Call 1-800-949-4ADA
for Technical Assistance
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) calls for businesses to make their facilities, goods, and services accessible to all people with disabilities. The ADA is good business because access for everyone is the key to attracting new customers and retaining those you now serve.
This Guide will help you work creatively to comply with requirements of the public accommodations section of the Act for existing businesses. It contains suggestions for readily achievable-cheap and easy-methods for removing architectural barriers; methods for achieving effective communication; and guidance for determining whether your policies or procedures might exclude some people with disabilities.
To make sure that the Guide provides practical answers to your questions, seven Better Business Bureaus in different regions of the country brought together local business leaders and disability rights groups to discuss their concerns and questions about compliance. Instructive answers to the most frequently asked questions are included.
The Guide was produced by the Council of Better Business Bureaus'
Foundation in conjunction with the Disability Rights Education and
Defense Fund (DREDF). Initial funding was provided by the
U.S. Department of Justice. The Foundation and DREDF have
joined together in a partnership for compliance to help small and
mid-sized businesses understand what they have to do to comply
with the ADA.
Copyright 1992
Council of Better Business Bureaus' Foundation
The Council of Better Business Bureaus' members are 400 national corporations and more than 150 Better Business Bureaus around the country whose members are 250,000 small and mid-sized businesses. The Council's Foundation is an education and research organization.
DREDF is a national law and policy center dedicated to furthering the civil rights of people with disabilities. It is managed and directed by people with disabilities and parents of children with disabilities. DREDF is universally credited for their leadership in the passage of the ADA.
We are working together to promote voluntary compliance with the Act. Businesses that fail to comply are subject to administrative complaints, lawsuits, and fines. People in business who read this Guide will learn that compliance really is good for business.
We thank all who helped produce this Guide: the Better Business Bureaus of Austin, Boston, Denver, Fresno, New Orleans, Philadelphia, and Toledo; the participating local business and disability leaders; the staff and consultants of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, the Foundation, and DREDF; and the staff of the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.
Barbara Bode, Executive Director, Council of Better Business Bureaus' Foundation
Liz Savage, National Director of Training and Technical Assistance, Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
July, 1992
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) is the nation's first comprehensive civil rights law for people with disabilities. The ADA changes the way America does business.
The ADA aims to eliminate discrimination against people with disabilities
by ensuring equal opportunity in employment, state and local government
services and programs, places of public accommodation, public and
private transportation, and telecommunications. This publication
provides an overview of Title III of the Act, Public Accommodations,
with a specific emphasis on
requirements for existing facilities and current service practices.
Under the ADA, a person with a disability is someone with a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, or someone with a record of such an impairment, or one who is regarded as having such an impairment.
Examples of disabilities include orthopedic, visual, speech, and
hearing impairments; cerebral palsy; epilepsy; muscular dystrophy;
multiple sclerosis; cancer; heart disease; diabetes; mental retardation;
psychiatric disability; specific learning disabilities; HIV disease
(whether symptomatic or
asymptomatic); tuberculosis; drug addiction (although people who
are currently illegally using drugs are not covered); and alcoholism.
Title III of the ADA specifies twelve types of entities that, regardless of size, are public accommodations: places of lodging, exhibition or entertainment, public gathering, public display or collection, recreation, and exercise; private educational institutions; establishments serving food or drink; sales or rental establishments; service establishments; stations used for specific public transportation; and social service center establishments.
Title III went into effect on January 26, 1992, for all covered businesses, including small ones. However, small businesses have been given a grace period before legal action can be taken against them. For businesses with 10 or fewer employees and gross annual receipts of less than $500,000, the grace period extends until January 26, 1993. This grace period does not apply to violations of the ADA's requirements for new construction or alterations.
The ADA identifies actions that discriminate against people with disabilities. In general, denial of the right to participate and unequal or separate treatment are prohibited by the ADA. For example, a business cannot ask a person with a disability to leave because an employee or another customer is uncomfortable with that person's disability or because its insurance company conditions coverage or rates on the absence of people with disabilities. Nor, for example, can people with disabilities be limited to attending only certain performances at a theater.
