Table of Contents
Americans
with Disabilities Act
Telecommunications Act
Fair Housing Act
Air Carrier Access Act
Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and
Handicapped Act
National Voter Registration Act
Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons
Act
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
Rehabilitation Act
Architectural Barriers Act
General Sources of Disability Rights Information
This guide, prepared by the National Council on Disability
and the National Urban League, provides a summary of federal civil
rights laws that ensure equal opportunity for people with disabilities.
The original source for this information is the U.S. Department
of Justice (DOJ). To find out more about how these laws may apply
to you or your family and friends, please contact the agencies and
organizations listed in this summary.
Americans With Disabilities
Act
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits
discrimination on the basis of disability in employment,
state and local government, public accommodations, commercial facilities,
transportation, and telecommunications. The act also applies
to the U.S. Congress.
To be protected by 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 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. ADA does not specifically name
all the impairments that are covered.
ADA Title I: Employment
Title I requires employers with 15 or more employees
to provide qualified individuals with disabilities with 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 the accommodation results
in undue hardship for the employer. Religious entities with 15 or
more employees are covered under Title I.
Title I complaints must be filed with the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) within 180 days of the
date of discrimination, or within 300 days if the charge is filed
with a designated state or local fair employment practice agency.
Individuals may file a lawsuit in federal court only after they
receive a right-to-sue letter from EEOC.
Charges of employment discrimination on the basis
of disability may be filed at any EEOC field office. Field offices
are located in 50 cities throughout the United States and are listed
in most telephone directories under "U.S. Government."
For the appropriate EEOC field office in your geographic area, call:
(800) 669-4000 (voice)
(800) 669-6820 (tty)
www.eeoc.gov
You can obtain publications and information on EEOC-enforced
laws by calling
(800) 669-3362 (voice)
(800) 800-3302 (tty)
For information on how to accommodate a specific individual
with a disability, contact the Job Accommodation Network at
(800) 526-7234 (voice/tty)
www.jan.wvu.edu
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 whether
it receives 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, such
as 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 they must 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.
Complaints of Title II violations may be filed with
DOJ within 180 days of the date of discrimination. In certain situations,
cases may be referred to a mediation program sponsored by DOJ. DOJ
may bring a lawsuit where it has investigated a matter and has been
unable to resolve violations. For more information, contact:
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Civil Rights Division
Disability Rights Section - NYAV
Washington, DC 20530
(800) 514-0301 (voice)
(800) 514-0383 (tty)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
Title II may also be enforced through private lawsuits
in federal court. It is not necessary to file a complaint with DOJ
or any other federal agency, or to receive a right-to-sue letter,
before going to court.
ADA Title II: Public Transportation
The transportation provisions of Title II cover public
transportation services, such as city buses, and public rail transit,
such as subways, commuter rails, and 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 through which persons 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. Questions and complaints about public transportation
should be directed to:
Federal Transit Administration
U.S. Department of Transportation
400 Seventh Street, SW
Washington, DC 20590
(888) 446-4511 (voice/relay)
(202) 366-2285 (voice)
www.fta.dot.gov/office/civ.htm
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 that 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,
such as taxicabs, 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 this can be done 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 ADA's architectural standards for new construction
and alterations.
Complaints of Title III violations may be filed with
DOJ. In certain situations, cases may be referred to a mediation
program sponsored by DOJ. DOJ is authorized to bring a lawsuit where
there is a pattern or practice of discrimination in violation of
Title III or where an act of discrimination raises an issue of general
public importance. Title III may also be enforced through private
lawsuits. It is not necessary to file a complaint with DOJ or any
federal agency, or to receive a right-to-sue letter, before going
to court. For more information, contact:
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Civil Rights Division
Disability Rights Section - NYAV
Washington, DC 20530
(800) 514-0301 (voice)
(800) 514-0383 (tty)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
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 text telephones (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. Title IV also requires closed captioning of federally
funded public service announcements. For more information about
TRS, contact the FCC at:
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20554
(888) 225-5322 (voice/tty)
www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro
Telecommunications Act
Section 255 and Section 251(a)(2) of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, require
manufacturers of telecommunications equipment and providers of telecommunications
services to ensure that such equipment and services are accessible
to and usable by people with disabilities, if this goal is readily
achievable. These amendments ensure that people with disabilities
will have access to a broad range of products and services--such
as telephones, cell phones, pagers, call waiting, and operator services--that,
in the past, were inaccessible to many users with disabilities.
For more information, contact:
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20554
(888) 225-5322 (voice/relay)
www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro
Fair Housing Act
The Fair Housing Act, as amended in 1988, prohibits
housing discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex,
disability, familial status, and national origin. Its coverage includes
private housing, housing that receives federal financial assistance,
and state and local government housing. It is unlawful to discriminate
in any aspect of selling or renting housing or to deny a dwelling
to a buyer or renter because of the disability of that individual,
an individual associated with the buyer or renter, or an individual
who intends to live in the residence. Other covered activities include,
for example, financing, zoning practices, new construction design,
and advertising.
