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Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA)
The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in
employment, State and local government, public accommodations,
commercial facilities, transportation, and telecommunications. It also
applies to the United States Congress.
To be protected by the ADA, one must have a disability or have a
relationship or association with an individual with a disability. An
individual with a disability is defined by the ADA as a person who has a
physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more
major life activities, a person who has a history or record of such an
impairment, or a person who is perceived by others as having such an
impairment. The ADA does not specifically name all of the impairments
that are covered.
ADA Title I: Employment
Title I requires employers with 15 or more employees to provide
qualified individuals with disabilities an equal opportunity to benefit
from the full range of employment-related opportunities available to
others. For example, it prohibits discrimination in recruitment, hiring,
promotions, training, pay, social activities, and other privileges of
employment. It restricts questions that can be asked about an
applicant's disability before a job offer is made, and it requires that
employers make reasonable accommodation to the known physical or mental
limitations of otherwise qualified individuals with disabilities, unless
it results in undue hardship. Religious entities with 15 or more
employees are covered under title I.
ADA Title II: State and Local Government Activities
Title II covers all activities of State and local governments regardless
of the government entity's size or receipt of Federal funding. Title II
requires that State and local governments give people with disabilities
an equal opportunity to benefit from all of their programs, services,
and activities (e.g. public education, employment, transportation,
recreation, health care, social services, courts, voting, and town
meetings).
State and local governments are required to follow specific
architectural standards in the new construction and alteration of their
buildings. They also must relocate programs or otherwise provide access
in inaccessible older buildings, and communicate effectively with people
who have hearing, vision, or speech disabilities. Public entities are
not required to take actions that would result in undue financial and
administrative burdens. They are required to make reasonable
modifications to policies, practices, and procedures where necessary to
avoid discrimination, unless they can demonstrate that doing so would
fundamentally alter the nature of the service, program, or activity
being provided.
ADA Title II: Public Transportation
The transportation provisions of title II cover public transportation
services, such as city buses and public rail transit (e.g. subways,
commuter rails, Amtrak). Public transportation authorities may not
discriminate against people with disabilities in the provision of their
services. They must comply with requirements for accessibility in newly
purchased vehicles, make good faith efforts to purchase or lease
accessible used buses, remanufacture buses in an accessible manner, and,
unless it would result in an undue burden, provide paratransit where
they operate fixed-route bus or rail systems. Paratransit is a service
where individuals who are unable to use the regular transit system
independently (because of a physical or mental impairment) are picked up
and dropped off at their destinations.
ADA Title III: Public Accommodations
Title III covers businesses and nonprofit service providers that are
public accommodations, privately operated entities offering certain
types of courses and examinations, privately operated transportation,
and commercial facilities. Public accommodations are private entities
who own, lease, lease to, or operate facilities such as restaurants,
retail stores, hotels, movie theaters, private schools, convention
centers, doctors' offices, homeless shelters, transportation depots,
zoos, funeral homes, day care centers, and recreation facilities
including sports stadiums and fitness clubs. Transportation services
provided by private entities are also covered by title III.
Public accommodations must comply with basic nondiscrimination
requirements that prohibit exclusion, segregation, and unequal
treatment. They also must comply with specific requirements related to
architectural standards for new and altered buildings; reasonable
modifications to policies, practices, and procedures; effective
communication with people with hearing, vision, or speech disabilities;
and other access requirements. Additionally, public accommodations must
remove barriers in existing buildings where it is easy to do so without
much difficulty or expense, given the public accommodation's resources.
Courses and examinations related to professional, educational, or
trade-related applications, licensing, certifications, or credentialing
must be provided in a place and manner accessible to people with
disabilities, or alternative accessible arrangements must be offered.
Commercial facilities, such as factories and warehouses, must comply
with the ADA's architectural standards for new construction and
alterations.
ADA Title IV: Telecommunications Relay
Services
Title IV addresses telephone and television access for people with
hearing and speech disabilities. It requires common carriers (telephone
companies) to establish interstate and intrastate telecommunications
relay services (TRS) 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TRS enables callers
with hearing and speech disabilities who use telecommunications devices
for the deaf (TDDs), which are also known as teletypewriters (TTYs), and
callers who use voice telephones to communicate with each other through
a third party communications assistant. The Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) has set minimum standards for TRS services. Title IV
also requires closed captioning of Federally funded public service
announcements.
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