Website Accessibility Recommendations for Minnesota Cities

Accessibility of government information and resources is a fundamental principle all cities and their constituents value. When city websites and mobile apps are not accessible, they can create barriers for people with disabilities. New accessibility requirements from the federal government provide more clarity about what cities need to do to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act so everyone can access city services, programs, and activities online.

New accessibility rule for city websites and apps

In April 2024, the Department of Justice (DOJ) published the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title II Web and Mobile Application Accessibility Rule that includes technical requirements your city must follow to ensure your websites and mobile applications (apps) are accessible to people with disabilities. For many cities, this change will require significant upgrades to their websites and apps.

Technical standard established

The new ADA Title II rule provides uniform web standards to increase accessibility to online government services for all. The rule adopted Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Version 2.1, Levels A and AA as the technical standard for local governments’ web content and mobile apps. While they are called guidelines, they are required under Title II of the ADA.

If your city contracts with third parties to provide online resources and services, you must ensure those contractors also meet the WCAG technical requirements.

The WCAG standards were developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C); find more information about the standards on their website:

Deadline for complying with the ADA Title II rule

The start date for compliance with the ADA rule depends on your city’s population. After the rule’s start dates, your city’s web content and mobile apps must comply with WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA standards.

  • Cities with a population of 50,000 or more persons
    Compliance deadline: April 24, 2026
  • Cites with a population of 0 to 49,999 persons and special district governments
    Compliance deadline: April 26, 2027

Prior to the rule start date, cities must provide people with disabilities equal access to their services, programs, and activities offered via the web and mobile apps according to existing ADA Title II obligations.

Suggested steps your city can take to comply with the ADA Title II Web and Mobile Application Accessibility Rule

Your city should plan to ensure compliance with the rule for your website and mobile apps by the deadline. Because certain steps in this process may take time and planning, cities should not wait to get started. The DOJ and Minnesota IT Services (MNIT) have helpful information and resources to get you started:

The following recommendations include some suggested steps your city may want to take to start to comply with the Title II ADA rule; these are summaries from external resources and include links to more detailed information. The recommendations are a starting point, are not all inclusive, and are not a substitute for legal advice; consult your city attorney for advice about complying with the ADA Title II rule.

  • Identify your city's web content and mobile apps

    An inventory can help your city identify the online content and apps that may need to comply with the WCAG 2.1 standards and help focus your efforts going forward. Consider including the following in your inventory:

    • City website(s), including:
      • Number of webpages.
      • Types of web content (PDFs, Word files, videos, audio, images).
      • Who can post on the website, including members of the public.
    • Social media and video platforms used and types of content posted on these.
    • Other places on the web where the city posts content.
    • Mobile apps used by the city; indicate if operated in-house or by third parties.
    • Third-party vendor resources and content the city provides online.

    Minnesota IT Services has an Accessibility Inventory Workbook to help you gather data, identify questions that need to be considered, and document plans for future changes.

  • Identify and review contracts with third-party vendors that provide online resources and apps

    If your city provides online resources and content from third-party vendors, review any contracts with these service providers regarding their compliance with WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA requirements. For those that aren’t compliant, you might amend contracts or start exploring alternative vendors that can provide compliant services. The city should work with the city attorney to review any third-party vendor contracts. In addition to the city attorney, the League’s Contract Review Service may be able to help cities in reviewing their vendor contracts. Read more about the League’s Contract Review Service.

    Here are some steps you may want to take regarding third-party vendors:

    • Review current contracts with website and digital services vendors to determine if they include any guarantees of accessibility. Contact vendors to ensure their tools are compliant with WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA.
    • Before entering contracts with digital service vendors, ensure their services are compliant with WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA.
    • Understand the city’s role in maintaining accessibility of information hosted on a vendor’s platform. While a vendor’s platform or service may be compliant, any city-produced documents, maps, tables, or images must also be compliant. Ask vendors to outline the role of each party in the service agreement or in writing.

