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Vertical Access

2:30 pm EDT June 02, 2016   |   Organized by: Great Lakes ADA Center

Description

Date/Time: Thursday June 2, 2016 at 2:30 pm ET

Location: Webinar

Description: A key component of accessibility is vertical access between changes in level along accessible routes. This session will explain where vertical access is required (or exempted) in the ADA and ABA Accessibility Standards and how it can be achieved. Presenters will review requirements in the standards for ramps, curb ramps, elevators, and platform lifts, clarify common sources of confusion, and address questions submitted in advance or posed during the session.

Registration

  • Required

  • Cost - Free

  • To register please click hereYou must have an account and be signed in to complete your registration. For first time users you must create an account. This step is done only once and you will use the same account to register for different sessions throughout the year. After you create an account, you will immediately be able to register for any of our sessions.

  • Continuing Education

    • AIA CES - 1.5 units

    • Certificate of Attendance - 0




Jim Pecht

Accessibility Specialist/Librarian

Jim Pecht joined the U.S. Access Board in November of 1991 after receiving a Masters degree in Architecture from the University of Maryland. One of his first duties was to assist with the rulemaking for the accessibility guidelines under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. He then coordinated the work of the Board's Federal Facilities Workgroup, which began the process of revising the accessibility guidelines for Federal facilities covered by the Architectural Barriers Act. He was part of the team that developed the new combined guidelines for the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Architectural Barriers Act. Jim provides technical assistance to the building design and construction industry, State and Federal agencies, and consumers with disabilities. He has particular responsibility for the administration of the Board's 5200 plus volume technical library on accessibility issues. Jim has been a speaker before many professional and business groups affected by the ADA, including the American Institute of Architects. He has also advised several Federal agencies covered under the ABA and the Rehabilitation Act, including the White House, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Social Security Administration, the Federal Communication Commission, and the U.S. Census Bureau. Jim is a member of the National Fire Protection Association and is an associate member of the American Institute of Architects.

Dave Yanchulis

Coordinator of Public Affairs

Dave Yanchulis is a graduate of George Washington University (1987) and has worked at the Access Board since 1988 as an Accessibility Specialist responsible for technical assistance to Federal, state, and local governments and private sector entities regarding the requirements of the Architectural Barriers Act (ABA) of 1968 and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990. In 1994, he was appointed Coordinator of Research, a position created to manage the research efforts that underpin the development of accessibility guidelines. Dave has also been active in rulemaking for both Title II and Title III guidelines for buildings and facilities and for transit vehicles. Most recently, he has developed guidelines for the accessibility of correctional and judicial facilities constructed by state and local governments and for elements used by children. Dave's magnum opus is the ADAAG Technical Assistance Manual, a comprehensive advisory on applying accessibility guidelines to design and construction projects. In May of 1998, Dave was appointed Coordinator of Public Affairs, taking responsibility for the Board's public outreach activities, including its bi-monthly newsletter, Access Currents.

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