Guide dog barred for speaking only French

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A blind Quebec student may sue a Canadian university that denied him entry to English classes because his guide dog responds only to French commands.

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A blind Quebec student may sue a Canadian university that denied him entry to English classes because his guide dog responds only to French commands.

Yvan Tessier was turned away from an English immersion course at the University of New Brunswick because he would be forced to give his dog, Pavot, instructions in French.

Students in the course are expected to communicate only in English, at all times, during the intensive five-week course. That includes talking to the dog.

“I feel a little bit frustrated and sad about the situation,” Tessier said from Fredericton, New Brunswick Wednesday.

“They don’t have the openness of spirit to understand that it’s better for me and my mobility to operate with my guide dog. It’s only 17 commands in French, it won’t compromise the English program.”

Tessier said he would file a complaint with the human rights commission if the university stuck to its decision.

The graduate student has been guided by the black Labrador retriever for the past two years. Pavot was trained by the Quebec-based Mira Foundation specifically for French speaking clients.

“We were astonished by this,” said Pierre Noiseux, a spokesman at the foundation which placed Pavot with Tessier.

“The dog doesn’t speak French or English. He doesn’t know how to spell ’en avant.’ He doesn’t know it’s French. He just knows that ’en avant’ means forward.”

Noiseux said the university’s decision was tantamount to discrimination, given that it had accepted Tessier and only raised objections once he inquired about services for blind students.

The university in the eastern Canadian town of Fredericton, New Brunswick, said it turned Tessier away because it did not have enough time to prepare for his special needs. It said he can join the program once Pavot learns English commands.

“In the past, the service has been provided that we do teach their guide dogs commands in English, so the dog learns English as well,” a university spokeswoman told CBC Television.

Tessier said it would take too long to teach Pavot English commands. The Mira Foundation said it was also dangerous to teach the dog new commands just as Tessier arrives in unfamiliar surroundings.

“He’s in a new city, he needs a dog that will be really alert,” Noiseux said. “Sure we could take the dog, bring him back and recode. But why would I do that? The guy is French.”

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