On December 26, 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice published a notice for web accessibility. The notice, like many governmental documents, was confusing.
The notice withdrew a document called “Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,” which had announced a new set of upcoming regulations for accessibility of web information under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Many observers assumed (i) the Advance Notice meant that the DoJ was going to issue regulations that forced websites to be accessible to users with disabilities, and (ii) having withdrawn the Advance Notice, the DoJ did not, ultimately, require accessible websites.
Both of these assumptions are wrong.
The Americans with Disabilities Act already required websites to be accessible to disabled users. This has been well established in U.S. courts — most recently in a decision by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals against Domino’s Pizza.
Moreover, the DoJ issued a clear statement, via a letter from the assistant U.S. attorney general, on September 25, 2018:
The Department first articulated its interpretation that the ADA applies to public accommodations’ websites over 20 years ago. This interpretation is consistent with the ADA’s title III requirement that the goods, services, privileges, or activities provided by places of public accommodation be equally accessible to people with disabilities.
In other words, there was no need for the Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, as the courts and the DoJ made clear their positions: an accessible website is required under the ADA.
Where does this leave commercial websites?
Obligations for Web Accessibility
The lack of regulations governing web accessibility for commercial websites means there are no rules. You do not need to follow the guidelines established for federal websites, nor do you need to follow the international standards for accessibility published by the World Wide Web Consortium.
But the Sept. 25 letter contains broad guidance on compliance with the ADA:
Absent the adoption of specific technical requirements for websites through rulemaking, public accommodations have flexibility in how to comply with the ADA’s general requirements of nondiscrimination and effective communication. Accordingly, noncompliance with a voluntary technical standard for website accessibility does not necessarily indicate noncompliance with the ADA.
Thus, the DoJ grants flexibility in determining how to comply with the ADA’s requirements.
You have no obligation to follow web accessibility guidelines. But you do have an obligation to provide an accessible website. Almost any accessibility consultant will acknowledge that guidelines on website accessibility are flawed; there is no perfect description of web accessibility. However, few would argue that the guidelines are too strict. Usually, the flaws with guidelines are failures to address important issues.
The lack of specificity means that the determination of an accessible website is not through compliance with a set of rules or regulations. Instead, the accessibility of individual sites is being arbitrated in the courts.
Web Accessibility in the Courts
All of this has produced a great number of web accessibility lawsuits. According to Seyfarth Shaw, an international law firm, the number of ADA Title III lawsuits (Title III is the section that prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability) has increased from 4,789 in 2015 to 10,163 in 2018. The firm attributes much of this increase to website accessibility. In 2018, there were nearly 2,000 web accessibility lawsuits filed. Before 2015, there were virtually none.
I used to tell my clients that there was little chance they would be sued for an inaccessible site. But that is no longer the case — an inaccessible site is now a financial risk. (I am not an attorney, however.)
Next Steps
Even though the DoJ has not established guidelines for accessible websites, businesses (including ecommerce sites) are well advised to follow W3C’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, version 2.1, at level AA. There are several reasons.
First, multiple countries, include the U.S., follow those W3C guidelines for their own websites. This will protect you at some level internationally, and will certainly not hurt within the U.S. (The U.S. government is using WCAG 2.0 and not WCAG 2.1, the July 2018 revision. However, 2.1 offers considerable benefits with only a handful of new requirements.)
Second, you need to start somewhere. While you aren’t required to follow specific guidelines, there’s no benefit to inventing your own techniques. Certainly there is room for interpretation when it comes to accessibility. But, still, following existing standards is considerably easier and safer than creating your own.
Third, the federal government will almost certainly set regulations for web accessibility. It’s unlikely they will deviate significantly from international standards.