Title III requires that public accommodations provide their services to people with disabilities in the most integrated setting possible.
Public accommodations are required to make reasonable modifications to their policies, practices, and procedures in order to make their goods and services available to people with disabilities unless the business can demonstrate that a modification would fundamentally alter the nature of the goods or services provided. For example, an auto rental agency with a policy requiring that the person who will be driving the vehicle must pay for the rental of the vehicle would be required to modify that policy by making an exception to allow the person with a disability who has arranged for someone else to drive to rent the vehicle using a credit card, provided the driver of the vehicle has valid driver's license.
A public accommodation is not allowed to apply eligibility criteria
for its goods or services that tend to, or that actually do, screen
out people with disabilities except when the criteria are necessary
to provide the goods or services that are being offered. For
example, an automobile dealer cannot
require an individual to state on a credit application whether the
applicant has a disability because this information is not relevant
to obtaining credit approval and could be used to exclude a customer
illegally from credit eligibility.
The ADA also requires that any criteria used be applied fairly
and equally to all members of the public. It prohibits public
accommodations from basing their eligibility criteria on assumptions
that would unnecessarily exclude individuals with disabilities who,
in fact, are eligible to participate in an
activity.
Public accommodations are required to communicate effectively with customers or clients who are deaf or hard of hearing or who have speech or vision impairments by whatever means are appropriate. In the ADA, the term "auxiliary aids and services" refers to the means for achieving effective communication. This term includes sign language interpreters; written materials; assistive listening devices; Telecommunication Devices for the Deaf (TDDs); taped, brailled, or large print materials; readers; and other communication tools.
The auxiliary aid requirement is a flexible one. The goal is to find an effective means of communication that is appropriate for the particular circumstance. For example, interpreters are not required if a deaf customer has come into an automobile sales showroom merely to look at the latest models. The dealer would be able to communicate general information about models available by providing brochures, exchanging notes by pen and note pad, or taking turns at a computer keyboard. However, this means of communication may not be sufficient in complex consumer transactions such as those necessary when a deaf individual becomes serious about buying a car.
A business is not required to provide any particular auxiliary aid or service that it can demonstrate would fundamentally alter the nature of the goods or services being provided or would result in an undue burden on the business. It must, however, provide those needed auxiliary aids and services that would not result in an undue burden. "Undue burden" is defined as significant difficulty or expense when considered in light of a variety of factors including the nature and cost of the auxiliary aid or service and the overall financial and other resources of the business. The undue burden standard is intended to be applied on a case-by-case basis.
Public accommodations are required to remove architectural barriers-those elements of a facility that impede access by people with disabilities-to ensure access for customers, clients, or patrons where it is possible to do so in a readily achievable manner. Examples of barriers are curbs and steps; narrow exterior and interior doorways and aisles; rest room doorways and stalls that are too narrow for use by a person who uses a wheelchair; and inaccessible drinking fountains and telephones.
The ADA defines "readily achievable" as "easily accomplishable and able to be carried out without much difficulty or expense." Examples of barrier removal possibilities include providing a ramp for one or even several steps, widening doorways, reconfiguring display shelves to increase aisle width, widening bathroom doorways, moving toilet stall partitions, and installing grab bars.
The readily achievable standard does not require barrier removal that involves extensive restructuring or burdensome expense. Required barrier removal for a particular public accommodation will depend on its financial and other resources. The readily achievable standard is intended to be a flexible one that is applied on a case-by-case basis.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has recommended an order of priorities for barrier removal that it urges businesses to follow. First, provide access from parking areas, sidewalks, and entrances to the public accommodation so a person with a disability can "get through the door." Second, provide access to those areas where goods and services are provided. Third, provide access to rest room facilities when they are open to the public. Fourth, take other measures to provide access to the goods, services, or facilities.
Landlord and tenant-Allocation of responsibility for complying with Title III of the ADA
Both the landlord who owns the building where a public accommodation is located and the tenant who owns or operates the public accommodation are responsible for compliance with Title III. They may allocate between themselves the responsibility for meeting their mutual obligations however they wish.
