U.S. Dep’t of Justice, "ADA Best Practices Tool Kit for State and Local Governments: Chapter 7, Emergency Management under Title II of the ADA"
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NOTICE Portions of this chapter may not fully reflect the current ADA regulations. The regulation implementing title II of the ADA was revised as recently as 2016. Revised ADA Standards for Accessible Design (2010 Standards) were issued on September 15, 2010 and went into effect on March 15, 2012. ADA Best Practices Tool Kit for State and Local Governments Chapter 7 Emergency Management Under Title II of the ADAIn this Chapter, you will learn how to make emergency management programs, services, and activities accessible to everyone, including people with disabilities. Chapter 7 answers the following questions:
A. ADA Basics for Emergency Management One of the primary responsibilities of state and local governments is to protect residents and visitors from harm, including assistance in preparing for, responding to, and recovering from emergencies and disasters. State and local governments must comply with Title II of the ADA in the emergency- and disaster-related programs, services, and activities they provide.1 This requirement applies to programs, services, and activities provided directly by state and local governments as well as those provided through third parties, such as the American Red Cross, private nonprofit organizations, and religious entities.2 Under Title II of the ADA, emergency programs, services, activities, and facilities must be accessible to people with disabilities 3 and generally may not use eligibility criteria that screen out or tend to screen out people with disabilities.4 The ADA also requires making reasonable modifications to policies, practices, and procedures when necessary to avoid discrimination against a person with a disability5 and taking the steps necessary to ensure effective communication with people with disabilities.6 The ADA generally does not require state or local emergency management programs to take actions that would fundamentally alter the nature of a program, service, or activity or impose undue financial and administrative burdens.7 B. What is Emergency Management? Emergency management is wide-ranging. It includes all programs, services, and activities related to emergencies and disasters, including:
C. Preparation – Advance Planning for Emergencies and Disasters An emergency management plan is the all-important first step in ensuring an effective response to emergencies and disasters. Public officials, specialists from organizations such as the American Red Cross, and community members should work together to develop a comprehensive plan to prepare for emergencies. One good way to test your emergency management plan is to enlist people with disabilities to role-play during emergency simulations. Seeking and using input from people with a variety of disabilities, and organizations with expertise on disability issues, will help ensure that your emergency planning and preparedness meet the access needs of people with disabilities in your community with respect to all phases of emergency management. D. Notification – Alerting the Public to an Emergency Officials must act quickly to alert the public to an impending emergency situation. But many traditional emergency notification methods are not accessible to people with disabilities. People who are deaf will not hear radio, television, sirens, or other audible alerts. Those who are blind or who have low vision may not be aware of visual cues, such as flashing lights. State and local governments need to use warning methods that ensure all residents and visitors will have the information necessary to make sound decisions and take appropriate, responsible action. Often, using a combination of notification methods will be more effective than relying on one method alone. For instance, combining visual and audible alerts will reach a greater audience than either method would alone. Auto-dialed text telephone (TTY) messages to pre-registered individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, text messaging, emails, and other innovative uses of technology may be incorporated into such procedures. For announcements by government officials on local television stations, providing qualified sign language interpreters and open captioning will ensure that all people tuning in are able to access the information provided. The emergency management plan should identify the steps that will be taken and the resources that will be used to ensure that emergency notifications will be accessible to all. E. Community Evacuation and Transportation In an emergency, people with disabilities may face a variety of challenges in evacuating to safety. A person with a mobility disability may need assistance leaving a building without a working elevator. Individuals who are blind or who have low vision may no longer be able to independently use traditional orientation and navigation methods. A deaf person may be trapped somewhere unable to communicate with anyone because the only available communication device relies on voice. State and local governments need to establish procedures to ensure that people with disabilities can evacuate the area of an emergency in a variety of conditions, with assistance when it is needed. One step that can significantly increase the effectiveness of your planning process is to create a voluntary, confidential registry of persons with disabilities who may need individualized notification or evacuation assistance. Setting up a voluntary registry requires that procedures be implemented to ensure that the registry is voluntary, confidentiality is protected, and information is updated as needed. Both public and private transportation may be disrupted due to overcrowding, because of blocked streets and sidewalks, or because the transit system is not functioning at all. The movement of people during an evacuation is critical, but many people, because of their disabilities, cannot drive or use traditional, inaccessible transportation. Thus, emergency plans must identify accessible forms of transportation (i.e., vehicles equipped with wheelchair lifts) available to help evacuate people with disabilities. For instance, some communities have used lift-equipped school buses, transit buses, or paratransit vehicles to evacuate people who use wheelchairs or scooters. Some people with disabilities will be able to reach mass evacuation pick-up locations