Result: People who are deaf have no way of knowing that a building emergency has been declared while others who can hear are alerted by the audible alarm....
Search Results "Deaf"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
Visual Alarms
- IRS Videos in ASL: Understanding Tax Terms for American Sign Language Interpreters, Part 3 (Captions & Audio)
-
Senator Harkin Delivers Floor Speech in American Sign Language Upon Passage of the ADA
Requires the Registered User plan or above. Login!
-
3. Benefits—Qualitative Discussion of Benefits
Data on movie-going patterns of persons who are deaf or hard of hearing or are blind or have low vision is very limited, making estimations of demand very difficult. ...
- Accessible AlertSanDiego
-
13. May an employer be required to provide more than one accommodation for the same employee with a hearing disability?
Example 20: A deaf employee can communicate effectively with her supervisor by lip-reading and with written notes....
-
C. Federal Appellate Case Law
The Ninth Circuit is the only Federal court of appeals to address the question whether the ADA requires movie theaters to provide captioning and audio description to patrons who are deaf...
-
Debra E. Babcock, PMP: Information Center for Accessibility Needs (iCAN) at IRS
Disabilities covered: blind, low vision, deaf, hard of hearing, mobility impairment, loss of limbs, psychological, and cognitive (slide 1)....
-
How VRS works
VRS, like other forms of TRS, allows persons who are deaf or hard-of-hearing to communicate through the telephone system with hearing persons....
-
Service animal
work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability, including, but not limited to, guiding individuals who are blind or have low vision, alerting individuals who are deaf...
-
§ 35.104 Service animal
perform tasks for the benefit of a qualified individual with a disability, including, but not limited to, guiding individuals who are blind or have low vision, alerting individuals who are deaf...
-
Auxiliary aids and services
telecommunications devices; videotext displays; accessible electronic and information technology; or other effective methods of making aurally delivered information available to individuals who are deaf...
-
PLANNING
Plans also need to include people who use oxygen or respirators, people who are blind or who have low vision, people who are deaf or hard of hearing, people who have a cognitive disability...
-
Audio Visual Components
This guide includes a full discussion of the types of accommodations that may be needed by individuals who are Deaf or hard of hearing, and for those with vision disabilities....
-
How “Service Animal” Is Defined
Examples of such work or tasks include guiding people who are blind, alerting people who are deaf, pulling a wheelchair, alerting and protecting a person who is having a seizure, reminding...
-
Chapter 4: Creating a Workable ADA: The Senate and the White House
Harkin also had a personal understanding of the need for the ADA because of his brother, who was deaf. It was therefore natural for Harkin to assume Senate leadership....
- Sorenson Video Relay Service ntouch® PC
-
B. Title III's Implementing Regulation
The Department updated this list in 2010 to reflect changes in technology and the auxiliary aids and services commonly used by individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, or blind or have...
-
III-4.3200 Effective communication
ILLUSTRATION 1: H, an individual who is deaf, uses sign language as his primary means of communication and also communicates by writing. He is shopping for film at a camera store....
-
7.6 Training
needs of particular individuals, may include: accessible locations and facilities for people with mobility disabilities; interpreters and note-takers for employees who are deaf...
-
C. The 2014 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Movie Captioning and Audio Description
The Department received a joint comment submitted by the National Association of Theater Owners in conjunction with the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing...
-
4. Federal Appellate Case Law Addressing Captioning and Audio Description
The use of auxiliary aids to make that service available to those who are deaf or hard of hearing or blind or have low vision does not change that service. ...
-
FEDERAL LAWS
the section 602(3) of the IDEA: developmental delay (only for children under the age of 9); intellectual disability (formerly known as mental retardation); hearing impairments including deafness...
-
31. Academic adjustments
For example, an institution might permit an otherwise qualified handicapped student who is deaf to substitute an art appreciation or music history course for a required course in music appreciation...