Related
Internal Links
Audio
- Chad Pawson reports: Ferret allowed back on Ottawa buses (Runs: 1:37)
- Play: Real Media »
Video
- Cory O'Kelly reports: Ferret allowed back on Ottawa buses (Runs: 1:34)
- Play: QuickTime »
- Play: Real Media »
Frances Woodard said the agreement allowing Gyno on the bus will make a 'huge' difference in her life by allowing her to get out of the house. (CBC)An Ottawa woman will once again be allowed to ride the city's public buses with the animal she relies on to stave off her panic attacks.
Frances Woodard can take her ferret Gyno back on public transit under an interim agreement with OC Transpo as soon as Thursday, once the deal has been signed by the city solicitor, City of Ottawa spokesman Patrick Uguccioni said Thursday.
Woodard, who visited City Hall Wednesday with Gyno and with other ferret owners who support her, said the ruling will make a "huge" difference in her life.
"It's going to get me out of the house," she said.
In July, Woodard filed an accessibility complaint with the Canadian Transportation Agency after Ottawa's public transit company revoked the access card that allowed Gyno on the bus.
Woodard, who uses a wheelchair and suffers panic attacks, said the animal calms her, staving off the attacks, and she is afraid to travel without him.
A letter from a psychiatrist confirmed that Gyno is Woodard's service animal, as guide dogs are for some people.
However, OC Transpo's policies stated that service animals must be trained and registered with a recognized organization for the purpose of being used in therapy.
One exception
Mary Beth Stanistreet, president of the Ferret Rescue Society of Ottawa, was at City Hall with her ferret Bruiser on Wednesday to argue for a broader definition.
In July, Woodard had filed an accessibility complaint with the Canadian Transportation Agency after OC Transpo revoked the access card that allowed Gyno on the bus. (CBC)"I like to consider ferrets something of nature's own naturally occurring anti-depressant," she said, adding that it's counter-intuitive for OC Transpo to encourage people to use transit and then prevent people from bringing pets that could be considered service animals.
For the moment, OC Transpo is not allowing exceptions except Woodard's ferret.
However, Woodard's interim agreement with OC Transpo includes mediation with the Canadian Transportation Agency to discuss what a service animal is. That means more general guidelines affecting other service animals will be drafted over the next few months, Uguccioni said.
Woodard said she will be involved in that.
Her lawyer, Terrance Greene, said there is no "cookie-cutter" definition.
However, what all service animals have in common is that they minimize their owner's functional limitations, he added.
"And there is full agreement with that with OC Transpo so that's why we're able to move forward."
Share Tools
Latest Ottawa News Headlines
- Double-lung recipient Hélène Campbell dances for joy
- The Ottawa woman who has become Canada's best-known advocate for organ donation was happy, smiling and in great spirits today as she described her new life less than two months after receiving a double-lung transplant. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Birds attack Ottawa joggers
- Women jogging along the Rideau Canal in Ottawa might want to rethink that ponytail. It seems to be making them a target for blackbirds nesting in the area. more »
- SIU probes Cornwall man's death
- Ontario's Special Investigations Unit is looking into the circumstances surrounding the death Wednesday of a 64-year-old man who fell from the third floor parking level of a mall in Cornwall, Ont. more »
Top News Headlines
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest

- The difficulty, danger and expense of removing the bodies of climbers who died in Mount Everest's "death zone" mean most of the dead remain on the mountain as a stark reminder to other climbers of the risks. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How compromise became a dirty word in Washington
- As brinkmanship becomes the norm in this U.S. election year, some policy analysts, and even some long-serving Republicans, are calling out today's GOP for practising 'the new politics of extremism.' more »
- Coffee prices get jolt in jittery economy
- A move by cash-conscious consumers away from expensive arabica coffee beans and toward cheaper robusta has turned coffee prices on their ear and caused a run on bargain beans. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- Gatineau police make arrest after multiple homicides
- Birds attack Ottawa joggers
- Victim named in Queensway rollover crash
- Double-lung recipient Hélène Campbell dances for joy
- Nude Harper painting sells for $5,000
- SIU probes Cornwall man's death
- Ottawa race weekend road closures
- Canadian climber describes Everest as 'a morgue'
- Marathon runner has really big shoe to fill


