Sign In

SERVICE AND THERAPY DOGS

April 2, 2020

California law gives special privileges to people who rely on a certified service animal.

But these days, a lot of people are getting doctor’s notes to qualify their pet as a therapy animal.

A service dog is trained for one person to perform a task whereas a therapy dog is for everyone. Owner of a service dog named Koda, Niculina Archer said her dog has saved her life many times.

“He gives me a reason to live, he has saved me when I feel like I still don’t have a reason,” Archer said.

It took Archer two years to train Koda.

Service dogs can work by their owner’s side at their job if the employer agrees with it. The dog helps them with tasks, whereas a therapy dog is not trained to be by a specific handler but help more so as a volunteer.

Raley’s is one of the local stores in Chico that employed Archer and Koda.

One Raleys employee said she thinks more places shouldn’t discriminate on people who need service dogs.

“it’s a great idea if the service animal feels a seizure is going to come on, we don’t know that person and the dog knows that and senses it and the dog can jump in front of that person and that person doesn’t smack his head on the cement floor.” “I think places like Raley’s needs to keep doing the good deed of hiring people that have service animals and allowing it.”

Archer broke down the difference between a service dog and a therapy dog.

“A service dog is tasked trained for one person,” Archer said. “So it could be medical or psychiatric such as PTSD or diabetes alert or seizure alert dogs. Therapy dogs are for everybody, so you know anyone can pet them, anyone can go up to them, they are there for the public’s happiness.”

An owner, Lynn Bishop of therapy dog Landon explained the difference on when you can touch a working dog.

“A service dog is just for one person,” Bishop said. “It’s not supposed to be pet by other people, it’s like a dog where you’re not supposed to go up to them,”

Bishop said it’s opposite with a therapy dog. She said with a therapy dog you don’t have to ask to pet them, like her therapy dog, Landon. She said the kids know they have permission to pet Landon.

Register Your Dog

  • Most Recent News

    Former Victoria man’s diabetic alert dog helps him get back to life

    When Luke Hengen’s diabetes worsened in his early twenties, it stripped him of the outdoor activities where the country kid felt at home. Countless wilderness adventures and years of hard-fought football games took a toll on his body, to the point where he could no longer sense when his blood sugar was too high or […]

    Read more

    Students Get Therapy Dog

    When middle school students return to class on Jan. 11, they’ll find a new face at the door: Daisy. Daisy is a therapy dog and the personal pet of Rob Kreger, principal of the Rock L. Butler Middle School. The five-year-old golden retriever is not a school pet or mascot, but rather a working dog […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dogtor

    Last March, Caroline Benzel, a third-year medical student, began to notice the stress and discomfort her nurse friends were feeling from the pressures of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. “[Personal protective equipment] can be really rough on the skin,” Benzel, 31, tells PEOPLE. Benzel and her 3-year-old Rottweiler, Loki (who’s also a therapy dog) hatched a […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dog Pups

    When Stanley the miniature fox terrier’s owner passed away, the little dog started a ‘paw-some’ new role – bringing puppy love to some of the Gold Coast’s oldest residents. After Carinity Cedarbrook Diversional Therapist Julianne Staff adopted Stanley, he began visiting the aged care community at Mudgeeraba as a therapy dog. Therapy dogs help to […]

    Read more

    Puppy Cams

    A nonprofit is providing an unusual form of therapy for those on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic – puppy cams! “You spend five minutes with a puppy and try not to smile,” said registered nurse Robin Lingg Lagrone. Lingg Lagrone says watching little furballs wag their tails and prance on their paws helps […]

    Read more

    Pet Committee

    When Moore County’s school doors were abruptly closed earlier in 2020, two- and four-legged volunteers from the Moore County Citizens’ Pet Responsibility Committee (PRC) were in their 12th year of presenting a six-session Pet Responsibility Education Program for fourth-graders. The PRC quickly shifted gears and placed its program materials online as part of a home […]

    Read more