C201.4 Prohibited Reduction of Accessibility, Usability and Compatibility (Section-by-Section Analysis) This section proposes to prohibit changes in covered ICT that decreases, or has...
Search Results "Hearing Aid Compatible"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
C201.4 Prohibited Reduction of Accessibility, Usability and Compatibility (Section-by-Section Analysis)
-
5. Voice Carryover and Hearing Carryover
With VCO, a person with hearing loss can speak directly to the call taker and read the response that is typed back....
-
Screening Mobility Aid or Assistive Device
Screening Mobility Aid or Assistive Device The statement of the law set forth above would not, however, prohibit you from examining a mobility aid or assistive device if, in your judgment...
-
Sec.36.303(b)(1)
(1) Qualified interpreters, notetakers, computer-aided transcription services, written materials, telephone handset amplifiers, assistive listening devices, assistive listening systems,...
-
§27.127(c) Time and place of hearing.
(c) Time and place of hearing....
-
Ability Self-Assessment
(Hearing aids amplify background noise, so the sound of the alarms may interfere or drown out voice announcements)....
-
§27.129(c) Decisions if hearing is waived.
(c) Decisions if hearing is waived. Whenever a hearing pursuant to §27.125(b) is waived, the Secretary makes his/her final decision on the record, stating the reasons therefor....
- Make Technology Work for Everyone: introducing digital accessibility
- Access Board: Pictograms
-
Q. Are people with AIDS covered by the ADA?
Are people with AIDS covered by the ADA? A. Yes. The legislative history indicates that Congress intended the ADA to protect persons with AIDS and HIV disease from discrimination....
-
702.5.1 ANSI/IEEE C63.19-2011
American National Standard for Methods of Measurement of Compatibility between Wireless Communications Devices and Hearing Aids, May 27, 2011, IBR approved for Appendix C, Section 412.3.1...
-
402.3.1 Private Listening
Where ICT provides private listening, it shall provide a mode of operation for controlling the volume and a means for effective magnetic wireless coupling to hearing technologies....
-
Senate Hearings and the Quest for Bipartisanship
Senate Hearings and the Quest for Bipartisanship Senate Hearings on S. 933 began in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Tuesday morning, May 9, 1989....
-
§ 36.303(d)(1)(iii)
(iii) This part does not require a public accommodation to use public telephones equipped with volume control mechanisms, hearing aid compatible telephones, or TTYs for receiving or making...
- Invisible Disabilities Association (IDA)
-
§ 36.303(b)(1)
(1) Qualified interpreters, notetakers, computer-aided transcription services, written materials, exchange of written notes, telephone handset amplifiers, assistive listening devices, assistive...
-
Who Decides Which Aid or Service Is Needed?
Who Decides Which Aid or Service Is Needed?...
-
§ 38.159(d)(3) Mobility aids accommodated
(3) Mobility aids accommodated....
-
§ 38.23(d)(3) Mobility aids accommodated
(3) Mobility aids accommodated....
-
§27.127(f) Consolidation or joint hearings.
(f) Consolidation or joint hearings....
-
Mono Jacks, Sound Pressure, Etc
The 2010 Standards at section 706 require assistive listening systems to have standard mono jacks and will require hearing-aid compatible receivers to have neck loops to interface with telecoils...
-
§1193.41(d) Operable without hearing
(d) Operable without hearing. Provide at least one mode that does not require user auditory perception....
-
New Requirements for Assistive Listening Systems (ALS)
Hearing Aid Compatibility: 25% of the receivers must be hearing aid compatible, which means that the ALS receiver must be usable with an induction neckloop that interfaces with the telecoil...
-
§ 36.303(d)(1)(ii)
opportunity to make outgoing telephone calls on more than an incidental convenience basis shall make available, upon request, public telephones equipped with volume control mechanisms, hearing...
