
Albert
Rizzi said the argument began when a crew member told him to put his
service dog under the seat in front of him as they waited for the US
Airways Express flight to leave Philadelphia International Airport for
the airport in Ronkonkoma, N.Y.
Rizzi, who is legally blind, told
MyFoxTwinCities.com that the flight attendant became aggressive after
noticing his service dog, Doxy, laying in the aisle. He said the dog
became restless after 45 minutes on the tarmac.
"The flight
attendant comes over and says, 'I need you to get that dog stowed
again,'" Rizzi told the station. "She comes back and gets in my face
again. 'I told you that dog needs to be under a seat or we are not
taking off.'"
Flight attendants described the dog as agitated
and expressed concern that Rizzi was not controlling it, airline
spokeswoman Liz Landau told The Associated Press.
Rizzi became
verbally abusive, and the crew decided to remove him, Landau said. That
decision caused some of the other 33 travelers to become upset, she
said, and the flight was canceled. US Airways then arranged for a bus to
drive passengers to Long Island.
"My comfort level with my blindness was totally rocked," Rizzi said. "I felt like a useless, unappreciated loser."
One
passenger told MyFoxTwinCities.com that he was so concerned about Rizzi
that even before the protest took place, he was ready to offer to get
off the plane, rent a car and drive Rizzi and Doxy to New York.
Fellow passenger Frank Ohlhorst told WPVI-TV, which first reported the encounter, that Rizzi wasn't being disruptive.
"We were like, 'Why is this happening? He's not a problem. What is going on?'" said Ohlhorst.
Landau
told the AP that crews are very familiar with the protocol for service
animals, but that the airline is reviewing how the situation was
handled.
Rizzi said he later learned there had been open seats on
the plane. "She never tried to move me or anybody else to secure the
aircraft the way she said needed to be secured," Rizzi said of the
flight attendant.
He told MyFoxTwinCities.com that he was grateful other passengers supported him.
"When
I heard those people coming off the plane saying what they said, I felt
like a million dollars and more humble than I have ever felt in my
entire life," Rizzi said.
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