JENSON DIGITAL
Euless, TX Request a scan

The inspection line · WCAG 2.1 Level AA

Compliance.

Your website guy builds it. I certify it. Accessibility audits, fixes, and monthly monitoring against the federal ADA standard, for the Texas cities, school districts, and businesses the law is about to reach.

The deadline is on the calendar.

The Department of Justice set hard dates. Public entities serving 50,000 or more residents must meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA by April 26, 2027. Everyone else, including every school, water, and utility district, has until April 26, 2028. Private businesses are already exposed: web accessibility lawsuits passed 5,000 filings last year and keep climbing roughly 30% a year.

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Run 02 · Who it's for Two kinds of pressure
Public entities

Cities & districts

April 2028entities under 50,000 and all special districts; larger cities hit April 2027

Cities, towns, school districts, and water and utility districts. The rule covers everything you publish: pages, PDF agendas, forms, and mobile apps. Most small entities have no web staff for this, so I work in plain English and leave you with documentation your attorney will actually want on file.

  • Scored audit with manual screen reader testingincluded
  • Findings in plain English, fixable by any vendorincluded
  • Remediation roadmap ordered by severityincluded
  • Dated verification letter after fixesincluded
  • Monitoring with a running compliance logmonthly
Private businesses

Shops & stores

In effect nowADA coverage of businesses open to the public; no future deadline to wait for

Online stores, restaurants, clinics, and anyone selling to the public. Accessibility lawsuits passed 5,000 filings last year, and online stores and restaurants are the most-sued categories. The fix costs a fraction of answering one demand letter, and an accessible checkout sells to the one in four adults living with a disability.

  • Free risk scan of your homepage48h
  • Full audit with lawsuit-pattern focusquoted
  • Fixes priced from the audit, never blindfixed quote
  • Verification letter for your recordsincluded
  • Monitoring so it never drifts backmonthly
Run 03 · Straight answers Asked on every call
Our website vendor handles that.

Ideal, and I'm not here to replace them. Accessibility is a specialty most builders have never done: screen reader testing, keyboard flows, the documentation standard. I audit, your vendor fixes from my findings, and I re-test and certify. A vendor can't credibly audit his own work; that's the whole point of an auditor.

Is this legal advice?

No. I'm a technical auditor, not a lawyer. The reports measure your site against the WCAG standard the federal rule cites, and every finding is independently verifiable. What it means for your legal position is a question for your attorney, and the audit is exactly the document they'd ask for anyway.

What does it cost?

The first scan is free. Full audits typically run $1,500 to $5,000 depending on site size, with manual testing and the written findings included. Fixes are quoted from the audit, so you never buy blind. Monitoring is a flat monthly rate. Government entities pay by purchase order and invoice, net 30.

We installed an accessibility widget.

Overlay widgets don't fix the underlying code, and plaintiffs now regularly sue sites that use them; some demand letters cite the widget itself. Real remediation with a documented trail is the defensible position. Happy to show you, on your own site, what the widget catches and what it misses.

What does monitoring actually do?

Sites drift out of compliance every time someone posts a page or uploads a PDF. Monitoring re-scans your site monthly, spot-checks it manually every quarter, flags regressions before anyone else finds them, and keeps a dated compliance log. That log is your proof of good faith if a complaint ever lands.

The scan is free and takes two days Request your scan
972-369-5007 journey@jensondigital.com Euless · serving all of Texas