The Fair Housing Act requires owners of housing facilities
to make reasonable exceptions in their policies and operations to
afford people with disabilities equal housing opportunities. For
example, a landlord with a "no pets" policy may be required
to grant an exception to this rule and allow an individual who is
blind to keep a service animal in the residence. The Fair Housing
Act also requires landlords to allow tenants with disabilities to
make reasonable access-related modifications to their private living
space, as well as to common use spaces. (The landlord is not required
to pay for the changes.) The Act further requires that new multifamily
housing with four or more units be designed and built to allow access
for people with disabilities. This includes accessible common use
areas, doors that are wide enough for wheelchairs, kitchens and
bathrooms that allow a person using a wheelchair to maneuver, and
other adaptable features within the units.
Complaints of Fair Housing Act violations may be filed
with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. For more
information or to file a complaint, contact:
Office of Program Compliance and Disability Rights
Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
451 Seventh Street, SW, Room 5242
Washington, DC 20140
(800) 669-9777 (voice)
(800) 927-9275 (tty)
www.hud.gov/offices/fheo
For questions about the Fair Housing Act, call the
Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity at:
(202) 708-2333 (voice)
(202) 401-1247 (tty)
For publications, call the Housing and Urban Development
Customer Service Center at:
(800) 767-7468 (voice/relay)
Additionally, DOJ can file a lawsuit in cases involving
a pattern or practice of discrimination. The Fair Housing Act also
may be enforced through private lawsuits.
Air Carrier Access Act
The Air Carrier Access Act prohibits discrimination
in air transportation by domestic and foreign air carriers against
qualified individuals with physical or mental impairments. The Act
applies only to air carriers that provide regularly scheduled services
for hire to the public. Requirements address a wide range of issues,
including boarding assistance and certain accessibility features
in newly built aircraft and new or altered airport facilities. People
may enforce their rights under the Air Carrier Access Act by filing
a complaint with the U.S. Department of Transportation, or by bringing
a lawsuit in federal court. For more information or to file a complaint,
contact:
Aviation Consumer Protection Division
U.S. Department of Transportation
400 Seventh Street, SW
Room 4107, C-75
Washington, DC 20590
(202) 366-2220 (voice)
(202) 755-7687 (tty)
www.dot.gov/airconsumer
Voting Accessibility
for the Elderly and Handicapped Act
The Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped
Act of 1984 generally requires polling places across the United
States to be physically accessible to people with disabilities for
federal elections. Where no accessible location is available to
serve as a polling place, a political subdivision must provide an
alternate means of casting a ballot on the day of the election.
This law also requires states to make registration and voting aids
available for disabled and elderly voters, including information
by tty. For more information, contact:
Voting Section
Civil Rights Division
U.S. Department of Justice
P.O. Box 66128
Washington, DC 20035-6128
(800) 253-3931 (voice/relay)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/voting
National Voter Registration
Act
The National Voter Registration Act of 1993, also
known as the "Motor Voter Act," makes it easier for all
Americans to exercise their fundamental right to vote. One of the
basic purposes of the act is to increase the historically low registration
rates of people with disabilities that have resulted from discrimination.
The act requires all offices of state-funded programs that are primarily
engaged in providing services to people with disabilities to provide
all program applicants with voter registration forms, to assist
them in completing the forms, and to transmit completed forms to
the appropriate state official. For more information, contact:
Voting Section
Civil Rights Division
U.S. Department of Justice
P.O. Box 66128
Washington, DC 20035-6128
(800) 253-3931 (voice/relay)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/voting
Civil Rights of Institutionalized
Persons Act
The Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act
(CRIPA) authorizes the U.S. Attorney General to investigate conditions
of confinement at state and local government institutions such as
prisons, jails, pretrial detention centers, juvenile correctional
facilities, publicly operated nursing homes, and institutions for
people with psychiatric or developmental disabilities. Its purpose
is to allow the Attorney General to uncover and correct widespread
deficiencies that seriously jeopardize the health and safety of
residents of institutions. The Attorney General does not have authority
under CRIPA to investigate isolated incidents or to represent individual
institutionalized persons.
The Attorney General may initiate civil lawsuits where
there is reasonable cause to believe that conditions are "egregious
or flagrant," that they are subjecting residents to "grievous
harm," and that they are part of a "pattern or practice"
of resistance to residents' full enjoyment of constitutional or
federal rights, including Title II of ADA and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act. For more information or to bring a matter to
DOJ's attention, contact:
Special Litigation Section
Civil Rights Division
U.S. Department of Justice
P.O. Box 66400
Washington, DC 20035-6400
(202) 514-6255 (voice/relay)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/split/index.html
Individuals With Disabilities
Education Act
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
(formerly called P.L. 94-142 or the Education for all Handicapped
Children Act of 1975) requires public schools to make available
to all eligible children with disabilities a free, appropriate public
education in the least restrictive environment appropriate to their
individual needs.
