For Immediate Release
Contact:
(202) 467-5081
ebridges@acb.org
Rep.
“It is imperative that we restore the modest requirements
for production of video description to primetime television and extend them to
digital TV and the internet, require non visual access to onscreen emergency
warnings, and require visual menus to be accessible. Contrary to the commonly held notion about
the blind, we do watch television, go to movies, buy DVD's and participate
actively on the web. The American
Council of the Blind is committed to the concept that equal access to these
media is critically important for full integration into mainstream society,"
said
About the
Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act
This legislation would:
- require that mobile and other Internet-based telecommunications devices have accessible user interfaces, and offer people with disabilities use of a full range of text messaging and other popular services that are currently largely inaccessible;
- provide people who are deaf-blind with vital but costly technologies they need to communicate electronically,
- restore the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC's) modest video description rules and unambiguously establish the Commission's current and ongoing authority to expand such regulations, require emergency announcements and similar information to be accessible to people with disabilities through audible presentation of on-screen alerts,
- ensure that video programming offered via the Internet will be described, and call for all devices that receive and playback video programming to employ accessible user interfaces and allow ready access to description; and
- strengthen consumers' ability to enforce their rights to communications and video accessibility through the establishment of a clearinghouse of information about service and equipment accessibility and usability, a meaningful FCC complaint process that holds industry accountable for their accessibility obligations, and judicial review of FCC action to ensure the Commission's own accountability.
About the American
Council of the Blind
The American Council of the Blind is the largest
consumer-based organization of blind and visually impaired Americans advocating
for the rights of blind Americans. Comprised of more than 70 affiliates across
the