A Tampa Bay pain-management provider is cutting a six-figure check after federal investigators concluded staff shut a disabled veteran out of care because he arrived with a service dog. The $115,000 settlement resolves allegations that APC, Inc., which runs pain clinics in Tampa and Brandon, violated Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
According to a press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, APC agreed to pay $100,000 to the veteran and his wife, plus a $15,000 civil penalty to the United States. Investigators said staff at APC’s Brandon office refused to let the veteran attend a post-hospitalization appointment because of a “no pets” rule and claims the office was a “sterile environment.” The denial allegedly triggered a PTSD episode and repeated seizures and led the patient to abruptly stop taking his prescribed medication. “Service animals are not pets. They provide critical assistance for individuals with disabilities,” U.S. Attorney Gregory W. Kehoe said in the announcement.
Local coverage by Tampa Bay 28 reports that the complaint came from a military veteran whose service dog is trained to help during seizures and PTSD episodes. That reporting says the veteran’s complaint led the U.S. Attorney’s Office to open its investigation and underscores the real-world fallout described in the settlement, beyond the legal jargon and dollar figures.
What the settlement requires
Under the agreement, APC must adopt, clearly post, and enforce both a service-animal policy and a nondiscrimination policy. Every staff member has to be trained on ADA requirements. The clinics will also need to put “Service Animals Welcome” signs at public entrances and report any disability-discrimination complaints to the United States for the next two years. The $15,000 civil penalty is described in the federal release as payment to vindicate the public interest…