However, at least half of all self-service shelves in restaurant and cafeteria food service lines are required to be accessible in ADAAG 5.5....
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Scoping [4.1.3(12)]
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3. What types of complaints does the ADA Mediation Program resolve?
interpreters to a patient who is deaf or alternate formats of written materials to a patient's spouse who is blind; Modification of policies, practices, and procedures: alleging that a restaurant...
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Service animals.
covered as individuals with disabilities--are claiming that their animals are legitimate service animals, whether fraudulently or sincerely (albeit mistakenly), to gain access to hotels, restaurants...
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1. Q: Does the Americans with Disabilities Act -- or "ADA" -- apply to child care centers?
Privately-run child care centers -- like other public accommodations such as private schools, recreation centers, restaurants, hotels, movie theaters, and banks -- must comply with title...
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Relationship to Other Laws
For example, a quick service restaurant in an airport is a public accommodation subject to title III. ...
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Examples of effective communication are:
Examples of effective communication are: At a restaurant, the waiter can read the menu to a person with vision loss....
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Policies and Procedures
A restaurant that restricts seating of people with disabilities to one area must revise the policy to permit the range of choices enjoyed by others....
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Facility
In lounges, bars, and restaurants, low tables are required (at least 5% of the total number of tables). Pedestal tables rarely comply. A lower counter for check-in is required....
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Alterations Affecting Primary Function Areas [§202.4]
Examples of primary function areas include dining areas of a restaurant, retail space in a store, exam rooms in a doctor’s office, classrooms in a school, and offices and other work areas...
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IV. Eligibility for Goods and Services
For example, excluding individuals with cerebral palsy from a movie theater or restricting individuals with Down's Syndrome to only certain areas of a restaurant would violate the regulation...
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A. Signs
[ADA Stds. 4.1.3(16)(a)] All guestrooms Yes __ No __ N/A __ Comments: ___________________________________________ Restaurants, other food service areas, and vending/ice machine...
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II. ACTIONS TO BE TAKEN BY PALACE SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT, LLC:
barriers identified in the United States' site survey referenced in paragraph 8 above, including improving accessibility in restrooms on all levels, improving accessibility and service in restaurants...
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BACKGROUND
Part 36, by, among other ways, failing to make the Hotel and its amenities, including its restaurants, spa, and pool, readily accessible to and usable by individuals with disabilities. ...
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III-3.8000 Direct threat
ILLUSTRATION: Refusal to admit an individual to a restaurant because he or she is infected with HIV would be a violation, because the HIV virus cannot be transmitted through casual contact...
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I. Who is Covered by Title III of the ADA
Places of public accommodation include over five million private establishments, such as restaurants, hotels, theaters, convention centers, retail stores, shopping centers, dry cleaners,...
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A. Changes in Level
Yes __ No __ N/A __ Comments: ___________________________________________ ...the lobby and any restaurants, other dining areas, and vending/ice machine areas?...
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Section 36.206 Retaliation or Coercion (Preamble, Section-by-Section Analysis)
., a restaurant customer, to harass or intimidate an individual with a disability in an effort to prevent that individual from patronizing the restaurant....
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Can a public accommodation exclude a person with HIV or AIDS because that person allegedly poses a direct threat to the health and safety of others?
For example: A restaurant’s refusal to admit an individual with AIDS would violate the ADA, because HIV cannot be transmitted through the casual contact that occurs in a restaurant...