Basics of ada compliant signs

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Basics of ADA Compliant Signs

Image courtesy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disabled_parking_permit

According to a 2015 study of the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), an estimated 53 million Americans live with some kind of disability. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that out of the total number, almost 40 million civilian noninstitutionalized Americans have disability. That’s a whopping figure: one in five adults in the continental United States has some form of disability. Accessibility issues faced by the disabled Most disabled people encounter difficulty in walking or climbing stairs. The next major disability seems to be related to vision, that impacts badly memory and/or thinking, independent living and self-care. In order to safeguard the interests of the disabled in America, The Americans with Disability Act (ADA), a civil right act, was passed in 1990. The ADA has done well to help, protect and prevent discrimination against people with disabilities by working with institutions and the government on various compliance initiatives. With the inception of the ADA, disabled persons gained ramp access to buildings, and accessibility of places of public accommodation such as schools, supermarkets, stores, hospitals, hotels, sports stadia, movie theaters and so on. It became necessary for aisles in supermarkets to be wider to accommodate wheelchairs and provide disabled persons with sufficient room to move about. This mandate extended to ensure that signage and signboards were compliant with the needs of the disabled. It paved the way for people with disabilities to access places or information better, and to live as well their daily lives in a more efficient and comfortable manner.


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