Accessibility & Assistive Tech — 2026-05-05
New York City's comptroller published a five-year accessibility benchmark plan this week, marking a concrete municipal step toward disability inclusion under Local Law 12 of 2023. Meanwhile, WordPress's accessibility team released its April 2026 documentation update, and the HHS Section 504 web accessibility deadline of May 11, 2026 looms for healthcare and education entities — even as DOJ has extended its own ADA Title II deadlines by a year.
Accessibility & Assistive Tech — 2026-05-05
Tech Updates
WordPress Accessibility Docs Updated for April 2026
The WordPress Make Accessibility team published its April 2026 documentation update on April 30, covering ongoing work on how to test for accessibility within the WordPress ecosystem. The update reflects continued community-driven effort to align WordPress documentation with current assistive technology compatibility standards, including proper support for screen readers and other tools.

Inclusive Design
New York City Publishes Five-Year Accessibility Benchmark Plan
The Office of the New York City Comptroller Mark Levine published its Five-Year Accessibility Plan 2026 Benchmark this week, fulfilling a requirement under Local Law 12 of 2023 (codified as section 23-1004 of the NYC Administrative Code). The law mandates that city agencies prepare and publish five-year accessibility plans using a template provided by the Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities. The benchmark report represents the city's structured commitment to improving access across municipal services for people with disabilities.

What to Watch
HHS Section 504 Deadline Stands at May 11, 2026 — No Extension
While the DOJ extended its ADA Title II web accessibility deadlines by one year in April 2026 (moving larger jurisdictions to April 2027 and smaller ones to April 2028), the Department of Health and Human Services has not followed suit. HHS's Section 504 rule from May 2024 — which imposes parallel WCAG 2.1 Level AA web and mobile accessibility requirements on recipients of HHS funding, including healthcare providers and educational institutions — retains its original May 11, 2026 first compliance deadline. Legal advisers at Duane Morris note that covered entities should use any remaining time to complete WCAG 2.1 Level AA audits of primary sites and apps, inventory third-party content, and review vendor contracts to ensure accessibility is built into procurement.

Non-compliance with either the DOJ or HHS rules can lead to enforcement actions, administrative complaints, and private lawsuits. The DOJ has stated it "fully anticipates" enforcement at the new extended deadline, signaling that the extra year is not a regulatory pause.
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