Businesses across America, from Domino’s Pizza to Home Depot to Wells Fargo have been the targets in recent years of web accessibility lawsuits, but it is not just large companies with deep pockets at risk as Main Street is as vulnerable as Wall Street on this issue.
“In what legal experts have called a litigation tsunami, its mostly small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) that have been hit with thousands of lawsuits and letters relating to website accessibility over the past two years,” said accessiBe, a leading AI-driven WCAG and ADA compliance solution for websites.
In fact, it is estimated that 60 percent of ADA lawsuits filed in state and federal courts in 2018 were made against SMBs in the retail industry.
No formal government standards exist today for private businesses to adhere to and ensure their websites and online content
There is a consortium of web innovators that have created web accessibility guidelines known as Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG).
The Los Angeles Times says that “for a website to be accessible to disabled people, the content must be coded so that screen-reading software can convert the words to an audio translation. Video that appears on a website must include descriptions for the deaf. Also, all interactive functions must be operable through keyboard commands for people who can’t use a mouse.”
The Times story says as early as 2009 the ADA was cited in “lawsuits that targeted the websites of businesses and universities, saying the online portals must be just as accessible to disabled people as the buildings that house businesses and schools.”
Earlier this summer, a federal district court judge backed up this principle when ruling in a case against Domino’s Pizza, saying the alleged inaccessibility of the website and app “impedes access to the goods and services of its physical pizza franchises—which are places of public accommodation.”
Some of the web accessibility lawsuits can result in a large financial hit to companies.
Recent cases include:
In California businesses can face higher lawsuit costs as the state has the Unruh Civil Rights Act. While the ADA Title III itself prevents plaintiffs from receiving financial compensation, the Unruh Act provides for such compensation and damages including:
California has a minimum $4,000 per ADA violation as well as punitive damages and attorneys’ fees which can add up, especially with SMBs.
Web accessibility lawsuits, as measured by ADA Title III federal filings, have more than quadrupled from 2013 through 2019, according to analysis by Seyfarth Shaw LLP.
These lawsuits involve physical facilities as well as online access.
While there were just 2,722 total ADA Title II federal lawsuits filed in 2013, that number jumped to 11,053 in 2019.
After leveling off in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, with 10,982 total, filings are on a record pace in 2021 with 6,304 filings as of June 30, 2021. In March alone there were 1,240 filings, the most ever in a single month.
“One law firm in southern California filed over 500 lawsuits about hotel reservations websites allegedly not providing sufficient disclosures about accessibility features in hotels starting in the fall of 2020 and continuing into 2021,” said authors Minh Vu, Kristina Launey and Susan Ryan for Seyfarth Shaw LLP.
Year-by-Year ADA Title III Federal Filings since 2013:
While all industries need to comply with accessibility regulations, some have been more impacted than others when it comes to web accessibility lawsuits.
According to accessiBe, the following industries have seen an uptick in web accessibility lawsuits:
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