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2 The law 3 Frequently asked questions |
Section 508 was originally added as an amendment to The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, in 1986. The original Section 508 was added to The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, to prevent employment dicrimination by parties having contracts with the U. S. Federal Government and by programs and activities receiving Federal funding. The original section 508 dealt with electronic and information technologies, in recognition of the growth of this field.
In 1997, The Federal Electronic and Information Technology Accessibility and Compliance Act was proposed in the U. S. legislature to correct the shotcomings of the original section 508; the original Section 508 had turned out to be mostly ineffective, in part due to the lack of enforcement mechanisms. In the end, this Federal Electronic and Information Technology Accessibility and Compliance Act, with revisions, was enacted as the new Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, in 1988.
Section 508 requires that electronic and information technology developed, procured, used, or maintained by all agencies and departments of the Federal Government be accessible both to Federal employees with disabilities and to members of the public with disabilites, and that these two groups have equal use of such technologies as federal employess and members of the public that do not have diabilities.
The latest information about these standards and about support available from the Access Board in implementing them, as well as, the results of surveys conducted to assess compliance is available from the Board's newletter Access Currents.
Is this part of the ADA?
History
The law
This legislation is due to come into effect on June 25, 2001. The original legislation mandated that the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, known as the Access Board, establish a draft for their Final Standards for accessibility for such electronic and information technologies in December 2001. The final standards were approved in April 2001 and come into effect six months after the initial draft, i.e., this June 25.Frequently asked questions
''Is this related to, or the same as, the WWW Consortium's
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines?''