Automated announcements are also expected to generate time savings by lessening (if not preventing) situations in which passengers with vision- or hearing-related disabilities disembark...
Search Results "Hearing Loop"
-
2. Benefits: Qualitative Summary of Benefits
-
Reasonable Accommodation
Example A: An employee with a hearing disability must be able to contact the public by telephone....
- East Texas Center for Independent Living (ETCIL) - Tyler, TX
- Social Security Disability Benefits Guide
- Wheelchair & Ambulatory Sports
-
Subpart F-Certification of State Laws or Local Building Codes (Section-by-Section Analysis)
., if the Assistant Attorney General makes a preliminary determination of equivalency, he or she shall hold an informal hearing in Washington, D.C.) be changed to a requirement that the...
- Acoustiguide Custom Mobile Applications for Exhibitions and Multimedia Content
- Clarity AL12 Visual Alert System
-
Executive Summary
to specifically address the obligations of public accommodations that own, operate, or lease movie theaters to provide equally effective communication to patrons who are deaf or hard of hearing...
-
Master the Art of Rhythm-Based Platform Gaming: A Beginner's Guide to Geometry Dash
If you're playing with external speakers, position yourself where you can hear the music clearly without distraction....
- Media Access Group at WGBH
- Delta Center for Independent Living (DCIL) - St. Peters, MO
-
Section 1630.10(a)—In General
This provision is applicable to all types of selection criteria, including safety requirements, vision or hearing requirements, walking requirements, lifting requirements, and employment...
-
II. Overview of Requirements
., prescription eyeglasses or hearing aids); or services of a personal nature including assistance in eating, toileting, or dressing....
-
Typical examples of reasonable accommodations are:
Providing instructions and information in writing for an employee with hearing loss. Allowing an employee to bring his or her service animal to work....
-
Issue: Program Accessibility
If a municipal building such as a courthouse is inaccessible, people with disabilities who use wheelchairs are unable to participate in jury duty, attend hearings, and gain access to other...
-
Q6. Does the Amendments Act address the "major life activities" referred to in the Section 504 and Title II regulations?
The list of major life activities in the ADA now includes, but is not limited to: caring for oneself performing manual tasks seeing hearing eating...
-
Four Specific Situations in which a Seating Accommodation Must be Provided
impairment who is traveling with a reader/assistant who will be performing functions for the passenger during the flight [Sec. 382.38(a)(2)(ii)]; or (iii) is a passenger who is deaf, hard of hearing...
-
i. EIT for effective communication in accessible rooms
facilities such as hospitals, nursing homes, hotels, or other places of lodging to permit effective communication by individuals with disabilities, including those who are deaf or hard of hearing...
-
4. c. CUSTOMER SERVICE and COMMUNICATION and ACCESS
Describes practical approaches to use when serving or waiting on customers with physical, visual, hearing, cognitive, intellectual, and psychiatric disabilities, as well as people with significant...
-
Scoping [4.1.3(5)]
This is required for several reasons: some people with mobility impairments can use stairs, ADAAG addresses access for people with hearing or vision impairments as well as mobility impairments...
-
3.2. Baselines
Until recently, few movie theaters actually provided auxiliary aids and services for movie patrons who are deaf or hard of hearing, or blind or have low vision, despite the increasing availability...
-
Audio Elements
In general, when utilizing headphones to receive audio description/content, users preferred to have their headsets cover only one ear so they could hear the environment around them....
-
Attachment A: NOTICE UNDER THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
services, and activities, including qualified sign language interpreters, documents in Braille, and other ways of making information and communications accessible to people who have speech, hearing...