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# Web Accessibility

The DOJ’s 2026 Accessibility Rule: What K-12 School Districts Need to Know

In 2024, the DOJ finalized major updates to the ADA Title II rule, setting new digital accessibility requirements for public universities—including K-12 School Districts—with compliance deadlines beginning in 2026. In this webinar, we’ll break down what the rule means for documents and PDFs, how the deadlines apply to your organization, and the practical approaches institutions are using to provide accessible access to materials when manual remediation isn’t feasible

Original Air Date: February 3, 2026

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What You’ll Learn:

  • An overview of the DOJ’s ADA Title II ruling as it applies to documents and digital files
  • Key 2026 compliance deadlines and what CSU and UC campuses are expected to address by those dates
  • What “document accessibility” means for PDFs, syllabi, forms, and legacy academic content
  • Common document accessibility challenges across large, decentralized university systems
  • Practical paths to compliance, including a range of document accessibility approaches
  • Tools and workflows that can support document accessibility at scale

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The DOJ Web Accessibility Deadline is Approaching

* Deadline indicated is for municipalities w/ populations over 50,000. Deadline based on CST.

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Meet Your Speakers

Mac Clemmens Headshot

Mac Clemmens

Senior Vice President of Product Strategy and Innovation at CivicPlus

CivicPlus® Senior Vice President of Product Strategy and Innovation Mac Clemmens is the Co-Founder of DocAccess and Streamline. Mac is a proud advocate of website accessibility and local government, having presented on the subject at conferences nationwide. He received the prestigious “Vision Award” from Disability Rights California—the nation’s largest disability rights advocacy organization—in recognition of his commitment to creating accessible website experiences for all users. Mac is passionate about helping local governments tell their stories and engage with their communities, ensuring that the fear of ADA noncompliance doesn’t stand in the way.

Driven by the real challenges local governments face around PDF accessibility, Mac created DocAccess, a tool designed to make compliance achievable while significantly improving the user experience for people with disabilities and the public at large. To date, more than 10 million document pages have been made WCAG 2.1 AA compliant through DocAccess.

Carter Temm Headshot

Carter Temm

Accessibility Consultant and Screen Reader User

Carter Temm is an accessibility consultant and trainer with nearly a decade of experience helping organizations improve their digital and document accessibility. He has worked with a wide range of clients on accessibility auditing, strategy, and practical implementation of standards. A lifelong user of assistive technologies himself, Carter brings both professional expertise and firsthand insight into how people with disabilities actually experience digital content. His work focuses on helping institutions build accessible, usable content and services for all users, and on empowering teams with the knowledge and tools to make accessibility part of everyday practice.