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Practices Development F.A.Q. Glossary Accessibility
Resources
Arkansas Code: Information
Technology Access for the Blind Promulgated from Act 1227
of 1999
Findings
and Policy Definitions Assurance of Nonvisual
Access Procurement
Requirements
Implementation Action for Injunction History
25-26-201. Findings and policy.
(a) The General Assembly finds that:
(1) The advent of the information age throughout
the United States and around the world has resulted in lasting changes
in information technology;
(2) Use of interactive visual display terminals by state and state-assisted
organizations is becoming a widespread means of access for employees
and the public to obtain information available electronically, but
nonvisual access, whether by speech, Braille, or other appropriate
means has been overlooked in purchasing and deploying the latest information
technology;
(3) Presentation of electronic data solely in a visual format is a
barrier to access by individuals who are blind or visually impaired,
preventing them from participating on equal terms in crucial areas
of life such as education and employment;
(4) Alternatives, including both software and hardware adaptations,
have been created so that interactive control of computers and use
of the information presented is possible by both visual and nonvisual
means; and
(5) The goals of the state in obtaining and deploying the most advanced
forms of information technology properly include universal access so
that segments of society with particular needs, including, but not
limited to, individuals unable to use visual displays, will not be
left out of the information age.
(b) It is the policy of the State of Arkansas that all programs and
activities which are supported in whole or in part by public funds shall
be conducted in accordance with the following principles:
(1) Individuals who are blind or visually impaired
have the right to full participation in the life of the state, including
the use of advanced technology which is provided by the state or state-assisted
organizations for use by employees, program participants, and members
of the general public; and
(2) Technology purchased in whole or in part with funds provided by
the state to be used for the creation, storage, retrieval, or dissemination
of information and intended for use by employees, program participants,
and members of the general public shall be accessible to and usable
by individuals who are blind or visually impaired.
25-26-202. Definitions. For purposes of
this subchapter:
(1) "Access" means the ability to receive, use, and manipulate data
and operate controls included in information technology;
(2) "Blind or visually impaired individual" means an individual who:
(A) Has a visual acuity of twenty/two hundred (20/200) or less in
the better eye with correcting lenses or has a limited field of vision
so that the widest diameter of the visual field subtends an angle
no greater than twenty (20) degrees;
(B) Has a medically indicated expectation of visual deterioration;
or
(C) Has a medically diagnosed limitation in visual functioning that
restricts the individual's ability to read and write standard print
at levels expected of individuals of comparable ability;
(3) "Covered entity" means the state or any state-assisted organization;
(4) "Information technology" means all electronic information processing
hardware and software, including telecommunications;
(5) "Nonvisual" means synthesized speech, braille, and other output
methods not requiring sight;
(6) "State" means the state or any of its departments, agencies, public
bodies, or other instrumentalities;
(7) "State-assisted organization" means a college, nonprofit organization,
person, political subdivision, school system, or other entity supported
in whole or in part by state funds; and
(8) "Telecommunications" means the transmission of information, images,
pictures, voice or data by radio, video, or other electronic or impulse
means.
25-26-203. Assurance of nonvisual access.
(a) In general, the head of each covered entity shall ensure that information
technology equipment and software used by employees, program participants,
or members of the general public:
(1) Provide blind or visually impaired individuals
with access, including, but not limited to, interactive use of the
equipment and services which is equivalent to that provided to individuals
who are not blind or visually impaired;
(2) Are designed to present information, including, but not limited
to, prompts used for interactive communications in formats intended
for both visual and nonvisual use; and
(3) Have been purchased under a contract which includes the technology
access clause required pursuant to § 25-26-204.
25-26-204. Procurement requirements.
(a) The technology access clause specified in § 25-26-203 shall
be developed by the Department of Information Systems and shall require
compliance with nonvisual access standards established by the state.
The clause shall be included in all contracts for the procurement of
information technology by, or for the use of, entities covered by this
subchapter on or after July 30, 1999.
(b) The nonvisual access standards established by the state pursuant
to subsection (a) of this section shall include such specifications as
are necessary to fulfill the assurances in § 25-26-203 and shall
include the following minimum specifications:
(1) That effective,
interactive control and use of the technology, including, but not limited
to, the operating system, applications programs, and format of the
data presented, is readily achievable by nonvisual means;
(2) That the technology equipped for nonvisual access must be compatible
with information technology used by other individuals with whom the
blind or visually impaired individual must interact;
(3) That nonvisual access technology must be integrated into networks
used to share communications among employees, program participants,
and the public; and
(4) That the technology for nonvisual access must have the capability
of providing equivalent access by nonvisual means to telecommunications
or other interconnected network services used by persons who are not
blind or visually impaired.
(c) The minimum specifications under subsection (b) of this section
do not prohibit the purchase or use of an information technology product
that does not meet these standards if the information manipulated or
presented by the product is inherently visual in nature, so that its
meaning cannot be conveyed nonvisually.

25-26-205. Implementation.
(a) For the purpose of assuring the effective phasing in of nonvisual
access technology procurement, the head of any covered entity:
(1) May not approve exclusion of the technology access clause from
any contract with respect to: (A) The compatibility of standard operating
systems and software with nonvisual access software and peripheral
devices; or
(B) The initial design, development, and installation of information
systems, including the design and procurement of interactive equipment
and software; or
(2) May, with respect to nonvisual access software or peripheral devices
obtained during the three-year period beginning upon the date of enactment
of this act, approve exclusion of such technology access clause to
the extent that the cost of such software or devices for the covered
entity exceeds:
(A) Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for the first year;
(B) One hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for the second year;
and
(C) Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) for the third
year.
(b) Nothing in this section requires the installation of software or
peripheral devices used for nonvisual access when the information technology
is being used by individuals who are not blind or visually impaired.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) of this section,
the applications programs and underlying operating systems, including,
but not limited to, the format of the data used for the manipulation
and presentation of information, shall permit the installation and effective
use of nonvisual access software and peripheral devices.
(d) Compliance with this subchapter in regard to information technology
purchased prior to July 30, 1999, shall be achieved at the time of procurement
of an upgrade or replacement of the existing equipment or software.
25-26-206. Action for injunction.
(a) A person injured by a violation of this subchapter may maintain
an action for injunctive relief to enforce the terms of this subchapter.
(b) The limitation period for civil action is as follows: (1) Any such
action shall be commenced within four (4) years after the cause of action
accrues; and
(2) For the purposes of this subsection, a cause of action for a continuing
violation accrues at the time of the latest violation.
History. Acts 1999,
No. 1227, § 1. 2003, No. 1301.

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