Policy Brief: Building Inclusive Digital Communities in Detroit

Digital accessibility ensures that websites, apps, and digital tools can be used by people with disabilities—including those who are blind, low vision, deaf, hard of hearing, or who have cognitive, mobility, or neurological differences. The global standard for accessibility is the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), developed by the W3C’s Web Accessibility Initiative.

WCAG is structured around four core principles:

Digital accessibility is more than a technical standard—it’s a community issue. In a city like Detroit, where residents rely on digital tools to access housing, transportation, healthcare, and public services, inaccessible websites and apps can create real barriers to opportunity. As new accessibility requirements take effect in April 2026, Detroit organizations (especially public-facing) have a critical opportunity to build more inclusive digital spaces. For residents with disabilities, these challenges are often compounded when digital systems are not accessible and show up when:

  • Applying for housing or benefits online
  • Accessing city services and information
  • Finding accessible businesses and community spaces
  • Engaging in civic processes

April 2026 marks a significant shift in how accessibility is enforced and implemented globally and in the U.S. A stricter standard and stronger enforcement of WCAG 2.1 AA level is now in effect. The new baseline regulatory shift comes from updates to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

  • State and local governments are now required to ensure digital services meet WCAG 2.1 AA standards
  • Compliance deadlines begin April 2026 for larger entities
  • This applies to websites, mobile apps, online forms, and digital services

This is one of the most significant accessibility policy changes in decades and signals stricter enforcement moving forward. Accessibility lawsuits and enforcement actions are increasing across industries. Organizations that fail to comply risk legal repercussions in fines, loss of funding (especially public sector organizations), and damage to reputation as a non-compliant organization. Accessibility is both a compliance issue and a risk management priority.

Whether you’re a city department, nonprofit, or local business, here are ways to move forward:

  • Conduct an accessibility audit of your website or digital tools
  • Prioritize fixes for high-use services (applications, forms, contact pages)
  • Train staff on accessible content and design practices
  • Identify critical points (such as emails, flyers, courses, and more) to include accessibility SOP’s
  • Include accessibility requirements in vendor contracts
  • Gather feedback directly from Detroit residents with disabilities

Short-Term (0–6 Months)

  • Conduct accessibility audits of digital platforms
  • Identify and fix high-priority barriers
  • Ensure new content meets accessibility standards

Mid-Term (6–12 Months)

  • Train staff on accessible design and content practices
  • Integrate accessibility into procurement and vendor contracts
  • Establish internal accessibility policies

Long-Term (12+ Months)

  • Engage residents with disabilities in testing and feedback
  • Embed accessibility into all digital strategy and planning
  • Monitor compliance and continuously improve

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