|
All United States federal agencies were
mandated under Section 508 of the US Rehabilitation Act to make their
websites accessible by June 21st, 2001.

Accessibility policies vary from country to country, but most countries,
including the European Union, have adopted standards based on the
Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) of the
World Wide Web
Consortium. In the United States,
Section
508 of the U.S. Rehabilitation Act mandates that web content maintained
by the federal government must be made accessible to people with
disabilities. This law is based on
W3C priority 1 checkpoints.
If you are working in another country
or under different standards, please be aware that section 508 issues are,
for the most part, parallel to W3C priority 1 issues. While there are subtle
differences between Section 508 and W3C priority 1, and different approaches
to implementing them, the checkpoints for each are very similar.

Section 508 of the U.S. Rehabilitation Act prohibits federal agencies from
buying, developing, maintaining, or using electronic and information
technology that is inaccessible to people with disabilities. Although
enacted more than 14 years ago, little progress was made under Section 508,
until 1998, when Congress passed the Workforce Investment Act, amending the
law to give members of the public and government employees with disabilities
the right to sue agencies in federal court and file administrative
complaints for noncompliance.
The deadline for full compliance of
Federal Web sites with Section 508 was June 21,2001. (It does not apply to
Web pages of private Industry). Specifically, the law directs all Federal
agencies that develop, procure, maintain or use electronic and information
technology to ensure that this technology is accessible to employees and
members of the public. The amended Section 508 requires that:
"…electronic and information technology
allows Federal employees with disabilities to have access to and use of
information and data that is comparable to the access to and use of
information and data by Federal employees who are not individuals with
disabilities, unless an undue burden would be imposed on the agency."
Read the full
regulation.
Section 508 also requires that
individuals with disabilities, who are members of the public seeking
information or services from a Federal agency, have access to and use of
information and data that is comparable to that provided to the public who
are not individuals with disabilities, "unless an undue burden would be
imposed on the agency." The full regulation can be viewed at:
www.usdoj.gov.
While applying legal leverage to
agencies, Section 508 also uses government buying power to pressure
companies to produce accessible products. Section 508 standards will become
part of the Federal Acquisition Regulation and other federal laws that
govern agency buying. Simply put, companies will no longer be able to sell
federal agencies any software or hardware that fails to meet accessibility
standards.
For more than two years, federal
agencies have been working together to realize the goal of fully accessible
federal Web sites. To coordinate training and offer technical assistance
regarding Section 508, the Federal Access Board and the General Services
Administration created
The Federal Information Technology Accessibility Initiative. FITAI's Web
site is a gateway for information regarding this topic. Noted below are
FITIA's interpretations of the portions of Section 508 that are relative to
Web accessibility:
-
Web--Based Intranet and Internet Information
and Applications (1194.22)
The criteria for Web-based technology and information are based on access
guidelines developed by the Web Accessibility Initiative of the World Wide
Web Consortium. Many of these provisions ensure access for people with
vision impairments who rely on various assistive products (such as screen
readers, which translate what's on a computer screen into automated
audible output, and refreshable Braille displays) to access computer-based
information. Certain conventions, such as verbal tags or identification of
graphics and format devices, like frames, are necessary so that these
devices can "read" them for the user in a sensible way.
The standards do not prohibit the use of Web site
graphics or animation. Instead, the standards aim to ensure that such
information is also available in an accessible format. Generally, this
means use of text labels or descriptors for graphics and certain format
elements.(HTML code already provides an "Alt Text" tag for graphics that
can serve as a verbal descriptor for graphics). This section also
addresses the usability of multimedia presentations, image maps, style
sheets, scripting languages, applets and plug-ins and electronic forms.
-
Video or Multimedia Products ((1194.24)
Multimedia products involve more than one media and include, but are not
limited to, video programs, narrated slide production and
computer-generated presentations. Provisions address caption decoder
circuitry (for any system with a screen larger than 13 inches) and
secondary audio channels for television tuners, including tuner cards for
use in computers. The standards also require captioning and audio
description for certain training and informational multimedia productions
developed or procured by Federal agencies. The standards also provide that
viewers be able to turn captioning or video description features on or
off.

The U.S. Government provides a comprehensive listing of
Section
508 information regarding general, technical, functional and
informational standards.
|