Skip to main content

Welcome to our new website! The content and organization have been heavily redone and we want to hear from you! 
Submit feedback

Accessibility Governance Charter

Structure, roles, and accountability for UA's digital accessibility program.

📜 Official governance document

Charter overview

This charter establishes the governance framework for digital accessibility at the University of Arizona. It defines organizational structure, roles, responsibilities, and accountability mechanisms to ensure compliance with legal requirements and institutional commitment to access.

Charter scope

This governance structure applies to:

  • All university websites and web applications
  • Mobile applications
  • Learning management systems and educational technology
  • Documents and digital content
  • Procured third-party technology
  • Audio and video content

Governance structure

Digital Accessibility Steering Committee

Purpose: Provide strategic direction, resource allocation, and executive oversight.

Composition:

  • Chief Information Officer (Chair)
  • Vice Provost for Academic Affairs
  • ADA/504 Coordinator
  • Director of Disability Resource Center
  • University Communications representative
  • Faculty Senate representative
  • Staff Advisory Council representative
  • Student representative (appointed by ASUA)

Meetings: Quarterly

Digital Accessibility Operations Team

Purpose: Implement policies, provide training, and manage day-to-day accessibility operations.

Composition:

  • Digital Accessibility Coordinator (Lead)
  • Web Accessibility Specialist
  • Instructional Technology Accessibility Specialist
  • Procurement Accessibility Liaison
  • Communications Accessibility Liaison

Meetings: Bi-weekly

Unit Accessibility Liaisons

Purpose: Serve as accessibility points of contact within colleges, departments, and administrative units.

Responsibilities:

  • Coordinate accessibility efforts within unit
  • Report issues to Operations Team
  • Communicate policy updates to unit staff
  • Attend quarterly liaison meetings

Roles and responsibilities

Digital Accessibility Coordinator

  • Develop and maintain accessibility policies and standards
  • Coordinate accessibility training programs
  • Manage accessibility auditing and testing
  • Track and report on accessibility metrics
  • Respond to accessibility complaints and requests
  • Advise on procurement accessibility evaluations

Content owners (all staff)

  • Create accessible content following guidelines
  • Remediate existing inaccessible content
  • Report accessibility issues when identified
  • Complete required accessibility training
  • Respond to accommodation requests

Web developers and IT staff

  • Build accessible websites and applications
  • Test for accessibility during development
  • Follow WCAG 2.1 AA standards
  • Fix accessibility bugs as high priority
  • Maintain accessibility in third-party integrations

Procurement officers

  • Include accessibility requirements in RFPs
  • Evaluate vendor VPATs
  • Document accessibility exceptions
  • Consult with Accessibility Coordinator on technology purchases

Supervisors and managers

  • Ensure staff complete accessibility training
  • Allocate time for accessibility work
  • Include accessibility in job descriptions
  • Hold staff accountable for accessible output

Standards and compliance

Technical standards

Content typeStandardLevel
WebsitesWCAG 2.1AA
Web applicationsWCAG 2.1AA
Mobile appsWCAG 2.1AA
Documents (PDF, Word)PDF/UA, WCAG 2.1 AA principles—
VideoWCAG 2.1 (captions, audio description)AA
Procured softwareVPAT/ACR documenting WCAG 2.1 AAAA

Legal compliance framework

  • ADA Title II: Requires accessible public services (deadline April 2026)
  • Section 504: Requires accessibility for institutions receiving federal funds
  • Section 508: Standards for federal electronic and IT
  • Arizona State Law: HB 2319 requires accessible government websites

Accountability mechanisms

Training requirements

  • All employees: Accessibility awareness training within 90 days of hire
  • Content creators: Document accessibility training within 6 months
  • Web developers: Technical accessibility training annually
  • Supervisors: Accessibility management training within 1 year

Auditing and reporting

  • Automated scans: Monthly scanning of university websites
  • Manual audits: Annual audit of high-traffic pages and applications
  • User testing: Quarterly testing with users of assistive technology
  • Metrics reporting: Quarterly accessibility dashboard to Steering Committee

Issue resolution

  1. Report: Issues reported to accessibility@arizona.edu or web form
  2. Triage: Operations Team categorizes by severity (24-48 hours)
  3. Assignment: Issue assigned to responsible unit
  4. Resolution: Unit remediates within SLA timeframe
  5. Verification: Operations Team verifies fix
  6. Escalation: Unresolved issues escalate to Steering Committee

Performance integration

Accessibility responsibilities will be:

  • Included in position descriptions for relevant roles
  • Part of performance evaluation criteria
  • Considered in unit-level assessment

Exception process

When full accessibility cannot be achieved, units may request an exception:

Exception criteria

  • Fundamental alteration of program/service
  • Undue burden (documented financial analysis required)
  • Technical impossibility with current technology

Exception requirements

  • Documented business justification
  • Description of barriers and affected users
  • Proposed equally effective alternative access
  • Timeline for remediation if possible
  • Approval by unit head and Digital Accessibility Coordinator

Exception review

Exceptions are reviewed annually and must be re-approved to remain in effect.

Charter amendments

This charter may be amended by:

  • Proposal from Steering Committee member
  • Review by Operations Team
  • Approval by majority of Steering Committee
  • Annual review and update cycle

Version: 1.0
Effective date: January 1, 2026
Next review: January 2027

Related documents