MIAMI-DADE COUNTY PARKS, RECREATION AND OPEN SPACES
SERVICE ANIMAL POLICY
Miami-Dade County Parks, Recreation and Open Spaces Department Service Animal Policy is
to meet all of the requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. This includes allowing
persons with disabilities to use service animals in parks, inside park facilities, and during programs. With the exception of designated dog park areas, and designated dog friendly parks,
pets are not allowed in Miami-Dade County Parks. Service animals are not pets. Policies
banning dogs and pets from parks do not apply to service animals.
A "service animal" is a well behaved dog trained to perform tasks for an individual with a
disability. The tasks may include, but are not limited to, guiding a person who is visually impaired or blind, alerting a person who is deaf or hard of hearing,. pulling a wheelchair,
assisting with mobility or balance, alerting and protecting a person who is having a seizure,
retrieving objects, or performing other special tasks. Therapy, comfort or emotional support
animals are not service animals, and are not allowed in parks. No documentation is required to prove that a dog is a service animal.
In accordance with local ordinance, service animals must be harnessed, leashed or telhered
and must be under control. The only time a service animal may be off leash, harness or tether,
is when being on it would inhibit the dogs ability to perform tasks for an individual with a
disability. In that case the individual must maintain control of the animal through voice, signal, or other effective controls. To confirm that a dog is a service animal, employees may ask
whether the dog is a service animal or not, and they may ask what tasks the dog performs for the individual, but they may not ask the individual questions about disability.
These questions are solely to confirm that the animal is a service animal.
In accordance with state requirements, individuals training service animals have all of the privileges (hat persons with disabilities using service animals have. Persons with disabilities
using service animals are allowed in any area that the public uses. This includes restaurants,
nature centers, theatres, auditoriums, museums, beaches, pool facilities, spectator areas,
campgrounds, fields, courts, etc. Although service animals are allowed on the pool deck and in
the pool dressing rooms, service animals are not allowed in the actual pool.
A fee may not be charged for a service animal to attend an event or activity. The individual
using the service animal is responsible for any damage service animal causes, and can be charged for these damages, if damage would typically be charged to the user. Allergies and fear
of animals are not valid reasons for denying access or refusing service to an individual using a
service animal.
Employees may exclude or remove a service animal, if the animal's behavior poses a direct
threat to the health and safely of others or if the animals presence fundamentally alters the
nature of the program taking place. Employees may ask someone with a service animal lo leave
an area if the animal is disruptive, (barking during a performance). causes damage, (digging
holes), or bothers others (excessive barking, aggressively approaches other visitors). If a
service animal is excluded or removed for any of the reasons above, the employees must
provide the individual with a disability the option of continuing access to the park, facility or
program without having the service animal on the premises.
Due to the need to address specific issues no common to general park areas. Zoo Miami has
its own service animal policy. In limited circumstances, miniature horses may function as service animals. Miniature horses are less than seal and must be house trained. In same
requirements above pertain to miniature horse service animals