Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • HHS’s new rule under Section 504 adopts a technical standard for digital accessibility applicable to covered entities within two or three years (based on number of employees)
  • Websites and apps provided or developed by third parties will be required to meet this standard
  • Work-around procedures can be used for programs provided through kiosks, but they must provide equal access, convenience and confidentiality

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through its Office for Civil Rights, recently published a historic final rule (the Rule) advancing broad protections for people with disabilities under section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Section 504). The Rule broadly applies to all recipients of federal financial assistance from HHS (recipients) and to recipients’ programs and activities that involve individuals with disabilities in the United States.

Section 504 and its implementing regulations, as updated by the Rule, prohibit discrimination on the basis of disability in HHS-funded educational, health, welfare and social services programs and activities. As outlined more fully below, the Rule’s accessibility requirements include specific technical standards for web content and mobile apps. The Rule also addresses the accessibility of programs and activities provided through kiosks.

Technical standard

The Rule requires that websites and mobile applications of recipients conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), Version 2.1, Level A and Level AA success criteria. Recipients may opt to conform to different standards (such as WCAG 2.2) or use different methods to ensure accessibility, provided that the alternative standards or methods result in substantially equivalent or greater accessibility and usability than WCAG 2.1, Level A and Level AA.