Breaking Down Barriers: Housing Equality and Service Dogs
At the Minnesota State Capitol, the usual blend of political theater was upstaged by the presence of wagging tails and vigilant eyes: service dogs and their trainers. Last Thursday, Governor Tim Walz, surrounded by advocates, signed into law a bill that signals a major shift in housing rights for those training the next generation of service animals. Make no mistake—this is not about canines as companions. The law recognizes service dogs as critical lifelines to many Minnesotans’ health and independence. For years, volunteers and trainees working tirelessly to prepare these animals for people with disabilities faced an astonishing but often invisible hurdle: housing policies that treated them as mere pet owners, subject to restrictive rules or outright denial.
The new law, House File 688 (Chapter 16), shatters that barrier by aligning the housing protections for service dogs-in-training with those for active service animals. If you’re working with an accredited service dog organization recognized by Assistance Dogs International or the International Guide Dog Federation, you no longer have to jump through hoops to access a rental or keep your trainee in a no-pets property. No extra fees. No discrimination. No more back doors.
Governor Walz, in his remarks, cut to the core: “Service dogs aren’t just nice-to-have things—they are essential to the quality of life and freedom for countless Minnesotans and the selfless trainers who devote hundreds of hours to this cause.”
The Power of Advocacy and Bipartisan Action
A closer look reveals the raw human element behind this legislation. The executive director of Can Do Canines, Jeff Johnson, stressed that his organization saw efforts to house trainers upended “eight to ten times in the last four years.” That’s not a minor inconvenience; that’s a systemic barrier blocking the lifeline that is a well-trained service dog for those in need.
Landlords and homeowners’ associations can require paperwork (written certification from an accredited group) and revoke accommodations if the status of training changes, striking a balance between legitimate property concerns and civil rights. But the overriding intent here is clear—an end to policies that discourage well-meaning volunteers and families from helping build the support networks our most vulnerable neighbors depend on. Bipartisan support in both chambers demonstrates that when the stakes are tangible, sensible policy can prevail even in a polarized era.
Organizations like Can Do Canines often rely not just on volunteers, but also on innovative partnerships—such as with Minnesota’s correctional system, where prison inmates train service dogs. According to Disability Rights Minnesota, these programs benefit both the future recipients of service animals and the trainers themselves, cultivating empathy, purpose, and connection. The law supports these grassroots, community-driven efforts that ripple out into broader positive change.
“Housing shouldn’t be the reason someone gives up on training a life-changing service dog. By breaking down these barriers, Minnesota is telling every trainer—and every future recipient—that their work matters.”
— Jennifer Lavin, advocate and parent of a young adult with epilepsy who relies on a service animal
Looking Ahead: Lessons for Policy and Progress
The stakes run deeper than a single state or one class of legislation. Systemic barriers to participation—whether in housing, education, or medical access—don’t just inconvenience some; they corrode our shared civic fabric. This law is a reminder that progressive policies don’t merely redistribute benefit—they cultivate dignity and opportunity where none existed before. Harvard legal scholar Martha Minow has written extensively about the quiet forms of exclusion that shape life chances in America. “Discrimination often hides in the ordinary,” she notes, “within HOA covenants, lease agreements, and unexamined rules.” In removing redundant, outdated restrictions against service dog trainers, Minnesota moves toward a society that prizes access over exclusion and community over bureaucracy.
Contrast this with conservative resistance to expanding protections for vulnerable groups. Time and time again, arguments about property rights or administrative ‘burdens’ are invoked to stall progress. Yet evidence from states with stronger fair housing laws shows property values remain stable while community well-being rises—rights and responsibilities can coexist. As Minnesota demonstrates, refusing to act only perpetuates barriers that, in practice, target the marginalized.
Beyond housing, the positive ripple extends to healthcare costs and public resources. Research by the Mayo Clinic shows that people with access to service animals require fewer interventions, enjoy a greater degree of independence, and report higher satisfaction with life. These gains are only possible when training is widespread, accessible, and encouraged—a goal that requires not just willingness but legal support. Every progressive advance is the product of relentless advocacy, legislative courage, and a society willing to examine its own blind spots.
As more states watch Minnesota’s approach, the question looms: Will others follow, or will they cling to outdated notions of who belongs where? One hopes that the message from St. Paul—voiced by lawmakers, trainers, and recipients alike—won’t be lost amid the din of distraction. The future belongs to those who knock down walls, not build them higher.