Setting
Standards
For The Assistance Dog Industry
Since 1987
Assistance Dogs International,
Inc. is a coalition of not for profit organizations that train and place
Assistance Dogs. The purpose of ADI is to improve the areas of training,
placement, and utilization of Assistance Dogs as well as staff and volunteer
education. Members of ADI meet annually to share ideas, attend seminars,
and conduct business regarding such things as educating the public about
Assistance Dogs, and the legal rights of people with disabilities partnered
with Assistance Dogs, setting standards and establishing guidelines and
ethics for the training of these dogs, and improving the utilization and
bonding of each team. ADI also publishes a newsletter for members and
subscribers. If you are a not for profit provider of Assistance Dogs,
ADI membership will be a benefit to you, and you can be a part of ADI's
mission.
ADI'S MISSION
The objective of Assistance Dogs International, Inc. is
to:
- Establish and
promote standards of excellence in all areas of Assistance Dog acquisition,
training and partnership
- Facilitate communication
and learning among member organizations,
- Educate the public
to the benefits of Assistance Dogs and ADI membership
TERMINOLOGY
ADI uses terminology
established by the industry that produces Assistance Dogs. The individuals
who are partnered with these dogs have adopted this terminology. Terminology
used in access laws varies from State to State and in the Americans With
Disability Act. ADI is working to establish consistent terminology internationally.
ASSISTANCE DOGS
Assistance Dogs not
only provide a specific service to their handlers, but also greatly enhance
their lives with a new sense of freedom and independence.
The three types
of Assistance Dogs are GUIDE DOGS for the blind
and the visually impaired , HEARING DOGS for
the deaf and hard of hearing and SERVICE
DOGS for people with disabilities other than those related
to vision or hearing . Although Guide Dogs for the blind have been trained
formally for over seventy years, the training of dogs to assist deaf and
disabled people is a much more recent concept. There are organizations
throughout the world that are training these wonderful dogs.
Assistance Dogs can
come from breeding programs, with volunteer puppy raisers caring for them
until they are old enough to start formal training, or in many cases the
dogs are rescued from animal shelters.
Disabled individuals
with Assistance Dogs are guaranteed legal access to all places of public
accommodation, modes of public transportation, recreation and other places
to which the general public is invited.
ACCESS LAWS
ADI is working to
establish consistent access laws with consistent terminology for individuals
partnered with Assistance Dogs. Toward this effort, ADI has created a
MODEL LAW, to be presented to State Legislatures.
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