Accessibility

Our commitment to creating accessible materials reflects our understanding that accessibility benefits all people. Accessible materials reach broader audiences, enable deeper engagement, and ensure that the many perspectives essential to sound transportation planning can be heard and incorporated into our work.

Accessibility as a Fundamental Principle

Creating accessible materials and publications goes beyond making accommodations in compliance with the law to being an expression of our agency’s values of collaboration, transparency, and inclusion. With accessibility as a fundamental principle, we can create materials that work for people with visual, hearing, physical, and cognitive differences, and strengthen our ability to serve all stakeholders effectively.

Adopting an accessibility mindset

When we each adopt an accessibility mindset and factor in accessibility from the beginning, our work products have a greater potential to be more effective, more aligned with our mission, and more inclusive as we reach more people within our agency and in the community.

It is our goal that each document, presentation, and digital tool we create will be conceived to welcome the widest possible range of experts and participants into our planning process. This effort is part of our long-term commitment to inclusivity. We are dedicated to evolving our practices over time.

Who benefits from accessible documents

Accessible content refers to materials that can be read (or in some cases, listened to) by everyone. Creating accessible materials gives everyone the opportunity to engage in transportation and community planning projects.

A document is accessible when people of differing abilities can read and understand it. Specifically, a document is accessible if it can be used by people who are

  • blind or visually impaired;
  • deaf, have impaired hearing, or use assistive hearing technology;
  • have speech difficulties;
  • experience difficulties with fine motor control; or
  • have limited reach and strength.

Standards we follow

The MPO follows the requirements of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of the United States Federal Accessibility Standards. Section 508 states that both public-facing documents and internal documents used by employees must be accessible.

It’s not just the law, it’s the right thing to do. The Boston Region MPO provides an important service to the community. People with disabilities are part of this community. Community members with and without disabilities may rely on information from the MPO, so no one should be excluded based on a disability. An accessible document gets the message out to the largest group of people possible. Accessibility benefits the community and the organization.

Training

In 2026, the National Center for Accessible Media delivered the 60-minute training, "Accessibility Principles," to all MPO staff. Use the link below to review the session.

The recording will open in Zoom. Enter the passcode &Cz8kHV8.

Helpful resources

Resources that can assist you when thinking about or creating accessible documents.

Historical resource

September 2014 publication: Nondiscrimination Handbook (PDF)
This handbook describes how to comply with Title VI and the Americans with Disabilities Act in communications and engagement with the public, including document translations, and accessible documents and meetings.

Accessibility FAQs

What is an accessible document?
Who is responsible for making a document accessible?
What kinds of disabilities might users have?
How could someone with blindness or vision impairment read a document?
What is a screen reader?
Why do documents need to be accessible?
Do all my documents have to be accessible? What about maps, tables, and charts?
What updates to Section 508 should I be aware of?
General 508 Tips for Authors