Allocation of responsibilities between landlord and tenant for removing barriers when readily achievable, providing auxiliary aids and services, and modifying policies, both in common areas as well as within places of public accommodation, may be determined by the lease or other contract between the parties. Alterations clauses in a lease often spell out what a tenant is allowed to do within leased space, while compliance clauses allocate responsibility to one party or another for compliance with federal, state, and local laws.
Tenants are advised to review ADA obligations with their landlords. Those tenants who are entering into new leases should negotiate and allocate responsibility for ADA compliance with their landlord. Failure to determine, allocate, and execute ADA responsibility may result in either the tenant's or landlord's liability for noncompliance.
The Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines (ADAAG) issued by the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board can serve as a guide for identifying the various kinds of measures that can be taken to remove barriers and as a guide for how best to remove them.
If there are steps to the front entrance and the front door is very narrow, businesses must provide a ramp and widen the door according to ADAAG standards if it is readily achievable to do so. If it is not readily achievable to follow the ADAAG standards for ramps and doorways, public accommodations must take other safe, readily achievable measures, such as installation of a slightly narrower door or a narrower door or a slightly steeper ramp than that permitted by the ADAAG. Although these barrier removal measures would not meet the ADAAG standards for alterations, they would nevertheless afford significant access for many customers or clients.
Where some elements of a facility come very close to meeting the ADAAG standards and others fall far short, public accommodations are advised to put first priority on removing the barriers that most deviate from ADAAG standards. For example, if the front entrance already has a ramp that is just slightly steeper than that permitted by the ADAAG and the front door is just slightly narrower than that permitted by the ADAAG, but elements in interior areas that serve clients or customers are wholly inaccessible, public accommodations should turn their attention first to the barriers that are the biggest impediments for their customers or clients. They should remove those that can be removed in a readily achievable manner before turning their attention to elements that deviate only slightly from the ADAAG standards.
It is a good idea for public accommodations to become familiar with the full array of access concerns that the ADAAG addresses.
For a free copy of the ADAAG contact:
Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board
1331 F. Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004-1111
(800)USA-ABLE (Voice/TDD)
Readily achievable barrier removal is a continuing obligation. Barrier removal that was not readily achievable initially may later be required because the public accommodation has more resources available. Therefore, a public accommodation must continually monitor its accessibility as well as its financial and other resources and engage in barrier removal as new measures become readily achievable.
Achieving effective communication for people with disabilities is also a continuing obligation. Auxiliary aids that were not required initially because they pose an undue burden may be required later in light of changing resources or changing technologies.
If providing access by removing barriers is not readily achievable, the law requires public accommodations to provide readily achievable alternatives to barrier removal. For example, if an automobile dealer cannot eliminate barriers to the showroom, sales negotiations could be conducted at another location or at the customer's home.
Public accommodations may not assess any surcharges on individuals with disabilities for auxiliary aids and services, barrier removal, or alternative measures taken in lieu of barrier removal.
Title III requires that physical alterations to public accommodations undertaken after January 26, 1992, be readily accessible to and usable by people with disabilities to the maximum extent feasible. The term "alterations" refers to changes a business is undertaking for its own purposes, such as renovation, and does not refer to steps a business takes to comply with the ADA's requirements for barrier removal. Alterations that affect or could affect usability are required to be accessible.
When alterations are made to "primary function areas"-work areas
and areas used by the public-alterations must also be made to provide
an accessible path of travel to the altered areas. "Path of
travel" means access to rest rooms, telephones, and drinking fountains
serving the area. The cost of providing an accessible path
of travel need not exceed 20 percent of the total cost of
the original alterations.
All newly constructed facilities must be readily accessible to and usable by people with disabilities if a completed application for a building permit or permit extension was filed after January 25, 1992, and the facility is occupied after January 26, 1993.
The technical standards for accessible new construction and alterations are set out in the ADAAG.
Congress and DOJ recognize that businesses not only are unique but also have different financial and other resources. Although most public accommodations will have to do something to comply with the ADA, the law allows businesses to determine on a case-by-case bases what steps must be taken to comply.
