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  • Available at No Cost to all Government, Education, & Healthcare organizations.
  • Built and maintained by the U.S. federal government for long-term digital services.
  • Designed for security, accessibility, and stability — not marketing churn.
  • Backed by public standards instead of vendor roadmaps.
  • No licensing fees, subscriptions, or per-seat costs.
  • No vendor lock-in or forced platform migrations.

Used by the WhiteHouse.gov & NASA

Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) are the legal frameworks that require public and federally-funded entities to provide accessible digital services. We help you navigate these mandates, focusing on the upcoming April 24, 2026 deadline to ensure your organization remains compliant and protected while securing its federal funding.

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) are the globally recognized technical standards used to measure digital accessibility. As mandated by the latest USDOJ rulings, we align your projects with Level AA standards. This ensures your content is POUR: Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust—the four pillars of a legally compliant and accessible website.”

While standard web code (HTML) provides the basic structure of a page, modern websites often use complex interactive features—like menus, pop-ups, and live updates—that standard code can’t fully describe. WAI-ARIA (Web Accessibility Initiative – Accessible Rich Internet Applications) is the specialized set of attributes we use to bridge this gap.

Why it matters for Section 508: ARIA is a mandatory technical requirement for any organization receiving federal funds. It is the key to moving beyond “static” accessibility and providing a truly robust, barrier-free experience for users with diverse needs.

The Human-Centered Validation of Digital Access

Technical compliance is the foundation, but Usability Testing is the ultimate proof of success. While automated tools can find code errors, they cannot simulate the lived experience of a person navigating a website with a disability. We prioritize testing that goes beyond the “checkbox” to ensure your digital services are truly functional for everyone.

Our testing process involves evaluating your site’s interface through the lens of real-world assistive technology users. We focus on:

  • Keyboard-Only Navigation: Verifying that a user can access every link and form without ever touching a mouse.
  • Screen Reader Fidelity: Ensuring the “audio version” of your site is clear, logical, and doesn’t get stuck in “focus traps.”
  • Cognitive Simplicity: Testing that instructions and layouts are intuitive for users with diverse learning and processing styles.

Why it matters for Section 508: Federal guidelines and USDOJ mandates aren’t just about passing a scan; they are about civil rights and equal access. By incorporating usability testing, we help you mitigate legal risk and ensure that your community members in government, healthcare, and education can actually complete the tasks they need—like filing a form or booking an appointment—without frustration.

Tab Title: PDF & Document Accessibility

The “Paperless” Compliance Mandate

Digital accessibility extends far beyond your website’s code; it applies to every document you host, share, or email. Whether it is a city ordinance, a school curriculum, or a patient intake form, Section 508 and ADA Title II require that electronic documents—including PDFs, Word files, Excel sheets, and PowerPoints—are fully navigable for users with disabilities.

An accessible document is more than just a “readable” file. We ensure your documents are “remediated” with a hidden structural layer that assistive technology depends on. This includes:

  • Structural Tagging: Adding digital “tags” (H1, P, Table) so screen readers understand the difference between a headline and a paragraph.
  • Logical Reading Order: Ensuring that content is read in the correct sequence, even in complex multi-column layouts.
  • Alternative Text & Metadata: Embedding descriptions for images and charts, and setting internal document titles and languages for proper pronunciation.
  • Accessible Forms: Converting static forms into interactive, keyboard-navigable documents with clear labels and instructions.

Why it matters for Section 508: For organizations accepting federal funds, providing an inaccessible PDF is a high-risk compliance gap. With the April 2026 deadline approaching, remediating your document library is a critical step in serving your community and protecting your organization from digital accessibility litigation.