Julie,
Wanting to assist with training is commendable but puppies have accidents. It’s more likely to pee than not, it’s more likely to nip than not, and it just isn’t
old and experienced enough to know everything an older, experienced guide dog would know.
I think of it this way—a volunteer is similar to staff. Would I allow staff to bring a puppy to work, especially when they’re responsible for processing collections?
Absolutely not. As much as I value volunteers and the wonderful work they do, they have to follow the same rules staff do.
From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Elizabeth Walton
Sent: Monday, February 24, 2014 12:23 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MUSEUM-L] Guide Dog puppies in training and collections
Even a well trained puppy is still a puppy. It may not jump or pee, but it still might chew on something that resembles a toy. I personally think offices are fine, but there is no real benefit for a guide dog to be in a storage area.
On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 1:17 PM, Deb Fuller <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Is the dog going to be handling the collections? Do people in the
collections area have to wear protective gear, hairnets, or other
items to keep human particulates from getting on the collections? If
not, I don't see how a dog would be any different than a human. Unless
the dog leaves clouds of hair behind wherever it goes, I'd think
anything that it sheds is going to stay on the ground. I'd be more
worried about people hair getting in the collections and the
accidental sneeze.
Deb Fuller
On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 1:02 PM, Julie Blood
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Happy Monday everyone,
>
> I have a new intern starting this week and she is raising a puppy for Guide Dogs for the Blind. In general our policy is only to allow animals onto our campus who are service dogs. However, this dog is in training and will be in areas where collections
are processed. I have met her and she is well behaved, but my office area is so closed spaced that I'm thinking that pet hair and other issues could harm the collection. My intern would only be here for 3-4 hours out of the day and said that she could leave
the dog at home for that time, but I don't know what the guidelines for that are. I think having the dog in an office environment for training would be a good thing for the dog, but at the same time I also need to look out for our collections. Your thoughts
would be appreciated, especially if you've dealt with this situation before.
>
> Thanks,
> Julie
>
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