A good resource for this task is the ADA Checklist for Existing Facilities produced by the New England ADA Center (http://www.adachecklist.org)....
Search Results "RERC Rec-Tech: Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Recreational Technologies"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
ADA Checklist for Existing Facilities: Identify barriers and develop a plan
-
11B-411.2.2.1 Visible identification
Exception: Existing buildings shall be permitted to have a visible identification fixture with a car designation character adjacent to each elevator car entrance centered at 72 inches (1829...
-
§ 38.23(d)(4) Orientation
forward, or rearward with a padded barrier, extending from a height of 38 inches from the vehicle floor to a height of 56 inches from the vehicle floor with a width of 18 inches, laterally centered...
-
11B-411.2.2.1 Visible identification
Exception: Existing buildings shall be permitted to have a visible identification fixture with a car designation character adjacent to each elevator car entrance centered at 72 inches (1829...
-
[ADA Title II §35.151(b)(4)(i)] Primary function
Areas that contain a primary function include, but are not limited to, the dining area of a cafeteria, the meeting rooms in a conference center, as well as offices and other work areas in...
- BEA Inc. Piezo Push Button Heavy Duty Door Actuator (Push to Exit)
-
F203 General Exceptions
Section F203.2 establishes a general exception for elements complying with earlier standards issued pursuant to the ABA or to section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973....
-
2. Business Necessity
Business Necessity "Business necessity" will be interpreted under the ADA as it has been interpreted by the courts under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act....
-
§35.103 Relationship to Other Laws
this section provides that, except as otherwise specifically provided by this part, title II of the ADA is not intended to apply lesser standards than are required under title V of the Rehabilitation...
-
FEDERAL LAWS
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (Section 504) and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (Title II) are federal civil rights laws that prohibit disability discrimination,...
- Total Living Center Inc. (TLC) - Egg Harbor Township and Atlantic City, NJ
-
413.1 General (Section-by-Section Analysis)
C, Rec. 4-C. (Complimentary provisions governing software-based on-screen controls for captions and audio description are addressed in proposed 503.4.)...
-
Auxiliary Aids and Services
In addition, aids and services include a wide variety of technologies including 1) assistive listening systems and devices; 2) open captioning, closed captioning, real-time captioning, and...
- Self Reliance, Inc. - Tampa, FL
-
II. DEFINITIONS
systems, including text telephones (TTYs),1 videophones, and captioned telephones, or equally effective telecommunications devices; videotext displays; accessible electronic and information technology...
-
7.1. Purpose and Objective of the Final Rule, Relative to Movie Theaters Categorized As Small
Recent technological changes in the movie exhibition industry—including widespread conversion from analog film projection to digital cinema systems—make exhibition of captioned and audio-described...
- Florida Independent Living Council
-
Issue 2: What Approach is needed to develop “Guidelines”?
And again, you know, if it came to me, I’d say, fine, I’ll do the search, and I’ll do my research, and I’ll come up with this, and I can give you my two cents’ worth....
- Center for Hearing and Communication - New York, NY and Fort Lauderdale, FL
- Center for Independent Living of South Jersey, Inc. (CILSJ) - Westville, NJ
-
C. Next Generation 9-1-1
consider a rule to revise the ADA title II regulation to address how Public Safety Answering Points, which provide 9-1-1 services at the local level, can shift from analog telecommunications technology...
-
"Video Interpreting Services" (VIS) (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The Department has added a definition of "video interpreting services (VIS)," a technology composed of a video phone, video monitors, cameras, a high-speed Internet connection, and an interpreter...
-
Paragraph (e) (Advisory Guidance)
Although it may not be achievable with current technology, an alternate strategy might be to recognize the tones, transmit them as codes, and resynthesize them at the other end....
-
§ 38.175(a)
(a) All cars for high-speed rail systems, including but not limited to those using “maglev” or high speed steel-wheel-on-steel rail technology, and monorail systems operating primarily on...