1.
The U.S. Access Board is in process of updating the requirements of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act and
Section 255 of the Telecommunication Act. As part of the effort to update electronic and information
technology requirements, the Access Board formed in 2006 a federal advisory committee to provide
recommendations. The Access Board’s Telecommunications and Electronic and Information Technology
Advisory Committee was composed of 41 organizations including technology companies, trade associations,
national disability organizations, and invited to its sessions representatives from international bodies (European
Commission; Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (Australia); Industry Canada; and Japanese
Standards Association). The representative of the European Commission is a voting member in that Federal
Advisory Committee to ensure coherence in requirements to the greatest extent possible. On February 18,
2015, the U.S. Access Board released a
proposed rule updating the 508 Standards and the 255 Guidelines
, and
made them available for public comment until May 28, 2015. The rulemaking process is expected to be finalized
soon.
2.
The European Commission issued in 2005 the Mandate M 376 to the three European Standards Organizations
(CEN, CENELEC and ETSI) to develop accessibility requirements for the public procurement of ICT products and
services. They accepted the mandate and the work of M/376 was managed by a CEN-CENELEC and ETSI Joint
Working Group eAccessibility, with AENOR Secretariat and a Team of Experts. In January 2014, CEN, CENELEC
and ETSI were pleased to announce the publication of the EN 301 549 ‘Accessibility requirements suitable for
public procurement of ICT products and services in Europe’, as the first European Standard for accessible ICT
products and services. The standard has been accompanied by an online accessible ICT procurement toolkit, to
help its implementation. It was updated in April 2015 (v.1.1.2). As agreed under the Dialogue, experts of the U.S.
Access Board were participating in the work of the standard development.
3.
Thanks to this collaboration, these two standards aligned on a number of important aspects. For instance, like
Section 508, which avoids the purchase of non-accessible technologies, also the EN 301549 (a voluntary
standard) can be used to comply with the obligation of the European Public Procurement Directive, which also
obliges to take into account accessibility for persons with disabilities.
I
NNOVATION
Standards development takes a long time, so the challenge has been to maintain close contact to help ensure the
standards do not go in different directions. Countries have unique regulatory and standards development processes and
time must be taken to understand the limitations and mechanisms of these processes. Close trans-atlantic cooperation
was difficult due to the differences between the two legislative & standards models (being the Section 508 binding
legislation, and the EN 301549 a voluntary standard), the process to push this policy forward and the stakeholders
involved in it. Despite this, both administrations worked to have a common approach to e-accessibility. The regular
meetings and the integration of voting members in each drafting committee were ensuring an intense and continuing
cooperation. This US-EU cooperation, by its scale, is unprecedented in the field of accessibility in ICT.