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You are here: Home / Blog / Because of the ADA… Telecommunications Relay Services

Because of the ADA… Telecommunications Relay Services

July 18, 2023

TTY iconIn celebration of Disability Pride Month, and the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), we present this series of blog posts highlighting the impact of this monumental civil rights legislation. The ADA played a transformative role in promoting accessibility, equity, and inclusion of people with disabilities. Let’s celebrate these achievements and continue to work towards a more accessible and inclusive world for everyone.

Telecommunications Relay Services

Email or texts are used by almost everyone these days, and thanks to text-to-speech software, they can be accessible to everyone. But back in the olden days (say, 25 years ago) land line telephones were pretty much the only means to access two-way communication from a distance. Good luck trying to call your Aunt Marge if you had a speech or hearing issue.

Enter Title IV of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Title IV requires telecommunications are accessible to everyone, regardless of their ability to hear or speak.

Title IV requires telephone companies to establish interstate and intrastate telecommunications relay services (TRS) 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TRS enables callers with hearing and speech disabilities who use TTYs (teletypewriters, also known as TDDs), and callers who use voice telephones to communicate with each other through a third-party communications assistant.

TTYs are still in use (although not too common); and there are other accessible telecommunications tools available, some of which you might be acquainted with:

  • Audio/visual accessible pagers
  • Specialized telephones
  • Speech generating devices
  • Amplifiers or headsets

Title IV also mandated that federally funded public service announcements had to be closed captioned. This meant people with hearing issues could see if there was an emergency message being broadcast on their televisions. Today, news agencies and broadcasters are required to offer closed captioning options for all of their programming.

Thanks to the ADA, people with hearing or speech issues can access telephone communication and television broadcasts.

Learn more about telecommunications access for people with disabilities.

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