totes.

Popping up in store lobbies from Asheville to Boca Raton are tall signs in Publix green. The placards counsel customers that, while legitimate service animals are welcome inside, emotional support animals and pets definitely are not.
The signs say that under federal law, service animals are "dogs or miniature horses trained to perform tasks for people with disabilities," and the Food and Drug Administration does not allow nonservice animals.

That means even with a note from a doctor, "dogs, pets and other animals whose sole function is to provide comfort, companionship, or emotional support do not qualify as service animals," according to the sign. What's more, trying to pass off a pet as a service animal is against the law in Florida and other states.

It's unclear what prompted this very public reminder of a longstanding Publix policy at its 1,348 stores in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. A Publix spokesperson who responded to questions from the Tampa Bay Times did not answer a specific query as to whether there had been complaints, a specific incident or other cause.

"We do have new signage in all stores not just certain areas," spokesperson Hannah Herring wrote in an emailed response to the Times, "but our policy remains the same."

People asked by the Times via social media what they thought generally responded: Good. They said not everyone is comfortable with an encounter with a dog while shopping, with the proximity of animals and food, or with using grocery carts that previously held a dog.

"I love animals and own several but the grocery store is not the place for everyone to drag Fido," Kimberly Evans Skinner Connell posted on Facebook. "Use some common sense people."

"Finally … a business that will stand up and set rules and (is) not afraid of someone's feelings getting hurt!" wrote Dean Rodenroth.

Poster Mary Hedrick wrote: "The abuse of the term 'service' dog diminishes the importance of these gifted animals to the people who truly need them."

But, Kirch Linsie wondered on Facebook, "will they enforce it?"

Publix, billed as the largest employee-owned grocery chain in the country, has courted a loyal fan base with an emphasis on customer service. Under the slogan that shopping there is "a pleasure," employees greet customers, ask if they found everything they wanted and tote groceries to cars, refusing tips.

The Publix spokesperson did not respond to a question from the Times about whether that hometown vibe may have made some customers feel the rules were lax and dogs would be welcome.

Kathy Saunders, who sits on the board of directors for Southeastern Guide Dogs, applauded the signs. The organization, which prepares pups as service dogs for the disabled and veterans, sometimes takes dogs-in-training to public settings, including grocery stores.

While service dogs are trained not to react to other dogs — or interact with people, bark or sniff food — other dogs often aren't, she said.

Saunders, who lives in St. Petersburg, stopped taking pups to a local Publix after seeing an untrained dog in a service dog vest jump up on a counter.

Publix managers "have a lot on their plate, and that's a lot to ask them to get into an argument with a fake service dog owner," she said. The new signs, she said, "hopefully will empower the managers."

On social media there were also some dissenters who said they did not mind seeing well-behaved pooches at Publix.

The signs also ask customers not to put service animals in shopping carts or baskets "due to health and sanitation concerns."

The signs apply to all animals. Social media posters who said they were Publix employees said they saw one customer in a store with a python around his arm, another with a pet squirrel.

Publix has long been a topic of conversation on the Internet. One recent post had a decided Florida Man flair.

Under the heading "Florida memes," the photo making the rounds features a bearded man wearing nothing but a thong and sandals as he appears to wait in the Pub sub line at a Publix deli counter — a leashed dog lying at his feet.

 

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Posted at 12:04 AM, Aug 19, 2023

and last updated 9:44 AM, Aug 19, 2023

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Where shopping is a pleasure, no pets are allowed.

New signs have popped up at all 1,350 Publix entrances that read only service animals are allowed inside, not pets or emotional support animals.

"No, I'm not happy with that," Lina Avihannal said.

 Lina Avihannal boycotting Publix for its no-pet policy, Aug. 18, 2023

Matthew Kauerauf/WPTV

Lina Avihannal says she's not shopping at Publix anymore because of its no-pet policy, Aug. 18, 2023, in downtown West Palm Beach, Fla.

Avihannal, who lives near the Publix along Fern Street in downtown West Palm Beach, said stopping at Publix is part of her daily routine after taking her dog, which isn't a service animal, for a walk.

"Now, I cannot do that," she said. "I have to come home, drop the dog off and go back out."

Seeing the signs, she said she plans to boycott Publix.

"My plan is not to go to this Publix again," Avihannal said.

Lina Avihannal's dog Luna outside Publix, Aug. 18, 2023

Matthew Kauerauf/WPTV
Luna frequently goes for walks with owner Lina Avihannal, but she won't be allowed inside Publix under the supermarket's no-pet policy, Aug. 18, 2023, in downtown West Palm Beach, Fla.

According to Publix, the "no pets allowed" signage is new, but the policy has stayed the same.

The Publix signs read, in part:
"A service animal is a dog or miniature horse that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks to assist an individual with a disability. Dogs, miniature horses, or other animals that provide only emotional support, comfort, or companionship are not considered service animals."
Gustavo Carvalho went shopping at Publix on Friday with his service dog Minucho.

"From your experience of going to Publix, do you often see pets inside?" WPTV reporter Joel Lopez asked.

"I do," Carvalho said. "As a matter of fact, I just came out and saw a pet right there."

Gustavo Carvalho with service dog Minucho speaks to WPTV's Joel Lopez outside Publix, Aug. 18, 2023

Matthew Kauerauf/WPTV

Gustavo Carvalho holds his service dog Minucho as he speaks to WPTV's Joel Lopez outside a Publix supermarket, Aug. 18, 2023, in West Palm Beach, Fla
Carvalho said his dog goes with him everywhere and carries proof of his service dog certification.

According to the Americans with Disabilities Act, if it's unclear whether someone's dog is a service dog, establishments like Publix may ask two questions:
  • Is the dog a service animal required because of a disability?
  • What work or task has the dog been trained to perform?
However, Publix employees are not allowed to ask for any documentation that the dog is registered, licensed or certified as a service animal or ask that the dog demonstrate its task, or ask about the person's disability.

The ADA also said service animals aren't required to wear vests.

According to the ADA, the tasks animals can be trained to do to be considered a service animal are:
  • retrieve objects for a person who uses a wheelchair
  • remind a person with depression to take their medication
  • alert a person with PTSD of an oncoming panic attack by licking their hand
  • detect the onset of a seizure and help the person remain safe during the seizure if the person has epilepsy
"I think dogs inside of grocery stores are just kind of risky with people with allergies and just the germs all around it," Skylar Senes, who is in favor of Publix's no-pet policy, said.
Senes said she has a Boxer and a small Shihtzu at home but, for health reasons, doesn't bring them grocery shopping.
Skylar Senes has 2 dogs but keeps them out of Publix, Aug. 18, 2023

Matthew Kauerauf/WPTV

Skylar Senes has two dogs but keeps them home when she shops at Publix. "I think dogs inside of grocery stores are just kind of risky," she says.

"Some dogs shed, and it can get inside the open food areas like the food and the produce sections," she said.

Keep in mind that even if a pet is a service animal, it's not allowed to be inside a grocery cart or shopping basket.

Publix has not issued a reason for the new signage but a Publix employee along Fern Street in downtown West Palm Beach said they've had incidents where dogs have had accidents inside the store.

 
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