Congress also has amended the Internal Revenue Code to include tax incentives for businesses that incur expenses in removing barriers or increasing accessibility for people with disabilities. The "Tax Deduction to Remove Architectural and Transportation Barriers to People with Disabilities and Elderly Individuals" (Title 26, Internal Revenue Code, Section 190) allows a deduction for "qualified architectural and transportation barrier removal expenses" not to exceed $15,000 for any taxable year. The "Disabled Access Tax Credit" (Title 26, Internal Revenue Code, Section 44) is available to eligible small businesses with 30 or fewer employees or $1 million or less in gross annual receipts. This provision allows a tax credit of 50 percent of eligible access expenditures tat exceed $250 but do not exceed $10,250 made for the purpose of complying with the ADA during the tax year.
For more information on these tax provisions, contact the Internal Revenue Service, Office of the Chief Counsel, PO BOX 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044, (202) 62203110 (voice only).
Please note that this Guide provides only an overview of the ADA. There may be other requirements that are not discussed here but that do apply to your business. Detailed information about a business' obligations with respect to employment are not covered, and requirements for new construction and alterations of existing facilities are discussed only briefly.
The following section answers some common questions about compliance with the public accommodations section of the ADA raised by restaurant and bar owners.
Q. Are restaurants and bars required to have TDDs (Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf?)
A. No. For making calls to and receiving calls from customers with hearing or speech impairments who use TDDs, grocery stores will be able to rely on the relay systems that telephone companies must establish by July 26, 1993. Operators employed by relay systems will relay communications between TDD- users and people using conventional telephones. Only those businesses that allow customers to make outgoing calls on more than an incidental convenience basis must provide TDDs.
Restaurants and bars can ensure effective communication by training staff who answer the telephone to anticipate incoming calls through the relay services. Handling these calls may take longer because an operator at the relay system will be receiving typed communications from the caller and will also be using the relay system equipment to type communications from the staff person to the caller. Training should be undertaken as soon as possible because at least 40 states already offer some type of relay service.
For your information, however, a TDD is relatively inexpensive,
usually costing about $275 and would be a welcome service for customers
with hearing or speech impairments. If you have a TDD, be
sure to list your telephone number followed by "Voice/TDD" in any
publications or advertisements to signify that customers can communicate
with you by voice or TDD.
Q. Are restaurants and bars that offer parking required to provide accessible parking spaces for people with mobility impairments? If such parking is required, how many spaces must be provided?
A. Yes. If a restaurant or bar owns and operates the parking lot, it must provide accessible parking if it is readily achievable to do so. If an retail store is a tenant, responsibility for providing accessible parking rests with both the landlord and the tenant. These responsibilities may be allocated between the landlord and tenant in the lease or other contract.
The spaces must comply with the dimensions specified in the ADAAG if it is readily achievable to meet those standards. The ADAAG also specifies a formula for determining the number of accessible spaces which must be followed if it is readily achievable to do so. If it is not readily achievable to comply with the ADAAG standards for the number and dimensions of accessible spaces, a retail store must provide as many spaces as readily achievable and of readily achievable dimensions.
If it is not readily achievable to provide any accessible spaces,
a retail store must provide readily achievable alternatives to barrier
removal. For example, retail stores could consider providing
valet parking as an alternative method of providing access.
Q. Are restaurants and bars required to remove barriers posed by sidewalk curbs?
A. Curb cuts (also known as curb ramps) enable people who use wheelchairs or other mobility devices to have ready access to businesses. If the only parking available is on a city street and the business does not have ownership or control of the sidewalk, the municipality, not the store, is responsible for providing curb ramps. If a grocery store owns or controls the sidewalk, it must provide curb ramps if readily achievable. If a restaurant or bar is a tenant, responsibility for providing curb ramps rests with both the landlord and the tenant.
The ADAAG establishes standards for construction of curb ramps
that must be followed if readily achievable.
