| Initiative | Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) |
| Comment Number | OL-100655 |
| Status | Catalogued |
| Classification | Substantive |
| Submitted Type | CW Web Form |
| Commenter Type | Undetermined Organization |
| Organization | ADA Build it Right, Inc. |
| Received | 05/31/2005 09:47:20 PM |
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| Category | Non-Standard/Attached file |
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| Commenter |
| First Name | Last Name | State/Province |
| Wayne | Yarnall | OR |
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| Comment Period Start | 9/30/2004 |
| Comment Period End | 5/31/2005 |
| Phase | Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) |
| Comment Instructions | NEW ALTERNATIVE PROCESS AVAILABLE: As described in its Announcement of Alternative ADA ANPRM Comment Process, as of May 16, 2005, the Department permits commenters who wish to restrict access to their identity to send their comments to a special new mailing or electronic address. At this address, commenters’ business and personal names and addresses will be removed before their comments enter the comment processing system. Comments must initially include the sender’s name and address and must follow all of the instructions set forth in the announcement.
The Department of Justice (Department) is issuing this ANPRM in order to begin the process of adopting revised ADA standards consistent with Parts I and III of the revised guidelines implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) and the Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 (ABA), published by the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (Access Board) on July 23, 2004, at 69 FR 44083. You may submit electronic comments though this form or through www.regulations.gov. The Department strongly encourages you to read the ANPRM before submitting your comments. Unless you use the new alternative process, you may address all written comments concerning this ANPRM to P.O. Box 1032, Merrifield, VA. 22116-1032; please note that courier and overnight deliveries will not be accepted at this address. Unless you use the new alternative process, comments submitted in written or electronic form are available to the public in their entirety, including personal information.
Using this form: The fields for your full name and address, marked with asterisks, are required fields. You cannot proceed with your comment unless you fill in these fields. You may select one or more of the 54 questions posed by the Department in the ANPRM and type your answer to the question in the space provided. There are two ways to select a question: you may either enter the number of the question that you want in the box provided and click on the "Retrieve Question" button, or you may scroll through the questions listed by topic, click the question you want to select, and then click on the "Retrieve Question" button. In addition, you may choose to type a comment in the "General Comments" box provided below (4,000 characters available). You may also submit a comment as an attachment at the end of this form.
Inspection of Comments: All comments will be available throughout the comment period to the public online at WWW.ADAANPRM.ORG and, by appointment, during normal business hours, at the office of the Disability Rights Section, Civil Rights Division, U.S. Department of Justice, located at 1425 New York Avenue, Suite 4039, Washington, D.C. 20005. To arrange an appointment to review the comments, please contact the ADA Information Line at (800) 514-0301 (voice) and (800) 514-0383 (TTY). |
| Initiative Type | Federal Rulemaking |
| Agency | U. S. Department of Justice |
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| Initiative | Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) |
| Subject | Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) |
| Docket ID | CRT Docket No. 2004-DRS01 |
| Short Title | Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services; Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability by Public Accommodations and in Commercial Facilities |
| Rule | Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services; Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability by Public Accommodations and in Commercial Facilities |
| Rule Citation | 28 CFR Parts 35 and 36 |
| Published Info | September 30, 2004 View Announcement of Alternative ADA ANPRM Comment Process (HTML) View ANPRM (HTML)  View ANPRM (PDF) View Notice to Extend Comment Period (HTML) View Notice to Extend Comment Period (PDF) (Download Adobe Reader) |
| Description | Description??? |
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| File Name | OL-100655.htm |
| File Extension | .txt |
| File Size | 1988 |
| Comments | Answers to Specific Questions
8-Stadium Seating - Theater Yes a specific regulation for stadium-style movie theater is important. It needs to be clear and simple. I think Distance from screen is an imperfect but easy to understand and implement for the majority of theater designers, owners, and builders. I agree with the Departments opinion that disabled seating should be within the rear 60% of seats. I am disabled using a power wheel chair and I prefer to sit in the rear 60% range. Line of sight angle calculations are more complex and the possibility of error and misinterpretation is too high to be usable. No issue is simple, there are a few people using wheel chairs who have marginal vision and prefer to sit as close to the screen as possible. But if there is a wide aisle in the front they could possibly sit there. However sitting on a slope in a wheel chair is uncomfortable. There is another problem in stadium seating implemented step stype, Since wheel chairs are deeper than companion seats, the step behind disabled seats needs to inset deeper than normal, or the companion seats or all seats in that row moved forward from the rear step. Then the person in the companion seat can hold hands with the person in the wheel chair. The ADAAG Manual (USAB 1998 Document --Not the ADAAG) shows this arrangement in the figures in Chapter 4.33 Assembly Areas Page 115 and 116. I can send you a pdf extract of these pages is needed. I greatly appreciated the seating layout of the new Carmike Twelve Theater in Corvallis, OR. You enter the theater on a 1:20 ramp the side from the rear up to approximately 50% from the screen with disabled seating in the center of the 50% row. There was insufficient space to the rear so the wheel chair stuck out from the companion seats. But in general it was a very good implementation. http://www.carmike.com/ Carmike Twelve 750 NE Circle Boulevard Corvallis, OR 541-753-3810 Thanks, Wayne General Comments
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| Version Date | 6/6/2005 |
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| File MIME Type | text/html |
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