    Read some DOJ examples of other approaches to consider regarding third-party vendors.

  • Determine what accessibility fixes are needed to comply with the rule

    Once you’ve taken an inventory of your websites, online content, and apps and have determined which of those needs to comply with WCAG standards under the new rule, the next step is to evaluate them to see what fixes may be needed.

    • Initial review: You may want to do some preliminary checks to help you get started and help figure out how to approach a more comprehensive review. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) offers a set of initial steps to manually check a webpage for some basic accessibility issues, which should be followed by a more robust assessment.
      Access W3C’s Easy Checks resource for a first review of web accessibility.
    • Automated testing tools: Automated tools can help identify only some accessibility issues but cannot assess all aspects, especially those requiring human judgment. Therefore, automated tools should be used alongside manual assessments for a comprehensive evaluation.
      W3C offers some guidance and considerations for using automated tools and provides a list of evaluation tools that may be a helpful starting point.

    • Comprehensive audit: You may want to contract with a vendor to conduct a more comprehensive accessibility assessment of your websites, online content and resources, and apps. The audit would include an automated check and a manual check by experts in web accessibility, including users with disabilities, to identify real-world accessibility barriers.
  • Prioritize which content to fix first

    After evaluating your websites, web content and resources, it’s time to develop a plan to fix accessibility issues to comply with WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA by the deadline. You may not be able to address all issues at once, so it’s important to prioritize what to fix now and what can be fixed over time.

    The DOJ recommends considering certain factors when prioritizing content, including whether the content:

    • Enables people to perform key tasks, like applying for employment opportunities; registering for programs; submitting forms, requests, or reservations; paying bills; or making purchases.
    • Is frequently accessed or is important for accessing essential government programs.
    • Has been flagged as inaccessible by individuals with disabilities.
    • Appears across multiple web pages, like navigation menus, search features, and footers.
    • Is based on a template, so that you can ensure all content using that template is accessible.

    Read more from the DOJ about prioritizing which content to fix first.

    View other issues to consider when prioritizing accessibility issues to fix.

    Some fixes may need to be addressed by third-party vendors while others can be handled by city staff who should understand the basics of web accessibility and how to make repairs — see the ‘Train your staff’ step to learn more. Once fixes have been made, they should be checked again to ensure accessibility issues were adequately addressed.

  • Create an accessibility policy and accessibility statement

    An internal accessibility policy includes specific actions that your city will take to start complying with the ADA Title II rule and stay compliant in the future. The policy may be similar to, or part of, other ADA non-discrimination policies your city may have adopted.

    A city’s accessibility policy should include accessibility goals and targets and establish the web accessibility standard you aim to conform to and by when. It can outline responsibilities, actions, processes, reporting, documentation, and deadlines for your city’s accessibility plan. The accessibility policy is a living document and should be reviewed and updated on a regular basis.

    Including an external accessibility statement on your city’s website:

    • Shows users that you care about accessibility and about them.
    • Provides users with information about the accessibility of your content.
    • Demonstrates an ongoing commitment to accessibility, and to social responsibility.

    Your city’s external accessibility statement should contain:

    • A commitment to accessibility.
    • A statement on the applied WCAG 2.1, Levels A and AA standard.
    • Contact information and procedures for users to submit feedback in case they experience accessibility barriers.

    Learn more from W3C on how to develop an accessibility statement and access a tool to generate an accessibility statement.

    Develop a process for staff to handle requests for accessible content

    City staff should be trained on how to respond to questions and requests regarding accessible online content to include the following:

    • If a request comes in via phone, email, or in person, follow data practices law for the process and stress an interactive dialog.
    • Document the date, time, and substance of the feedback, noting the city’s interest in working with the requester to resolve the issue.
    • Document all measures taken to resolve the issue.

    Consider including the handling of accessibility access requests in a specific position’s job duties and designate a back-up position to handle such requests. For example, if your city has a clerk and a deputy clerk, include this as a duty in both job descriptions.