A major activity for which the facility is intended....
Search Results "Pedestrian Activated Signal"
-
106.5.45 Primary Function
-
Participants
Participants were excluded if they had (1) significant upper extremity pain or injury that would inhibit their ability to transfer, (2) any active pressure sores, (3) any history of pressure...
-
E) Alternate Services
A town can make its services, programs, or activities accessible by relocating them to an accessible site or offering them in an alternate way that is accessible....
-
Primary Function
A major activity for which the facility is intended....
-
Discrimination prohibited. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
35.152(b)(1) proposed language stating that public entities are prohibited from excluding qualified detainees and inmates from participation in, or denying, benefits, services, programs, or activities...
-
1. When does someone with a hearing impairment have a disability within the meaning of the ADA?
are deaf should easily be found to have a disability within the meaning of the first part of the ADA's definition of disability because they are substantially limited in the major life activity...
-
7.12 Nondiscrimination in Other Benefits and Privileges of Employment
Nondiscrimination in Other Benefits and Privileges of Employment Nondiscrimination requirements, including the obligation to make reasonable accommodation, apply to all social or recreational activities...
-
BACKGROUND
Epilepsy is a physical impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, including neurological functions during a seizure. ...
-
k) Self-Evaluation/Transition Plan
of California shall, on the basis of . . . disability, be unlawfully denied full and equal access to the benefits of, or be unlawfully subjected to discrimination under, any program or activity...
-
Q1: What disability-related Federal laws does OCR enforce?
A: OCR enforces Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Section 504), a Federal law designed to protect the rights of individuals with disabilities in programs and activities that...
-
3. Maintenance of Accessible Features
Towns must maintain in operable working condition those features that are necessary to provide access to services, programs, and activities -- including elevators and lifts, curb ramps at...
-
Defining Disability Broadly
Individuals with disabilities include those with one or more activity limitations such as a reduced ability or inability to see, read, walk, speak, hear, learn, remember, understand, manipulate...
-
1.1 Recognizing the Barriers
Managers and owners of fitness centers are beginning to realize that in order to stay in business they can’t appeal only to those who are young, thin, fit, and who have no activity limitations...
-
6 [§ 4.7.7]
Detectable warnings are designed to be felt underfoot or with a cane by people who are blind or have low vision, thereby alerting them of hazards– mainly, the transition from a pedestrian-only...
-
Parallel Parking Spaces (R309.2) (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The access aisle must be 1.5 meters (5 feet) wide minimum and connect to a pedestrian access route....
-
6.3 PV Sytems at Newly Constructed Parking Facilities
Shaded or covered accessible parking spaces should be located on the shortest accessible route to the accessible pedestrian entrance of the shaded portion of the parking facility....
-
The FSTAG Implementation Process Flowchart
FSTAG must be applied before initiating new construction or altering any National Forest System trail with a "Designed Use" of "Hiker/Pedestrian."...
-
Trailhead Signs
Where new trail information signs are provided at trailheads on newly constructed or altered trails designed for use by hikers or pedestrians, the final rule requires the signs to include...
-
SAFETY/CRASH DATA AVAILABILITY
The Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) contains information on motor vehicle crashes that result in a fatality to either a vehicle occupant or a nonoccupant (such as a pedestrian)...
-
Is vertical access required to all levels of a parking garage?
For example, in underground parking garages, elevators or, where feasible, pedestrian ramps, are necessary to provide an accessible route from parking levels with accessible spaces to the...
-
Error/Omission: Parts of an accessible route with slopes that exceed 1:20 lack required features including handrails and edge protection.
Result: When a walkway or other pedestrian surface has a slope greater then 1:20, it is more difficult to maintain control of a wheelchair....
-
11B-705.1.2.2.2.1 One entrance/exit point
shall be 36 inches (914 mm) deep, as measured perpendicular to the curb, and the turning space shall provide a minimum 36 inches (914 mm) wide portion without detectable warnings to allow pedestrian...
-
11B-403.3 Slope
Access Board published in the Federal Register its Proposed Guidelines for Pedestrian Facilities in the Public Right-Of-Way, along with a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking....
-
Executive Summary
Detectable warnings are walking surfaces that are primarily intended to provide a tactile cue to pedestrians who are visually impaired....