The Justice Department told members of Congress that it is evaluating whether to issue guidance on web accessibility standards under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Responding to a bipartisan letter from 103 members of Congress requesting clarity, the DOJ stood by its interpretation that the law applies to websites, but left room for a flexible approach.
DOJ Indicates Support for ADA Website Flexibility
September 28, 2018 / By ICBA
The Justice Department told members of Congress that it is evaluating whether to issue guidance on web accessibility standards under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Responding to a bipartisan letter from 103 members of Congress requesting clarity, the DOJ stood by its interpretation that the law applies to websites, but left room for a flexible approach.
The Justice Department told members of Congress that it is evaluating whether to issue guidance on web accessibility standards under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Responding to a bipartisan letter from 103 members of Congress requesting clarity, the DOJ stood by its interpretation that the law applies to websites, but left room for a flexible approach.
The DOJ letter to Rep. Ted Budd (R-N.C.), who spearheaded the congressional letter with Rep. Lou Correa (D-Calif.), said public accommodations have flexibility in complying with nondiscrimination and communications requirements. It also said that “noncompliance with a voluntary technical standard for website accessibility does not necessarily indicate noncompliance with the ADA.”
The ICBA-supported congressional letter encouraged the DOJ to issue guidance and restrict the rising number of unsubstantiated demand letters and lawsuits from private plaintiffs. It noted that website accessibility demand letters and lawsuits rose from 57 in 2015 to 814 last year—a 1,328 percent increase.
The DOJ letter to Congress follows its response last year to an ICBA letter asking the department to intervene in the demand letters and lawsuits from plaintiff’s attorneys.
Following the DOJ’s response, ICBA updated its guidelines for community banks with advice on how to respond to plaintiffs’ demand letters.
Read DOJ Letter to Congress
Read Congressional Letter
Read ICBA Letter to DOJ
Read ICBA ADA Guidelines
Subscribe now
Sign up for the Independent Banker newsletter to receive twice-monthly emails about new issues and must-read content you might have missed.
Sponsored Content
Featured Webinars
Join ICBA Community
Interested in discussing this and other topics? Network with and learn from your peers with the app designed for community bankers.
Subscribe Today
Sign up for Independent Banker eNews to receive twice-monthly emails that alert you when a new issue drops and highlight must-read content you might have missed.
News Watch Today
Join the Conversation with ICBA Community
ICBA Community is an online platform led by community bankers to foster connections, collaborations, and discussions on industry news, best practices, and regulations, while promoting networking, mentorship, and member feedback to guide future initiatives.