Where wheelchair spaces are entered from the rear and includes space beneath components, wheelchair spaces shall include knee and toe clearances complying with M303.2.4.1 for breast...
Search Results "Patient with a Disability"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
M303.2.4 Equipment Clearances
-
M303.3.2 Beveled (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The MDE NPRM proposed that for equipment with a change in level at the entry to the wheelchair space, level changes greater than ¼ inch but not greater than ½ inch would be required...
-
M303.3.1 Vertical (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The MDE NPRM proposed that for equipment with a change in level at the entry to the wheelchair space, level changes of up to ¼ inch high are permitted to be vertical. This provision...
-
M303.2.4 Knee and Toe Clearance
Wheelchair spaces shall include knee and toe clearance complying with M303.2.4. The depth of the wheelchair space shall include knee and toe clearance of 17 inches (430 mm) minimum...
-
M303.2.4.1 Toe Clearance
Toe clearance shall be provided at a height of 9 inches (230 mm) above the floor to a depth of 6 inches (150 mm) maximum.
-
M303.3.1 Vertical
Changes in level of ¼ inch (6.4 mm) high maximum shall be permitted to be vertical.
-
M303.3.2 Beveled
Changes in level between ¼ inch (6.4 mm) high and ½ inch (13 mm) high maximum shall be beveled with a slope not steeper than 1:2.
-
M303.2.4.2 Knee Clearance
Knee clearance shall be provided at a depth of 11 inches (280 mm) minimum and 25 inches (635 mm) maximum at 9 inches (230 mm) above the floor and at a depth of 8 inches (205 mm)...
-
Reservations
Understanding what constitutes an accessible feature and how each feature serves guests with disabilities will enable staff to provide essential information to customers....
-
Accessible Route to Goods and Services
Accessible Route to Goods and Services The path a person with a disability takes to enter and move through your business is called an “accessible route.”...
-
You must provide timely access to the same information given to other passengers for those who are deaf, blind
You must provide blind or visually-impaired passengers and passengers who are deaf, hard of hearing, or deaf-blind, timely access to the same information given to other...
-
BUSINESSES AND NON-PROFIT SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS
BUSINESSES AND NON-PROFIT SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS The ADA prohibits discrimination by public accommodations, which include businesses and non-profit service organizations that...
-
How can I find out information on the number and types of disability-related complaints filed with DOT against specific airlines?
QUESTION: How can I find out information on the number and types of disability-related complaints filed with DOT against specific airlines?...
-
ADA Basic Building Blocks Course - Project of the ADA National Network
ADA Basic Building Blocks Course Project of the ADA National Network Course Overview "ADA Basic Building Blocks" is an introductory webcourse on the Americans with Disabilities...
-
Bullying and Harassment
is harassed or bullied on any basis (for example, bullied based on disability, or national origin, or homelessness, or appearance)....
-
Communication Access
Identifying disability biases (See Section B.) I.3....
-
§ 35.138(h) Prevention of fraudulent purchase of accessible seating
A public entity may not require proof of disability before selling a wheelchair space....
-
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(v) and 36.105(d)(1)(v)—Comparisons to Most People in the Population, and Impairment Need Not Prevent or Significantly or Severely Restrict a Major Life Activity
or mental impairments that would previously have been found to constitute disabilities are not considered disabilities under the Supreme Court’s narrower standard.’’ 154 Cong....
-
Bias Toward Wheelchair Users
Two commenters stated that the proposed guidelines were biased toward wheelchair users, and that the Department has erroneously assumed that the elderly and the physically disabled have...
-
§ 35.138(h) Prevention of fraud in purchase of tickets for accessible seating
A public entity may not require proof of disability, including, for example, a doctor's note, before selling tickets for accessible seating....
-
17. Q: Do I have to create another job for an employee who, because of disability, can no longer perform the essential functions of her job even with reasonable accommodation?
The ADA does not require an employer to create jobs for people with disabilities....
-
Fraudulent purchase of designated accessible seating. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
The Department continues to believe that requiring an individual to provide proof that he or she is a person with a disability is an unnecessary and burdensome invasion of privacy and may...
-
Communication Access
Effective Communication - The Department of Justice published revised final regulations implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for Title II (State and local government services...
-
Alterations to prison cells.
a correctional facility present challenges that are not an issue in other government buildings, so the Department must strike a balance between the accessibility needs of inmates with disabilities...