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Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 Rosaline Crawford National Association of the Deaf Coalition of Organizations for.

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Presentation on theme: "Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 Rosaline Crawford National Association of the Deaf Coalition of Organizations for."— Presentation transcript:

1 Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 Rosaline Crawford National Association of the Deaf Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology November 17, 2010

2 Overview  Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT)  Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010  Focus on Video Programming Captioning

3 Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT)  Over 300 national, state, and community-based organizations.  Advocates for legislative and regulatory safeguards to ensure full access by people with disabilities.  Access ensures equal opportunities to education, employment, telecommunications, information, entertainment, etc.  Universal design benefits everyone – closed captioning, vibrating cell phones, talking caller ID, cell phones with audio output.  www.COATaccess.org www.COATaccess.org

4 Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010  Public Law 111-260  October 8, 2010  Title I – Communications  Title II – Video Programming  “Video programming” means programming by, or generally considered comparable to programming provided by a television broadcast station, but not including consumer-generated media

5 Video Programming Captioning Overview  Captioned video programming on television to be captioned when distributed over the Internet  Apparatus with screens of any size to be capable of displaying the closed captions  Recording and playback equipment to be capable of transmitting closed captions for display  A mechanism that is reasonably comparable to a button, key, or icon designated for activating the closed captioning

6 Video Programming Advisory Committee  FCC to establish Video Programming and Emergency Access Advisory Committee (VPEAAC) within 60 days (by 12/8/10) (nominations closed 11/1/10)  VPEAAC initial meeting within 6 months (by 4/8/11)  VPEAAC to submit first report on closed captioning within 6 months after initial meeting (by 10/8/11)  VPEAAC to submit second report on video description, emergency information, user interfaces, and video programming guides and menus within 18 months after enactment (by 4/8/12)

7 Video Programming Advisory Committee Captioning Report  VPEAAC first report to recommend: Deadlines for the provision of closed captioning over Internet protocol (IP) Technical capabilities needed to permit content providers/distributors, ISPs, software developers, and device manufacturers to provide IP closed captioning Regulations necessary to ensure compatibility between video programming delivered using IP and devices capable of receiving and displaying programming

8 Video Programming Captioning Rules  FCC to issue rules within 6 months of VPEAAC first report (by 4/8/12) for captioned programs shown on television after the effective date of the regulations, to contain captions when shown over the Internet  Establish appropriate schedule of captioning deadlines, considering prerecorded and edited, and live or near-live not edited programming for Internet distribution  Define “near-live programming” and “edited for Internet distribution”

9 Video Programming Captioning Rules  FCC may waive or delay compliance for live programming, if economically burdensome  May provide exemptions for certain programming or equipment, if deemed economically burdensome  FCC must act on requests for exemption within 12 months of receipt

10 Video Programming Captioning Rules  Clarify that distributors and providers include entities that make video programming over IP available directly to the end user  Describe responsibilities of video programming providers or distributors and owners  Establish mechanism to inform providers and distributors about covered video programming on an ongoing basis

11 Video Programming Captioning Rules  Consider providers and distributors in compliance if they enable the rendering or pass through of closed captions, and make a good faith effort to identify covered video programming using the established mechanism  De minimis (relatively insignificant) failure permitted  Alternate means of compliance permitted

12 Video Programming Equipment Captioning Requirements  FCC to issue rules within 18 months of VPEAAC second report (by 10/8/13)  Requires video programming apparatus with screens smaller than 13 inches to have circuitry or capability to display closed captions, if achievable  Covers recording devices so viewers can turn closed captions on/off when played back, if achievable  Covers interconnection mechanisms and standards for digital video source devices

13 Video Programming Equipment Captioning Requirements  Apparatus with display-only video monitors with no play-back capability are exempt  FCC may waive Equipment primarily designed for other activities Equipment designed for multiple purposes where essential utility is derived from other purposes  Alternate means of compliance permitted

14 Video Programming Equipment Caption Button, Key, or Icon  FCC to issue rules within 18 months of VPEAAC second report (by 10/8/13)  Apparatus designed to receive or play back digital video programming, including IP, must enable activating closed captioning through a designated mechanism that is reasonably comparable to a button, key, or icon  Alternate means of compliance permitted  Grants minimum 2-year waiver, from date of final rules, for mobile DTVs

15 Video Programming Equipment Caption Button, Key, or Icon  FCC to issue rules within 18 months of VPEAAC second report (by 10/8/13)  Navigation devices (set-top boxes) with closed captioning capability must enable activating closed captioning through a designated mechanism that is reasonably comparable to a button, key, or icon  Permits maximum flexibility to achieve compliance  Provides minimum of 2 years after adopting regulations to comply  Applies only to navigation devices manufactured or imported after the effective date

16 Contact Information Rosaline Crawford National Association of the Deaf rosaline.crawford@nad.org 301-587-7730


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