What is Section 508?
Section 508 is part of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. It focuses on ensuring that information and communication (ICT) products, including hardware and software, websites, applications, and digital media, are accessible to people with disabilities.
Section 508 applies to three types of organizations:
- Government bodies
- Organizations that receive federal funding
- Service providers to government agencies and organizations that receive federal funding
The Rehabilitation Act: a brief rundown
In the early 1970s, American lawmakers started to become more aware of the need to enact laws that would protect the rights of citizens with disabilities. This culminated in the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, a law mainly affecting the ways in which the government would support people with disabilities. The Rehabilitation Act expanded the authorization of grants for state vocational rehabilitation services, established federal responsibility for research and training programs for individuals with disabilities, and tasked government agencies such as the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare with coordinating programs for people with disabilities.
The introduction of Section 508 to the Rehabilitation Act and its later revision
As time progressed, there was an urgent need to update the Rehabilitation Act so that it would address rapidly evolving technological developments. To that end, Section 508 was introduced into the Rehabilitation Act in 1998. Under the original phrasing of this law, federal agencies were required to make their electronic and information technology (IET) accessible to people with disabilities. This was a significant step forward in ensuring equal access to information and technology for everyone, regardless of their physical or cognitive abilities.
This, however, would not be the final version of this law. In March 2017, the U.S. Access Board published a final update to Section 508’s accessibility requirements for information and communication technology (ICT). The update was intended to provide a stricter definition of “accessibility,” and to bring the requirements in line with the radically new technology of the 21st century.
Four major changes were introduced in the 2017 revision:
- WCAG as the standard for compliance: The 2017 update formally established the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) as the accessibility standards that agencies should use. Therefore, relevant bodies must ensure that their websites (along with other ICT products, such as online documents and videos) conform to WCAG 2.0 Level AA. We’ll explain what this means in detail in just a moment. You can skip to that section by pressing here
- Content accessibility: All official agency content that’s aimed at the general public has to be accessible in forms that accommodate different disabilities, including vision impairments, hearing impairments (e.g., deafness) along with cognitive, language, and learning disabilities
- Synchronization: At the root level of technological design, all software and operating systems must be compatible with assistive technologies that might be used by people with disabilities, such as screen readers
- Expanded marketplace: Lawmakers wanted to use Section 508 to create a larger market for accessibility solutions by incorporating international standards into US government policy