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Search Results "HCO: Hearing Carry Over"
Commonly Searched Documents
- inLOOP Personal inLOOP Assistive Listening System
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Receivers and Couplers
People often choose to wear their hearing aids while using assistive listening systems. It is important that couplers or receivers be compatible with hearing aids....
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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 passengers...
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5. What may an employer do when it learns that an applicant has or had a hearing impairment after she has been offered a job but before she starts working?
has had the hearing impairment; what, if any, hearing the applicant has; what specific hearing limitations the individual experiences; and what, if any, reasonable accommodations the applicant...
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§27.7(c) Communications
Recipients shall take appropriate steps to ensure that communications with their applicants, employees, and beneficiaries are available to persons with impaired vision and hearing....
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Public Address Systems
public address systems are provided in transportation facilities to convey public information, a means of conveying the same or equivalent information to persons who are deaf or hard of hearing...
- International Hearing Society (IHS)
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§ 38.159(d)(4) Orientation
(4) Orientation. At least one securement device or system required by paragraph (a) of this section shall secure the wheelchair or mobility aid facing toward the front of the...
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§ 38.159(c)(4) Ramp barriers
(4) Ramp barriers. Each side of the ramp shall have barriers at least 2 inches (50 mm) high to prevent mobility aid wheels from slipping off.
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§ 38.161 Moveable aisle armrests
A minimum of 50% of aisle seats, including all moveable or removable seats at wheelchair or mobility aide securement locations, shall have an armrest on the aisle side which can...
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§ 38.155 Interior circulation, handrails and stanchions
[See subsections ...]
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B. Restrooms
B. Restrooms. The following is provided to assist manufacturers and designers to create restrooms which can be used by people with disabilities. These specifications are derived from...
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§ 38.153(a)
(a) Floor surfaces on aisles, step treads and areas where wheelchair and mobility aid users are to be accommodated shall be slip-resistant.
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§ 38.159(b)(9) Platform deflection
(9) Platform deflection. The lift platform (not including the entrance ramp) shall not deflect more than 3 degrees (exclusive of vehicle roll or pitch) in any direction between its...
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§ 38.159(b)(3) Emergency operation
(3) Emergency operation. The lift shall incorporate an emergency method of deploying, lowering to ground level with a lift occupant, and raising and stowing the empty lift if the...
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§ 38.159(b)(2) Controls
(2) Controls—
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§ 38.159(c)(7) Stowage
(7) Stowage. A compartment, securement system, or other appropriate method shall be provided to ensure that stowed ramps, including portable ramps stowed in the passenger area, do...
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§ 38.159(b)(12) Use by standees
(12) Use by standees. Lifts shall accommodate persons using walkers, crutches, canes or braces or who otherwise have difficulty using steps. The platform may be marked to indicate a...
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§ 38.159(b)(1) Design load
(1) Design load. The design load of the lift shall be at least 600 pounds (2665 N). Working parts, such as cables, pulleys, and shafts, which can be expected to wear, and upon which...
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Attachment E: GUIDE FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS
Remember that deaf or hard of hearing persons must be able to understand you as well as those who do not have hearing impairments....
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Assistive listening systems. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
impairments, especially those using hearing aids....
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§ 1194.23(i)
(i) Interference to hearing technologies (including hearing aids, cochlear implants, and assistive listening devices) shall be reduced to the lowest possible level that allows a user of...
- The Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA)
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Communication. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
Commenters said that the communication features in the 2004 ADAAG do not address the most common barriers that deaf and hard-of-hearing inmates face....