OHIO honors the Americans With Disabilities Act
OHIO’s commitment to the cause of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) goes back decades.
By Carey L. Busch, BS ’97, MED ’00, assistant dean for student accessibility at OHIO | November 20, 2015
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OHIO honors ADA
Here are other milestones in OHIO’s mindfulness for people with disabilities.
- The Office for Affirmative Action first provided services to students and employees with disabilities in 1991.
- The University issued its first policy on the matter in 1992 to recognize the spirit and letter of the ADA.
- Campus Area Transportation Cutting Across Boundaries (CATCAB), shuttling individuals with mobility limitations for free within a one-mile driving radius of Baker University Center, began in 2000.
- The Shostack Adaptive Equipment Room in the Learning Commons of Alden Library opened in the mid-2000s for patrons with visual impairments or learning disabilities.
- Student Accessibility Services and the Office for Equal Opportunity and Accessibility were established in 2008 as two independent entities, the former addressing students, the latter campus and employee accommodations.
- Galbreath Memorial Chapel reopened in 2013 following $1.2 million renovations that included the addition of an elevator and restroom upgrades to improve accessibility.
- OHIO’s redesign of its online front door in 2014 also met Internet accessibility standards.
ADA by the numbers at OHIO
Approximately 22 miles of ADA accessible sidewalks on the Athens Campus.
81 employees with disabilities on all campuses receive accommodations through the Office for Equal Opportunity and Accessibility.
130 students use free assistive technology such as Livescribe smartpens, Kurzweil software, Dragon Naturally Speaking speech-recognition software, and Read&Write Gold literacy support software (100 on the Athens Campus and 30 on regional campuses).
146 ADA parking spaces on the Athens Campus (out of 6,400 total spaces).
200 ADA accessible building entrances on the Athens Campus (out of 248 total buildings).
Up to 225 people with disabilities earn degrees at OHIO annually from approximately 8,100 degrees conferred.
340 note takers per year (200 on the Athens Campus and 140 on regional campuses).
475 requests filled for books in alternate format across all campuses each academic year.
970 ADA students on the Athens Campus in 2014-15, more than double the 443 registered in 2000-01, in the earliest data available.
1,359 ADA students on all OHIO campuses in 2014-15, versus 543 registered in 2000-01, in the earliest data available.
More than 5,400 letters of notification provided for students with disabilities to present to faculty each year (4,000 on the Athens Campus, 1,400 on regional campuses).