Section 11B-202.4 requires the provision of: an accessible primary entrance; toilet and bathing facilities; drinking fountains; signs; public telephones; and an accessible path of travel...
Search Results "Emergency Telephone"
-
ALTERATION
-
Web Site Accessibility
., Spanish) Web sites targeting a U.S. market segment would also be covered; whereas Web sites that block sales to customers with U.S. addresses or telephone numbers, even if in English,...
-
Section 35.151(b) Alterations (Section-by-Section Analysis)
usability of or access to an area that contains a primary function, the entity shall ensure that, to the maximum extent feasible, the path of travel to the altered area--and the restrooms, telephones...
-
"Service Animal'' (Section-by-Section Analysis)
non-violent protection or rescue work, pulling a wheelchair, assisting an individual during a seizure, alerting individuals to the presence of allergens, retrieving items such as medicine or the telephone...
-
General rule on reservations. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
, or operates a place of lodging to: Modify its policies, practices, or procedures to ensure that individuals with disabilities can make reservations, including reservations made by telephone...
-
A. Accessible Voting Program
outside the polling place; a method for the voter with a disability to announce her arrival at the curbside (a temporary doorbell or buzzer system would be sufficient, but not a telephone...
-
References
spaces where people using wheelchairs and other mobility devices must park their mobility aids such as in wheelchair spaces, or maneuver to use elements such as at doors, fixtures, and telephones...
-
Section 1194.31 Functional Performance Criteria (Preamble, Section-by-Section Analysis)
For example, an interactive telephone menu that requires the user to say or press "one" would meet this provision. (See §1194.27(e) in the NPRM.)...
-
Section 37.9 Standards for Transportation Facilities
For example, alterations to the telephones in a key station may have been carried out in order to lower them to meet the requirements of UFAS, but telecommunications devices for the deaf...
-
Master Strategy and the Retooling of the ADA
“Readily achievable” modifications might include installing grab bars, ramping a few steps, lowering telephones, adding raised letter and braille markings on elevator controls, and adding...
-
3.1 Refining MDE Definition and Committee Scope
Stretchers or gurneys are typically seen as transport equipment, used to move recumbent patients within inpatient facilities, emergency departments, and other health care delivery settings...
-
[2010 ADAS] 105.2.4 ICC/IBC
While typical elevators are not designed to be used during an emergency evacuation, evacuation elevators are designed with standby power and other features according to the elevator safety...
-
Congressional Hearings
People do not emerge unscathed from these experiences, concluded Heumann: “this stigma scars for life."35 Belinda Mason knew stigma first-hand....
-
Phase II: Energy and Commerce & Public Works and Transportation Committees
In 1988, the Hearing Aid Compatibility (HAC) Act expanded this requirement such that nearly all telephones manufactured or imported into the country had to be compatible....
-
Wheelchairs and other power-driven mobility devices.
See Federal Highway Administration, Characteristics of Emerging Road and Trail Users and Their Safety (Oct. 2004), available at http://www.tfhrc.gov/safety/pubs/04103....
-
Wheelchairs and other power-driven mobility devices.
See Federal Highway Administration, Characteristics of Emerging Road and Trail Users and Their Safety (Oct. 2004), available at http://www.tfhrc.gov/safety/pubs/04103....
-
Swimming pools. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
Other commenters noted that having two accessible means of egress from a pool can be a significant safety feature in the event of an emergency. ...
-
Section 35.160 Communications (Section-by-Section Analysis)
) codifies the Department's policy that there are very limited instances when a public entity may rely on an accompanying individual to interpret or facilitate communication: 1) In an emergency...
-
Determining appropriate auxiliary aids. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
For example, a deaf individual may go to a private community health center with what is at first believed to be a minor medical emergency, such as a sore knee, and the individual with a...
-
Design of Shared Use Paths, Street Intersections, and Midblock Crossings
Population of Current and Emerging Users 2. Bicyclists 3. Pedestrians 4. Inline Skaters 5. Recumbents 6. Hand Cycles 7. Wheelchair Users 8....
- Fulton County, GA Self Evaluation Report
-
4. Grievance Procedure
Curb ramp requests or complaints may be submitted through the complaint form on MOD's website, by telephone, written correspondence, or e-mail, either to MOD or DPW, or through the City's...
-
Notes
(2) “Do you now have any health problems that require you to use special equipment such as a cane, a wheelchair, a special bed, or a special telephone?”...
-
ii. Web accessibility under the ADA
provision of goods and services provided in physical structures, but also covers access to goods and services offered by a place of public accommodation through other mediums, such as telephone...