Q. Must all entrances to restaurants and bars be accessible?
No, but one entrance, preferably the main entrance, must be accessible, making it possible for people with disabilities to "get through the door." For many businesses, ramping one step or even several steps will be readily achievable.
Installation of a permanent ramp, rather than a portable one, is required unless such installation is not readily achievable. If a public accommodation cannot meet the ADAAG's technical requirement for ramps because of space or other limitations, it can deviate slightly from these specifications as long as the ramp is still safe.
If a permanent ramp cannot be installed, a portable ramp must be used if readily achievable. Portable, i.e., moveable, ramps also must be safe. Most portable ramps are relatively inexpensive to purchase or construct.
A restaurant or bar using a portable ramp should install a doorbell or intercom (with an appropriate sign) to summon an employee to bring the ramp to the door if readily achievable. If the accessible entrance is one other than the main entrance, a sign at the main entrance should indicate where the accessible entrance is located.
If none of these access options is readily achievable, alternative
means to provide service must be considered, such as curbside service
at no additional charge.
Q. How does a restaurant or bar know if the doorway for the accessible entrance is wide enough for customers who use wheelchairs or other mobility devices?
A. The ADAAG standard states that a minimum of 32 inches of clear opening measured between the face of the door and the opposite stop when the door is opened 90 degrees is required to provide access to customers who use wheelchairs or other mobility devices.
Offset hinges can increase the amount of clear space by several inches.
Automatic or push button doors are the best for providing access. Whether installing them is readily achievable or not depends on the circumstances of the individual restaurant or bar.
Another measure that makes doors easier to use, not only for customers who use mobility devices but also for those who have conditions that limit their manual dexterity, is to install lever or U-shaped handles. Some retrofit levers cost less than $10 and can improve access significantly.
Adjusting door closers or springs and oiling hinges are also inexpensive
steps that make it easier to open doors and prevent them from closing
too quickly. Widening doors, installing accessible door handles,
and making door adjustments are examples of modifications that will
be readily achievable for most businesses.
Q. What can restaurants and bars do at their entrances to ensure safe access by customers with limited vision?
A. Restaurants and bars must make sure there is adequate
lighting at the entrance to enable customers with limited vision
disabilities to enter and exit safely.
Q. Can a restaurant or bar deny service to a person with a disability because his or her disability or behavior resulting from the disability may be disturbing to other patrons?
A. No. The ADA specifically prohibits this type
of discrimination against people with disabilities.
Q. How does a restaurant or bar make sure customers with mobility impairments can get to the establishment's various service areas?
A. When evaluating a restaurant or bar for accessibility to seating and other service areas, apply a few common sense rules.
If "getting through the door" is possible, a restaurant or bar
should determine whether the pathways between tables, bars, and
other facilities are wide enough for a customer using a wheelchair.
Are there level changes between service areas? Are there vending
machines or stocks stored in hallways or other areas that might
block passage? In some instances, minor, no cost changes to
the arrangement of tables and storage items can facilitate access.
Q. Must restaurants and bars provide accessible tables to people who use wheelchairs?
A. Accessible tables must, where practical, be distributed throughout the establishment.
Accessible tables must be between 28 and 34 inches from the floor to the top of the table if readily achievable. Keep a list of accessible tables so the person who seats customers will be able to direct customers using wheelchairs to accessible tables.
If an individual wishes to transfer from her or his wheelchair
to a regular seat, it is suggested that restaurant staff offer to
remove the wheelchair to an out-of-the-way location.
Q. Does a restaurant that provides only fixed seating have to provide accessible seating?
A. Yes, at least five percent of the restaurant's fixed
tables must be accessible if readily achievable. Accessible
tables (28 to 34 inches high) must, where practical, be distributed
throughout the restaurant. For establishments with fewer than
20 tables, at least one table must be accessible. This provision
is, in many cases, easy and inexpensive to meet by removing several
of the fixed seats (but leaving the tables) and replacing them with
seats that can be removed for a customer who uses a wheelchair.
This measure also creates aisles wide enough for people using wheelchairs
or other mobility devices to negotiate.
