Deaf Actor From Austin Testifying This Morning on Capitol Hill to Support Equal Access to Communications and Video Technologies
Deaf Actor From Austin Testifying This Morning on Capitol Hill to Support Equal Access to Communications and Video Technologies
WASHINGTON, May 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT) is pleased to announce that Russell Harvard, a deaf Hollywood actor from Austin, Texas, appearing in the double-academy award winning There Will Be Blood, is testifying today at a House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet hearing on the proposed draft of "Enhancing Access to Broadband Technology and Services for Persons with Disabilities."
Other witnesses include Jamaal Anderson, defensive end and 2007 first round draft pick of the NFL Atlanta Falcons whose father is a leading deaf educator and former board member of Gallaudet University; and Sergeant Major Jesse Acosta, a distinguished army veteran whose vision was seriously injured in Iraq.
The three celebrity and hero witnesses are testifying to the need for passage of legislation to ensure that, as our nation migrates from legacy telephone and television products to more versatile and innovative digital and Internet-based communications and video programming, people with disabilities must benefit like everyone else. In addition to generally requiring access to Internet-based communications services, legislative action is needed to achieve the following:
-- Extend the closed captioning mandates to certain Internet-based video
programming;
-- Require video devices with screens smaller than 13-inches to display
captioning;
-- Mandate video description on television so people who are blind can
have access to program content and visual emergency information;
-- Require accessible user interfaces/menus on video programming devices
such as TVs, VCRs, and DVR players;
-- Mandate hearing aid compatibility on "Smart" or Internet-enabled
phones;
-- Allow eligible consumers with disabilities who must use broadband for
phone calls to apply their Universal Service Fund (USF) discounts to
high speed Internet service; and
-- Allocate USF funds for the distribution of specialized equipment
needed to provide telecommunications access for individuals who are
deaf-blind.
The Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology, or COAT, is a coalition of nearly 200 national, regional, state, and community-based affiliates that have come together to ensure that communications technology in the 21st century is accessible to all. More information is available at http://www.coataccess.org/.
First Call Analyst:
FCMN Contact:
Source: Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology
CONTACT: Rosaline Crawford (NAD), +1-301-587-7730; Karen Peltz Strauss
(CSD), +1-202-363-1263; Jenifer Simpson (AAPD), +1-202-457-0046; Eric Bridges
(ACB), +1-202-467-5081; or Adrianna Montague-Gray (AFB), +1-212-502-7675
Web Site:
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