The Department believes that access to movies for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing or are blind or have low vision should not depend upon where they live.17 Consequently, the...
Search Results "Hearing Loop"
-
3. Voluntary Compliance
-
4. Availability of Movies with Captioning and Audio Description
That said, movie studios appear committed to making their movies accessible to individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing or blind or have low vision, and the Department commends their...
-
"Video Remote Interpreting (VRI) Services'' (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The video phone provides video transmission to a video monitor that permits the individual who is deaf or hard of hearing to view and sign to a video interpreter (i.e., a live interpreter...
-
Disability Emergency Supplies Kits
(Items such as teeth, hearing aids, prostheses, canes, crutches, walkers, wheelchairs, respirators, communication devices, artificial larynx, sanitary aids, batteries, eye glasses, contact...
-
Section 1194.31 Functional Performance Criteria (Preamble, Section-by-Section Analysis)
who are deaf or hard of hearing shall be provided....
-
Communication Access
We ask “will you need any assistance with getting on and off a table, walking, seeing, reading, hearing, filling out forms, communicating, speaking, during your appointment?...
- Door King Inc. 6050 / 6100 Residential and Commercial Swing Gate Operator
-
A. The ADA and Its Legislative History
The statute specifies that auxiliary aids and services include effective methods of making aurally or visually delivered materials available to individuals with hearing disabilities or vision...
-
Athletics and Extracurricular Activities
must first engage in an individualized inquiry to determine whether the modification is necessary. 106 As a result of this inquiry, a school district may find, for example, that a hard-of-hearing...
-
Recognizing TTY Calls/Treating Silent, Open Lines as Potential TTY Calls
Some TTYs emit a recorded spoken announcement to the call taker that a TTY call is being placed, such as "HEARING IMPAIRED CALLER. USE TTY."...
-
How to access video description
Depending upon the program being viewed, when listening to the secondary audio, you may hear the primary audio with video description, Spanish or other language translation, a duplicate...
-
Accessibility to Perform the Essential Functions of the Job
removing obstacles that might be potential hazards in the path of people without vision; adding flashing lights when alarm bells are normally used, to alert an employee with a hearing...
-
Scoping Requirement for Alarms
Many commenters supported ensuring that such alarm systems are accessible to people who are deaf or hard of hearing, but no information was received on appropriate technical specifications...
-
SUMMARY
installation is needed to assure that it meets the goals of providing accurate and helpful information to pedestrians who have vision impairments, particularly those who may also have hearing...
-
Blind or Low Vision
Many people who are blind depend on their sense of touch and hearing to perceive their environment....
-
Appropriate and inappropriate phrases to describe persons with disabilities
or visually impaired The blind Person with a disability The disabled; handicapped Person who is deaf or hard of hearing...
-
Personal Devices and Services
does not require a public entity to provide to individuals with disabilities personal devices, such as wheelchairs; individually prescribed devices, such as prescription eyeglasses or hearing...
-
503.4 User Controls for Captions and Audio Description (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The Advisory Committee recommended inclusion of these provisions to ensure that persons with hearing- and vision-related disabilities can find—and use—captioning and audio description controls...
-
Hall Lanterns [4.10.4]
Visual signals provide this information to people who are deaf or hard of hearing. At least one visible signal must serve each car....
-
III-3.4300 Modifications in the regular program
to provide an interpreter for a different tour, or the museum's obligation to provide a different auxiliary aid, such as an assistive listening device, for an individual with impaired hearing...
-
Q. What kinds of actions are required to reasonably accommodate applicants and employees?
Employers are not required to lower quality or quantity standards in order to make an accommodation, nor are they obligated to provide personal use items such as glasses or hearing aids....
-
II-3.4400 Modifications in the regular program
to provide an interpreter for a different tour, or the museum's obligation to provide a different auxiliary aid, such as an assistive listening device, for an individual with impaired hearing...
-
Background
These range from umbrella terms such as “assistance animal” to specific labels such as “hearing,” “signal,” “seizure alert,” “psychiatric service,” “emotional support” animal, etc. that...
-
Section 9, Accessible Transient Lodging (Preamble, Section-by-Section Analysis)
Four percent of the first hundred rooms, and roughly two percent of rooms in excess of 100, must meet certain requirements for accessibility to persons with mobility or hearing impairments...