Accessibility Statement

The United States Postal Service (Postal Service) is committed to making its electronic information and communication technologies (ICT) including its websites accessible to individuals with disabilities by complying with the requirements of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. This commitment applies to members of the public, employees, and applicants for positions with the Postal Service

Section 508 is a federal law that requires agencies to provide individuals with disabilities access to ICT and data comparable to those who do not have disabilities unless an undue burden would be imposed on the agency.

The Section 508 standards are the technical requirements and criteria that are used to measure conformance with the law. More information on Section 508 and the technical standards can be found at www.access-board.gov. The W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 can be found at www.w3.org/tr/wcag20.

COMPLAINT PROCEDURES

Any employee, applicant, or member of the public with a disability (Complainant) who believes USPS ICT is inaccessible in violation of Section 508 may file an informal complaint. If the Complainant is not satisfied with the response to the informal complaint, then the Complainant may file a formal complaint.

Informal Complaint. A complainant initiates the informal process by informing the responsible postal manager orally or in writing of the alleged discrimination or inaccessibility of Postal Service programs, activities, or ICT. Likewise, an applicant must inform the selecting official, and a member of the public must inform the responsible postal manager of the inaccessibility. If the matter cannot be resolved within 30 days of its receipt by the postal manager or official, the Complainant should receive an interim status report. On or before the 60th day from the agency's receipt of the informal complaint, the appropriate Postal Service area or functional vice president will send a written decision to the Complainant detailing the disposition of the informal complaint.

Formal Complaint. If an informal complaint is denied relief, the Complainant may seek relief in any other appropriate forum, including the right to file a formal complaint with the Vice President and Consumer Advocate in accordance with the following procedures. If the Complainant files a formal complaint with the Vice President and Consumer Advocate, the Complainant shall exhaust the formal complaint procedures before filing suit in any other forum. A formal complaint must be filed within 30 days of the date the Complainant receives the decision of the area/functional vice president denying relief.  Formal complaints must be sent to the Vice President and Consumer Advocate at the following address:

Vice President and Consumer Advocate
United States Postal Service
475 L'Enfant Plaza SW
Washington, DC 20260

Within 180 days of receipt and acceptance of a formal complaint, the Vice President and Consumer Advocate will notify the Complainant of the results of the investigation of the formal complaint through a written decision stating whether relief is being granted and the reasons for that decision.

The full procedures for filing a complaint under Section 508 are provided in 39 C.F.R. § 255.6.

No employee may be subject to retaliation for opposing a practice made unlawful by Section 508 or for participating in any stage of the administrative or judicial proceedings under the statute.

CONTACT INFORMATION

If you have feedback or concerns related to the accessibility of any content on Postal Service websites, or have ideas or comments that would help us improve the accessibility and usability of our website, please contact our Section 508 Program manager at Section508@usps.gov. For full description of the Postal Service Section 508 process visit handbook AS-508.

Updated on July 12, 2023