independently, while others may be unable to leave their homes without assistance. Evacuation and emergency transportation plans should address the evacuation-related needs of people with disabilities. F. Emergency Shelter Programs When emergencies arise, communities often provide residents and visitors with safe refuge in temporary shelters. Shelters are sometimes operated by government entities themselves. More often, they are operated by a third party. Regardless of who operates a shelter, the ADA generally requires shelter operations to be conducted in a way that offers people with disabilities the same benefits – e.g., safety, comfort, food, medical care, the support of family and friends – provided to people without disabilities. Because sheltering programs are critical to ensuring the safety of people with disabilities in emergencies and disasters, ADA requirements for sheltering are discussed in greater detail in two stand-alone technical assistance documents that state and local governments can provide to shelter operators to assist them in planning to meet the needs of people with disabilities in the shelter environment. While these technical assistance documents do not address all ADA compliance issues that may arise in emergency shelters, they address a number of the most common access problems. The first of these technical assistance documents – “The ADA and Emergency Shelters: Access for All in Emergencies and Disasters” is in Addendum 2 to this Chapter at www.ada.gov/pcatoolkit/chap7shelterprog.htm. It discusses the ADA’s nondiscrimination requirements for shelter programs. The second technical assistance document – “ADA Checklist for Emergency Shelters” is in Addendum 3 to this Chapter at www.ada.gov/pcatoolkit/chap7shelterchk.htm. The Checklist includes two assessment tools to help state and local governments and emergency shelter operators ensure that emergency shelters provide access to all: (1) a preliminary survey tool that will help in deciding if a facility has the accessibility characteristics that make it a good candidate for a potential emergency shelter, and (2) a more detailed checklist that will help identify the most common architectural barriers to access for people with disabilities found at emergency shelters. G. Access to Social Services, Temporary Lodging or Housing, and Other Benefit Programs State and local governments often provide social services and other benefit programs to assist people harmed by emergencies and disasters. These programs need to be accessible to all, including people with disabilities. Following are some important points to remember:
Access to Temporary Housing People with disabilities may have more difficulty locating temporary housing or lodging than others. For example, someone with a mobility disability may need to personally verify that an entrance to an apartment has no steps or that the accessible features of a bathroom or kitchen meet his needs. Some people who are blind or have low vision may not be able to locate addresses in an unfamiliar community or determine if an apartment is clean and safe without assistance. For these reasons people with disabilities may need extra time and help, including transportation assistance, in locating housing. H. Repairing and Rebuilding Emergencies and disasters often damage state and local government facilities. In the recovery stage of emergency management, state and local governments often make alterations to facilities to repair such damage, construct facilities to replace those that were destroyed or extensively damaged, or move government programs, services, and activities from damaged facilities to other locations. When constructing new or replacement facilities and repairing damaged facilities, state and local governments must comply with the accessibility requirements of Title II of the ADA. They may choose from two design standards for new construction and alterations – either the Uniform Federal Accessibility Standards (UFAS) or the ADA Standards for Accessible Design (ADA Standards). If the ADA Standards are chosen, public entities are not entitled to the elevator exemption contained in § 4.1.3(5) of the Standards. If the building was newly constructed or altered after the ADA went into effect, then the design standard used at that time must be followed for the rebuilding. Alterations to facilities must not decrease accessibility. State or local government facilities constructed after January 26, 1992 and alterations to such facilities must comply with the new construction requirements of Title II of the ADA.8 Alterations to facilities constructed before the ADA became effective, must comply with Title II’s requirements for alterations to existing facilities.9 Under the ADA Standards, alterations to primary function areas of existing facilities trigger a "path of travel" requirement – i.e., a requirement to make the path of travel from the entrance to the altered area accessible, including telephones, restrooms, and drinking fountains serving the altered area.10 Primary function areas are those where major activities take place. But a public entity is not required to spend more than 20 percent of the cost of the original alteration on making the path of travel accessible, even if this cost limitation results in less than full accessibility. Under UFAS, if an existing facility undergoes a “substantial alteration,” the public entity must provide (1) an accessible route from public transportation, parking, streets, and sidewalks to all accessible parts of the building; (2) an accessible entrance; and (3) accessible restrooms.11 A “substantial alteration” for purposes of UFAS is where the total cost of all alterations in a 12-month period amounts to 50 percent or more of the value of the building. When moving programs from a damaged facility to another location, state and local governments must ensure that the programs remain accessible to people with disabilities.12 This requirement applies whether the program is relocated permanently or temporarily. 8 28 C.F.R. § 35.151. 9 28 C.F.R. § 35.151. 10 28 C.F.R. Part 36, Appendix A, § 4.1.6(2). 11 41 C.F.R. Part 101 - 19.6, Appendix A, § 4.1.6(3). 12 28 C.F.R. §§ 35.149 - 35.151.I. Steps to Ensure Access for All in Emergencies and Disasters Here are some steps you can take now to ensure that emergency management programs, services, and activities are accessible to everyone, including people with disabilities.
ADA Tool Kit for State and Local Governments |
October 26, 2009