Miss-Delectable
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staugustine.com: the oldest city's home on the Net
Sadie Sterry went to a St. Augustine restaurant for dinner but left hungry.
The young woman, who was born deaf, wanted to bring her service dog into Sonny's Real Pit Bar-B-Q on U.S. 1 and was turned away, according to her mother, Holly Sterry.
Sterry, a 17-year-old senior at the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind, said she talked to her counselor about what happened.
"I'm embarrassed," she said, signing through her mother. "I have this traumatic feeling it's going to happen again. Being kicked out of a place is humiliating."
A spokeswoman at Sonny's corporate office in Maitland wasn't completely familiar with the incident and declined to comment specifically.
However, Monique Yeager said, "Sonny's has not ever, ever discriminated against anyone who ever walked through our doors. We abide by all laws.
"The people who own the St. Augustine franchise are great people who have been in that market for over 25 years. We have never had a complaint about this."
Holly Sterry said she, her daughter, and her son, Cedar, went with friends to Sonny's last August. A hostess said the dog, a Chihuahua-Pomeranian mix named "Foxy," couldn't accompany them.
A manager said they wouldn't be allowed in unless they could show him "some legal documentation," said Holly Sterry.
"I realized he might not be aware," she said. "I told him we don't need any legal documentation. Florida doesn't even have legal documentation."
She does have a card with the imprint on the outside, "I'm a Service Dog." On the inside are the questions that, by law, businesses may and may not ask those who have service dogs.
"We said Foxy isn't being threatening; she isn't disruptive," Holly Sterry said.
It made no difference.
"He said, 'You guys are not coming in here,'" she added.
The Sterrys moved to St. Augustine from Maine about five years ago so that Sadie could enroll in FSDB.
Foxy is 20 months old and weighs about 4 pounds.
The family got her 15 months ago from a Florida man who breeds the low-key dogs.
Foxy has a leash, but Sadie Sterry usually carries her.
"When you hold the smaller dogs ... if there's a sound behind Sadie, Foxy's going to turn and look," said Holly Sterry.
"I feel safer with a dog," her daughter signed. "She can warn me if other people are behind me. If we're in a vehicle, and there are horns blowing.
"If I'm walking on the road, and there are people behind me, she'll alert me to it."
The Sterrys looked for a local lawyer for about six months, and couldn't find anyone to take the case. Then they contacted Eric Jones with The Jones Law Firm in Jacksonville.
"A lot of people don't do this," said Jones, whose firm handles employment and public accommodation cases. "The (Americans With Disabilities Act) is kind of fading away. Not a lot of people seem to care about it anymore.
"But Sadie doesn't want to experience this for the rest of her life. She wants to speak out because it can impact her friends."
In letters sent certified mail to Sonny's, Jones asked for mediation, an apology, training for employees and "maybe some gift certificates," he said.
He then added reimbursement for attorney fees and an undisclosed amount for Sadie Sterry's "emotional pain, suffering and consequential damages."
There has been no reply.
"We want to education the community, businesses, restaurants - all the places of public accommodation," he said. "This shouldn't take place."
Jones filed a complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations, the state agency that handles cases such as this.
If further attempts at mediation fail, the commission will investigate the complaint. If it is found to be valid, the Sterrys will receive a "right to sue" letter.
"We can file a claim in this jurisdiction, and we can get a jury trial," said Jones.
Sadie Sterry may also be entitled to compensation for her "emotional distress," he added.
"People really need to be educated," Jones said. "This service dog is designed to put this girl on an equal playing field, so she can hear dangerous things and feel a sense of security, like we do with our ears.
"When they take the dog away, they're virtually throwing her out to the wolves. That's the way she felt."
Sadie Sterry went to a St. Augustine restaurant for dinner but left hungry.
The young woman, who was born deaf, wanted to bring her service dog into Sonny's Real Pit Bar-B-Q on U.S. 1 and was turned away, according to her mother, Holly Sterry.
Sterry, a 17-year-old senior at the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind, said she talked to her counselor about what happened.
"I'm embarrassed," she said, signing through her mother. "I have this traumatic feeling it's going to happen again. Being kicked out of a place is humiliating."
A spokeswoman at Sonny's corporate office in Maitland wasn't completely familiar with the incident and declined to comment specifically.
However, Monique Yeager said, "Sonny's has not ever, ever discriminated against anyone who ever walked through our doors. We abide by all laws.
"The people who own the St. Augustine franchise are great people who have been in that market for over 25 years. We have never had a complaint about this."
Holly Sterry said she, her daughter, and her son, Cedar, went with friends to Sonny's last August. A hostess said the dog, a Chihuahua-Pomeranian mix named "Foxy," couldn't accompany them.
A manager said they wouldn't be allowed in unless they could show him "some legal documentation," said Holly Sterry.
"I realized he might not be aware," she said. "I told him we don't need any legal documentation. Florida doesn't even have legal documentation."
She does have a card with the imprint on the outside, "I'm a Service Dog." On the inside are the questions that, by law, businesses may and may not ask those who have service dogs.
"We said Foxy isn't being threatening; she isn't disruptive," Holly Sterry said.
It made no difference.
"He said, 'You guys are not coming in here,'" she added.
The Sterrys moved to St. Augustine from Maine about five years ago so that Sadie could enroll in FSDB.
Foxy is 20 months old and weighs about 4 pounds.
The family got her 15 months ago from a Florida man who breeds the low-key dogs.
Foxy has a leash, but Sadie Sterry usually carries her.
"When you hold the smaller dogs ... if there's a sound behind Sadie, Foxy's going to turn and look," said Holly Sterry.
"I feel safer with a dog," her daughter signed. "She can warn me if other people are behind me. If we're in a vehicle, and there are horns blowing.
"If I'm walking on the road, and there are people behind me, she'll alert me to it."
The Sterrys looked for a local lawyer for about six months, and couldn't find anyone to take the case. Then they contacted Eric Jones with The Jones Law Firm in Jacksonville.
"A lot of people don't do this," said Jones, whose firm handles employment and public accommodation cases. "The (Americans With Disabilities Act) is kind of fading away. Not a lot of people seem to care about it anymore.
"But Sadie doesn't want to experience this for the rest of her life. She wants to speak out because it can impact her friends."
In letters sent certified mail to Sonny's, Jones asked for mediation, an apology, training for employees and "maybe some gift certificates," he said.
He then added reimbursement for attorney fees and an undisclosed amount for Sadie Sterry's "emotional pain, suffering and consequential damages."
There has been no reply.
"We want to education the community, businesses, restaurants - all the places of public accommodation," he said. "This shouldn't take place."
Jones filed a complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations, the state agency that handles cases such as this.
If further attempts at mediation fail, the commission will investigate the complaint. If it is found to be valid, the Sterrys will receive a "right to sue" letter.
"We can file a claim in this jurisdiction, and we can get a jury trial," said Jones.
Sadie Sterry may also be entitled to compensation for her "emotional distress," he added.
"People really need to be educated," Jones said. "This service dog is designed to put this girl on an equal playing field, so she can hear dangerous things and feel a sense of security, like we do with our ears.
"When they take the dog away, they're virtually throwing her out to the wolves. That's the way she felt."


And carrying a dog around sends mixed message as well, since it implies that it is more of a pet than a service dog. Most of the blind people adhere to these, but it seems like you have a few young people that believe otherwise and shatter the professional look of service dogs which cause people to turn away service dogs.