RELEVANT FACTUAL BACKGROUND Plaintiff David New, who is blind, alleges that in January 2014 he visited a Lucky Brand Jeans store in Miami, Florida, and attempted to purchase merchandise...
Search Results "Regulatory Background"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
David New, Plaintiff, v. Lucky Brand Dungarees Stores, Inc., d/b/a Lucky Brand Jeans, Defendant - Statement of Interest of the United States of America
-
5.1 Architectural Barriers Act (ABA).
constructed under authority of the National Capital Transportation Act of 1960, the National Capital Transportation Act of 1965, or Title III of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Regulatory...
-
Check-Out Aisles and Sales and Service Counters
Commenters recommended that the Department consider a regulatory alternative exempting small retailers from the new knee and toe clearance requirement and retaining existing wheelchair accessibility...
-
1. Executive Summary
access routes (see R302.3.2); • Permit compliance with the proposed technical provisions for the grade of pedestrian access routes to the extent practicable where physical constraints or regulatory...
-
Captioning, narrative description, and video interpreting services. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The Department is proposing to add video interpreting services (VIS) to the regulatory text and is discussing in this preamble options for addressing captioning and narrative description...
-
2. General Framework of Assessment
See Section VIII.F (Regulatory Process Matters – Paperwork Reduction Act)....
-
Miscellaneous Provisions
Nothing in this Agreement relates to other provisions of the ADA or affects UPDC’s obligations to comply with any other federal, state, or local statutory, administrative, regulatory, or...
-
Sections 35.108(a)(2) and 36.105(a)(2) Definition of ‘‘disability’’—Rules of Construction
final rule retains these provisions but renumbers them as paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of §§ 35.108(a)(2) and 36.105(a)(2) and replaces the reference to ‘‘covered entity’’ in the title III regulatory...
-
Section 37.139 Plan Contents
The Department's regulatory impact analysis discussing the probable costs involved in implementing this rule places the possible percentage of population who would be eligible for paratransit...
-
d. Estimated Cost of Compliance for Small Entities
See Table 38 in the Initial Regulatory Assessment and Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (available at http://www.ada.gov) for more information on how the figures in this table were...
-
Detectable Warning Surfaces on Curb Ramps (Section-by-Section Analysis)
specify detectable warning surfaces on curb ramps are available on the Access Board website at: https://www.access-board.gov/guidelines-and-standards/streets-sidewalks/public-rights-of-way/background...
-
Case Study #1: Auxiliary aids and services under Title II are different from special education and related services under the IDEA.
He also stated that the FM system transmitted static and background noises and interfered with his ability to focus....
-
Guest Rooms and In-Room Guest Services
Most guest room phones are in beige or another neutral color and do not have much contrast between the background color and the color in which graphic information and numbers are displayed...
- ADA25: #22 of 25 -- Preservation of Relay Services
- ADA25: #6 of 25 -- Title IV
- ADA25: #10 of 25 -- Hospital: VRI
-
Section 35.151(b) Alterations
Section 35.151(b) Alterations The 1991 title II regulation does not contain any specific regulatory language comparable to the 1991 title III regulation relating to alterations and path...
-
Audio Description (Section-by-Section Analysis)
36.303(g)(2) (movie captioning), the Department believes that given the availability of audio-description technology, and in light of the purpose and goals of the ADA and its statutory and regulatory...
-
Section 35.151(b) Alterations (Section-by-Section Analysis)
Section 35.151(b) Alterations (Section-by-Section Analysis) The 1991 title II regulation does not contain any specific regulatory language comparable to the 1991 title III regulation...
-
Accessible Route
Some commenters recommended additional regulatory language specifying that an exception from a pedestrian route requirement should be allowed only when a golf car passage provides unobstructed...
-
Swimming pools. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
In its 2002 regulatory assessment for the recreation guidelines, the Access Board assumed that pools with less than 300 feet of linear pool wall would represent ninety percent (90%) of the...
-
Two-tiered definitional approach. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
On balance, however, business commenters indicated that they support the establishment of a two-tiered regulatory approach because defining ‘‘other power-driven mobility device'' separately...
-
A. Statutory and rulemaking history
Under the regulatory provisions governing reasonable modifications of policies, practices, or procedures, program accessibility, effective communication, and barrier removal, the Department...
-
B. The 2010 Standards Regarding Public Entrances Are Intended To Achieve the Same Result As the 1991 Standards Regarding Public Entrances
. § 36.201 (regulatory language mirroring the statutory prohibition against discrimination on the basis of disability). ...