IDEA requires public school systems to develop appropriate
Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) for each child. The specific
special education and related services outlined in each IEP reflect
the individual needs of each student.
IDEA also mandates that particular procedures be followed
in the development of the IEP. Each student's IEP must be developed
by a team of knowledgeable persons and must be reviewed at least
annually. The team includes the child's teacher; the parents, subject
to certain limited exceptions; the child, if appropriate; an agency
representative who is qualified to provide or supervise the provision
of special education; and other individuals at the parents' or agency's
discretion.
If parents disagree with the proposed IEP, they can
request a due process hearing and a review from the state educational
agency, if applicable in that state. They also can appeal the state
agency's decision to state or federal court. For more information,
contact:
Office of Special Education Programs
U.S. Department of Education
330 C Street, SW, Room 3086
Washington, DC 20202
(202) 205-8824 (voice/relay)
www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP/index.html
Rehabilitation Act
The Rehabilitation Act prohibits discrimination on
the basis of disability in programs conducted by federal agencies,
in programs receiving federal financial assistance, in federal employment,
and in the employment practices of federal contractors. The standards
for determining employment discrimination under the Rehabilitation
Act are the same as those used in Title I of ADA.
Section 501
Section 501 requires affirmative action and nondiscrimination
in employment by federal agencies of the executive branch. To obtain
more information or to file a complaint, employees should contact
their agency's Equal Employment Opportunity Office.
Section 503
Section 503 requires affirmative action and prohibits
employment discrimination by federal government contractors and
subcontractors with contracts of more than $10,000. For more information
on Section 503, contact:
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
U.S. Department of Labor
200 Constitution Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20210
(202) 693-0106 (voice/relay)
www.dol.gov/dol/esa/public/ofcp_org.htm
Section 504
Section 504 states that "no qualified individual
with a disability in the United States shall be excluded from, denied
the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under" any
program or activity that either receives federal financial assistance
or is conducted by any agency of the executive branch or the U.S.
Postal Service.
Each federal agency has its own set of Section 504
regulations that apply to its own programs. Agencies that provide
federal financial assistance also have Section 504 regulations covering
entities that receive federal aid. Requirements common to these
regulations include reasonable accommodation for employees with
disabilities, program accessibility, effective communication with
people who have hearing or vision disabilities, and accessible new
construction and alterations. Each agency is responsible for enforcing
its own regulations. Section 504 may also be enforced through private
lawsuits. It is not necessary to file a complaint with a federal
agency or to receive a right-to-sue letter before going to court.
For information on how to file Section 504 complaints
with the appropriate agency, contact:
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Civil Rights Division
Disability Rights Section - NYAV
Washington, DC 20530
(800) 514-0301 (voice)
(800) 514-0383 (tty)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
Section 508
Section 508 establishes requirements for electronic
and information technology developed, maintained, procured, or used
by the federal government. Section 508 requires federal electronic
and information technology to be accessible to people with disabilities,
including employees and members of the public.
An accessible information technology system is one
that can be operated in a variety of ways and does not rely on a
single sense or ability of the user. For example, a system that
provides output only in visual format may not be accessible to people
with visual impairments, and a system that provides output only
in audio format may not be accessible to people who are deaf or
hard of hearing. Some individuals with disabilities may need accessibility-related
software or peripheral devices to use systems that comply with Section
508. For more information on Section 508, contact:
GSA Office of Governmentwide Policy
Center for IT Accommodation (CITA)
1800 F Street, NW
Room 1234, MC:MKC
Washington, DC 20405-0001
(202) 501-4906 (voice)
(202) 501-2010 (tty)
www.itpolicy.gsa.gov/cita
U.S. Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board
1331 F Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004-1111
(800) 872-2253 (voice)
(800) 993-2822 (tty)
www.access-board.gov
Architectural Barriers
Act
The Architectural Barriers Act (ABA) requires that
buildings and facilities that are designed, constructed, or altered
with federal funds, or leased by a federal agency, comply with federal
standards for physical accessibility. ABA requirements are limited
to architectural standards in new and altered buildings and in newly
leased facilities. They do not address the activities conducted
in those buildings and facilities. Facilities of the U.S. Postal
Service are covered by ABA. For more information or to file a complaint,
contact
U.S. Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board
1331 F Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004-1111
(800) 872-2253 (voice)
(800) 993-2822 (tty)
www.access-board.gov
General Sources of Disability
Rights Information
ADA Information Line
(800) 514-0301 (voice)
(800) 514-0383 (tty)
www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
Regional Disability and Business Technical Assistance
Centers
(800) 949-4232 (voice/tty)
www.adata.org
National Council on Disability
1331 F Street, NW, Suite 850
Washington, DC 20004
(202) 272-2004
(202) 272-2074 (tty)
(202) 272-2022 (fax)
www.ncd.gov
|