Q. What can a restaurant do if fixed seating obstructs passage of people who use wheelchairs or other mobility devices?
A. In many instances, restaurants with fixed seating
may be able to create access aisles wide enough for passage by people
with mobility impairments by removing some fixed seats and replacing
them with moveable seats. If this is not readily achievable,
restaurants may be able to put accessible tables near entrances
or close to service counters.
Q. If a restaurant has various levels where it provides the same service, does each level have to be accessible to customers with mobility impairments?
A. Access to all seating areas is not required.
However, if readily achievable, at least one area that the general
public and people with disabilities may use must provide the same
services and decor that are available in other, inaccessible areas.
Q. Is a restaurant that serves food on the ground floor but has a bar located in the basement required to provide access to the bar?
A. Possibly. Although installing an elevator will not be readily achievable for most restaurants and bars, some access to floors above or below the ground level may be required. If there are only several steps to reach the additional levels, a ramp is required if it is readily achievable to install one. If there are many steps, installation of a wheelchair lift, which is much less expensive than an elevator, is required if readily achievable. Other alternatives include using accessible routes such as a freight elevator or rear entrance. If alternative access is impossible, the restaurant must offer bar service at the same prices to customers with mobility impairments in the restaurant.
Conversely, if the bar is on ground level and the restaurant is downstairs and cannot be reached using readily achievable methods, the restaurant must make the menu items available in the bar at no additional cost.
Restaurants must also ensure that stairwells to different levels
are well lit so that people with limited vision can safely access
all levels. This measure will be readily achievable in most
circumstances.
Q. Does a bar that serves only customers seated on stools or standing have to make the bar wheelchair accessible?
A. Possibly. If the bar exceeds 34 inches in
height, a 60-inch long portion of the counter must be lowered, where
it is readily achievable, to between 28 and 34 inches from the floor
to the top of the bar, with knee space at least 27 inches high,
30 inches wide, and 19 inches deep, for customers who use wheelchairs.
Another acceptable, inexpensive, and easy alternative is to provide
accessible tables within the same service area.
Q. What special services might restaurants and bars provide to customers with vision impairments?
A. Customers with vision impairments may need orientation to their seats. It is customary to offer a person with a vision impairment assistance to his or her seat. If he or she accepts the offer of assistance, the service person should offer his or her arm to the customer and guide the person to the table, alerting him or her to obstacles along the way.
Menu information must be accessible to people with vision impairments.
The best way to provide access to the menu depends, in part, on
the type of restaurant and its resources. One method is for
employees to read menus and daily specials to customers. Large
print
menus are another inexpensive method for providing independent access
to some customers with limited vision. An inexpensive magnifier
is also useful to some people with vision limitations. Braille
menus are an option, but not everyone who is blind reads Braille.
Providing audio cassette tapes of the menu and a cassette player
will provide effective communication with many individuals with
vision impairments.
If a restaurant uses low lighting for ambiance, it could offer
a small flashlight for use at the table.
Q. Must restaurants and bars allow service animals, including guide dogs, to accompany customers with disabilities into restaurants?
A. Yes.
Q. How does a restaurant service person communicate with a customer who is deaf or hard of hearing or who has a speech impairment? Must a sign language interpreter be provided for communicating with deaf individuals?
A. It is important for restaurants to communicate effectively with customers with speech impairments. Allowing sufficient time for a person with such a disability to express himself or herself or read a message spelled out on a word board are examples of methods to achieve effective communication.
Sign language interpreters are not required for short and simple
communications with deaf individuals. Use of a pen and note
pad is adequate to communicate with a customer with a hearing or
speech impairment who simply wishes to order a meal or drinks and
pay the check.
Q. Can a bar that requires a driver's license as proof of age refuse to serve a person who does not have a license?
A. No. The ADA prohibits public accommodations
from using eligibility criteria that have the effect of discriminating
against people with disabilities unless necessary to one's business.
Requiring a driver's license as the sole acceptable document for
proof of age discriminates against people with disabilities such
as blindness who are ineligible to obtain a driver's license.
An exception to the policy must be made to permit these customers
to present another form of identification that shows their age.
