Tonka is a miniature horse service animal trained for mobility support. His owner lives in Oregon. He was trained by Donna Scarpa of The Tiny Trotters in Los Osos, CA....
Search Results "Mobility Assistance Animal"
Commonly Searched Documents
- Tonka's Job - A Mobility Assistance Animal Video
-
Animal Containment Areas: ADA Standard Section 203.12
Section 203.12 covers scoping requirements of general exceptions for animal containment areas in the most current ADA Standards.
-
ADA Requirements - Service Animals
Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Disability Rights Section Service Animals The Department of Justice published revised final regulations implementing the Americans...
-
Facilities Specializing in Treating Conditions That Affect Mobility: ADA Standard Section 223.2.2
Section 223.2.2 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for facilities specializing in treating conditions that affect mobility.
-
Tips for Communicating with Individuals with Mobility Impairments
Do not lean on a wheelchair or any other assistive device. Never patronize people who use wheelchairs by patting them on the head or shoulder....
-
Residential Dwelling Units with Mobility Features: ADA Standard Section 233.3.1.1
Section 233.3.1.1 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for residential dwelling units with mobility features.
-
Personal Assistants and Service Animals
Both personal assistants and service animals may be used to assist with mobility, balance, navigation, communication, and other issues that result from a wide variety of conditions,...
-
IS ASSISTANCE REQUIRED?
[See subsections ...]
-
Can things other than wheelchairs or canes be assistive devices?
QUESTION: Can things other than wheelchairs or canes be assistive devices? What exactly does part 382 mean when it refers to assistive devices?...
-
Facilities Not Specializing in Treating Conditions That Affect Mobility: ADA Standard Section 223.2.1
Section 223.2.1 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for facilities not specializing in treating conditions that affect mobility.
-
Cells with Mobility Features: ADA Standard Section 807.2
Cells required to provide mobility features shall comply with 807.2....
-
Service Animals
For example, many people who are blind or have low vision use dogs to guide and assist them with orientation. Many individuals who are deaf use dogs to alert them to sounds....
-
2. Q: What is a service animal?
A: The ADA defines a service animal as any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability....
-
Cells with Mobility Features: ADA Standard Section 232.2.1
Section 232.2.1 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for cells with mobility features.
-
Service Animals
People with mobility disabilities often use dogs to pull their wheelchairs or retrieve items....
- Service Animals for Business Owners
-
Guest Rooms with Mobility Features: ADA Standard Section 806.2
Guest rooms required to provide mobility features shall comply with 806.2. Advisory 806.2 Guest Rooms....
-
QUESTION: WHAT KINDS OF ANIMALS ARE REGARDED AS SERVICE ANIMALS?
39.3, 39.91 QUESTION: WHAT KINDS OF ANIMALS ARE REGARDED AS SERVICE ANIMALS?...
-
5. Service Animals
Service Animals. The rule defines "service animal" as a dog that has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability....
-
5. Service Animals
Service Animals. The rule defines "service animal" as a dog that has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability....
-
Service Animals
of hearing to the presence of people or sounds, providing non-violent protection or rescue work, pulling a wheelchair, assisting an individual during a seizure, alerting individuals to...
-
Guest Rooms with Mobility Features: ADA Standard Section 224.2
Section 224.2 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for transient lodging guest rooms with mobility features.
-
Service Animal:
Any animal that is individually trained or able to provide assistance to a qualified person with a disability or any animal shown by documentation to be necessary for the emotional well...
-
DEFINITION: SERVICE ANIMAL
A “service animal” is now defined as any dog* individually trained to do work or perform tasks benefitting [sic] an individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric...