Course Description

Live Webinar Date: Thursday, September 12th, 11:30 a.m.—1:30 p.m. PDT. A Zoom link will be sent 48 and 24 hours before the webinar.

30-Day Access Period: After the live webinar date, you can view a recording of this webinar and any supplemental documents as often as you like during your 30-day access period.

*Disclaimer: If you miss the live viewing of this webinar, we can refund you or send a recording and supplemental documents; however, no certificate will be issued if you miss the live webinar.

Description: This two-hour webinar focuses on accessible means of egress. The topic will include emergency planning and elements of accessible means of egress in the built environment. We will also discuss signs required for an accessible means of egress, such as stairway and floor identification.

Learning Objective 1:

Participants will learn how to develop a plan for accessible means of egress procedures. 

Learning Objective 2:

Participants will learn about the components of the means of egress. 

Learning Objective 3:

Participants will learn about the various types and locations of signs for means of egress.

Learning Objective 4:

Participants will learn the requirements for fire-rated door assemblies and hardware.  

Accessible Means of Egress - AIA #24_06

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Instructor

Susan Moe

Architect and CASp

Susan Moe recently retired from the Division of the State Architect (DSA), Headquarters Office, Access Code and Policy Unit. Susan is embarking on the next phase of her career and has launched an access compliance consulting firm to use her experience at DSA and expertise in the private sector. While at DSA, Susan developed regulations for the California Building Code, Chapters 2 and 11B, delivered access compliance training, and served as a CASp exam subject matter expert. As a CASp subject matter expert, she designed the first of the CASp open book exams.Susan participated on the team for the 2013 California Building Code rulemaking cycle when the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design became the model code for Chapter 11B. That process required a complete rewrite and reformatting of Chapter 11B. She participated in subsequent rulemaking cycles focusing on the federal housing-related regulations to bring Chapter 11B in alignment with those regulations, wrote the code change that