Man registers beer as emotional support animal
Perhaps it’s one man’s definition of comfort food.
A Brooklyn, N.Y., resident registered his beer as an emotional support animal on the USA Service Dog Registration website.
Ale Street News was the first to report that Floyd Hayes was initially successful in obtaining a registration letter with a code — 1085780890 — via email.
“I travel from upstate to Brooklyn a lot,” Hayes told Ale Street, “and on the bus they say it’s a federal crime to smoke or have an alcoholic beverage unless by prior written contest, and I always wondered where you get that consent.”
Hayes told Ale Street the beer he was thinking of when he signed up was “a 16 oz., lightly hopped session IPA served in a regular bar pint glass.”
His emotional support animal (ESA) was entered simply as “beer” with “No Training Needed.” Hayes put down that it helps him manage his social anxiety disorder.
While Hayes was initially able to get a code, a current search of the site shows it is no longer active.
A worker at USA Service Dog Registration told the Brooklyn News that registering a “beer” with the site carries no legal weight.
“He can register his beer all day long, it’s not going to get him anywhere,” the unnamed employee said, adding that the site is mainly used by landlords as a reference.
“This will not get you into Walmart, it will not get you into Denny’s, it will only protect you where you’re renting,” the worker said.
Prairie Conlon is a licensed mental health professional and clinical director for CertaPet, an online tele-health platform that helps connect individuals with animal assisted interventions.
She’s not a fan of what Hayes did — or a site that would allow him to do it.
“By allowing people to register things like beer and beehives as emotional support animals, we are setting up people with legitimate ESAs to look hokey,” Conlon said. “A legitimate health professional would never write such a letter, and by giving this man and his beer this kind of attention, we are adding to the problem.
“It is a slap in the face to those with genuine mental health disabilities who utilize emotional support animals as part of their treatment plan.”
To legally use an emotional support animal in a place of business, one would need written medical approval from a doctor under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Hayes admitted to the New York Post the whole thing was meant to be in good fun and hopes no one takes offense.
“It was really just … an experiment,” he told the Post. “I’m not trying to make light on anybody who has any emotional issues.”
“I don’t mean it in a heady mental health manner,” he told the Brooklyn Paper. “More if you go to a party, and want to break the ice.”
Ironically, Hayes hasn’t attempted to take his emotional support animal anywhere yet.
He’s observing Dry January.
Chris Pastrick is a Tribune-Review digital producer. You can contact Chris at 412-320-7898,
cpastrick@tribweb.com or via Twitter .