Q. Must restaurants and bars provide accessible rest rooms? How can rest rooms be made accessible?
A. If rest room facilities are provided for public use, at least one accessible rest room must be available when readily achievable. Certain relatively simple steps can increase access and usability. Widening entry and stall doors; moving obstacles such as vending machines; rearranging toilet partitions to increase maneuverability for customers using wheelchairs; installing a raised toilet seat; installing grab bars near the toilet; repositioning paper towel dispensers; installing lever handles on at least one sing; and installing insulation material around exposed lavatory pipes to prevent wheelchair users from burning their legs while sitting at the sink are examples of readily achievable measures for most businesses. If a restaurant or bar provides more than one rest room and not all are accessible, a sign should indicate where the accessible rest room(s) is (are) located.
Simple symbols indicating which facilities are for men or women
are easier for some people with cognitive impairments (such as mental
retardation) to understand than words or other images. Raised
letters and Braille differentiating men's and women's rest rooms
are important for people who are blind, and large, high-contrast
signs help people with limited vision. Restaurants and bars
must take all of these measures if readily achievable.
Q. Must restaurants and bars install visual alarms?
A. Where audible alarms are provided, visual alarms must be added if readily achievable. The ADAAG specifies the types of alarms that meet this requirement.
People who are deaf or hard of hearing depend on visual alarms
to alert them to fire or other emergencies. It is suggested
that signs be placed next to the alarms indicating their purpose.
Restaurant and bar personnel should also point out the location
of visual alarms to people who are deaf or hard of hearing.
Q. What other services are restaurants required to provide customers with disabilities?
A. Restaurants are required to make reasonable modifications to their policies and procedures to prevent discrimination against customers with disabilities. Keeping straws on hand for use by customers with manual impairments and unwrapping them if requested; cutting up foods if requested by a customer; providing a glass, cup, or different sized dish that is easier for a customer to handle if requested; and providing assistance to customers who request help removing their coats or jackets are examples of reasonable modifications for most restaurants and bars.
Restaurants must be prepared to respond accurately to telephone inquiries from customers who wish to know about the restaurant's accessibility. A common sense approach is to keep a typed list near the telephone outlining the restaurant's access features that any employee can read in response to an inquiry.
These measures are courtesies that are generally accepted as good business practice. The ADA makes sure such courtesies are extended to all customers.
This Guide provides general information to promote voluntary compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). It was prepared under a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice. While the Office on the Americans with Disabilities Act has reviewed its contents, any opinions or interpretations in this document are those of the Council of Better Business Bureaus' Foundation and the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice. The ADA itself and the Department's ADA regulations should be consulted for further, more specific guidance.
This Guide is available in alternative formats. For more information contact:
Council of Better Business Bureaus' Foundation
4200 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, VA 22203
(703) 247-3656
U.S. Department of Justice
Office on ADA
P.O. Box 66738
Washington, DC 20035-9998
(202) 514-0301 Voice
(202) 514-0307 Voice
(202) 514-0383 TDD
Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board
1331 F. Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004-1111
(800) 872-2253 Voice/TDD
(202) 272-5434 Voice/TDD
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Office of Legal Counsel, ADA Services
1801 L. Street, NW
Washington, DC 20507
(202) 663-4503 Voice
(800) 669-3362 Voice
(202) 663-7026 TDD
Job Accommodation Network
West Virginia University
809 Allen Hall
Morgantown, WV 26506-6123
(800) 526-7234 Voice/TDD
(800) ADA-WORK
National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research:
Disability and Business Technical Assistance Centers
(800) 949-4ADA
The President's Committee on Employment of People with Disabilities
1331 Fth Street, NW, Suite 300
Washington, DC 20004-1107
(202) 376-6200 Voice
(202) 376-6205 TDD
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
1633 Q Street, NW, Suite 220
Washington, DC 20009
(202) 986-0375 Voice/TDD
2212 Sixth Street
Berkeley, CA 94710
(510) 644-2555 Voice
(510) 644-2626 TDD
(800) 466-4232 Hotline