Total Credits: 0.8 CLE
An attorney will give the legal framework of the ADA and then an architect will give examples (good and bad) of how cities and counties handle various ADA issues at their facilities and on streets and other public areas in town.
You must complete this course by 11:59 PM on December 31, 2024 in order to receive credit with the Alabama State Bar.
Frawley HO.pdf (849 KB) | 10 Pages | Available after Purchase |
Ms. Frawley is a shareholder in the firm of Webb McNeill Walker in Montgomery, Alabama. She regularly advises and defends employers in both the public and private sectors on a variety of employment law issues and conducts anti-harassment and anti-discrimination training for supervisors and employees. She also practices in the areas of law enforcement defense, constitutional law, public funding disputes, insurance defense, administrative law, and is the head of the firm’s appellate law section. She received her B.A. from Wake Forest University and her J.D., summa cum laude, from The University of Alabama School of Law.
Mr. Terry, CEO of Evan Terry Associates, LLC, joined the firm after receiving his B.S. in Architecture from the University of Southern California and his Master of Architecture degree from the University of Michigan. He has served on a variety of levels at ETA including project architect, project manager, energy specialist, project designer, contract administrator, and accessible design specialist. Mr. Terry's architectural project experience includes corporate facilities, municipal facilities, healthcare, schools and universities, libraries, recreational facilities, large assembly facilities, shopping centers, multi-family housing, churches and light industrial facilities. For twenty-eight years, he has concentrated his efforts in the area of accessible design, and in particular with the Americans with Disabilities Act and various state accessibility standards’ requirements.