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State & Local Government

ADA Title II ready — without a year-long consulting engagement.

Readiness assessments, WCAG 2.1 AA audits, document and forms remediation, and vendor VPAT review for state agencies, city and county governments, transit, libraries, and special districts.

Where we focus

Deliverables and scope.

  • Public-facing portals (benefits, permits, payments, court services)
  • Internal staff applications used to administer programs
  • PDF and forms remediation (PDF/UA + WCAG 2.1 AA)
  • Mobile apps and progressive web apps
  • Vendor VPAT review for procurement and contract award
  • Title II readiness roadmap aligned to the DOJ deadlines

Built for

Built for these buyers.

  • State agencies, courts, and constitutional offices
  • Cities, counties, and consolidated governments
  • Transit agencies, utilities, and special districts
  • Libraries, parks, and other public-service providers

Why public-sector teams choose 508Audit

Public-sector fluency

We write deliverables your council, board, or oversight committee can put on the record — not generic accessibility marketing.

PDFs are first-class

Most Title II risk lives in forms and PDFs. We remediate to PDF/UA and WCAG 2.1 AA per-document or per-template, with bulk pricing.

Prioritized by impact

Year-one focuses on the programs people actually use. We sequence work against your fiscal calendar and the DOJ Title II deadlines.

State & local government FAQ

  • Are state and local governments covered by ADA Title II for web and mobile?
    Yes. The 2024 DOJ rule under Title II requires state and local government web content and mobile apps to conform to WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Entities with 50,000+ population have until April 2026; those under 50,000 until April 2027. The rule covers public-facing and internal content used to administer programs.
  • What about state procurement standards?
    Many states have adopted Section 508 by reference for IT procurement (often through statewide IT policy or governor's accessibility executive orders). We support both the Title II side (programs, services, activities) and the procurement side (VPAT review, vendor compliance).
  • Where do most agencies start?
    Inventory and baseline. Most state and local IT teams know their main public sites; the unknowns are department-specific subdomains, third-party SaaS, PDFs, and forms. We baseline the visible inventory, surface the hidden assets, and prioritize by program criticality.
  • Do you work with cities, counties, and special districts?
    Yes — city governments, county governments, special districts (water, transit, library), regional councils, and constitutional offices. Scope and pricing scale with inventory size; we publish fixed-fee tiers for readiness work.

Need a Title II briefing for leadership?

We'll come back with a sample roadmap, fixed-fee readiness pricing, and a procurement-ready scope your finance office can act on.