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Subject:
From:
Kelly Pierce <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Kelly Pierce <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 25 Nov 2000 14:43:56 -0600
Content-Type:
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This is from the site  http://www.govexec.com

kelly

November 21, 2000
New IT accessibility regulations could come next week
By William New, National Journal's Technology Daily

The U.S. Access Board on Monday appeared to be headed for a vote in favor of
new rules designed to help disabled citizens access government information
via technology.
A vote count of mail-in ballots from board members Monday was not complete
as of Monday afternoon, but it was clear that the rules would pass,
according to Doug Wakefield, accessibility specialist at the Access Board.
"I don't expect any hitches," Wakefield said.
The rules must receive final approval from the Office of Management and
Budget after the vote, but Wakefield said the office already has signed off
on the regulation. OMB looks at the cost implications of the rules to ensure
they are within budget.
Details of the long-delayed rules, which are required under Section 508 of
the 1998 amendments to the Rehabilitation Act, will not be made public until
they are published in the Federal Register in the next week or two,
Wakefield said.
The Access Board is tasked with developing guidelines to make both the
brick-and-mortar and online worlds accessible to the disabled. Under the
so-called Section 508 rules, which seek to close the "disability divide,"
companies that contract for government technology jobs would have to make
government computers, software, hardware, Web sites, fax machines and other
information sources more accessible to people with visual and other
impairments.
An example is a computer touch screen, which can be difficult for a person
with poor vision or a trembling hand to operate. Such screens also do not
respond to the touch of a prosthetic hand. The new rules would require
government contractors to structure government technology to compensate for
such needs. Section 508 would not apply to the private sector in general.
The total cost to business and government to meet the regulations is
estimated at $85 million to $600 million, but the Access Board believes
industry would benefit from them over time because a commercial market would
develop for the technologies they develop under government contract.
Advocates of the new rules also say they would reduce worker compensation
costs.
Twelve federal officials at the assistant secretary level and 13 members of
the public appointed by the president were to cast ballots on the Section
508 rules.
The rules have been anticipated for months, as authorities worked them into
final form. The proposed rules were published March 31, and the comment
period ended May 30.
The final rules are significantly different from the previous version, and
Wakefield said, "The changes are bound to upset some people on both sides of
the issue." That is the spirit of compromise, he noted.


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