Right Now, Someone in Your City Can't Read Your Documents.
Not because your website is down. Not because the link is broken. Because the PDF wasn't built for a screen reader.
That person — maybe a veteran checking benefits, maybe a parent reviewing school zoning, maybe a grandmother looking up property records — just hit a wall. On your website.
See how your city's documents score
Free analysis. No commitment required.
By scanning, you agree to our Terms of Service.
1 in 4 Americans has a disability. They deserve access.
Your Website Might Be Fine. Your Documents Aren't.
CivicPlus, Granicus, whoever manages your site — they've probably got web accessibility handled. But what about the thousands of documents sitting behind every link?
Council meeting minutes. Budget proposals. Zoning applications. Building permits. Every PDF your city has ever published online.
Foresera Compliance Pipeline
We crawl everything
2,847 documents found
1,203 accessibility issues
Fixed automatically
50 WCAG criteria checked
14 fix categories applied
Compliance evidence
WCAG 2.1 AA conformance
Conformance report delivered
Under Title II, they ALL have to be accessible by April 2026.
Not just your homepage. Not just new uploads. Every public-facing document your city hosts. The DOJ doesn't care if your tech partner forgot to mention it.
And right now? Nobody's managing that.
Your technology partner isn't telling you. Free checkers can't catch it — they scan websites, not PDFs. Your IT team doesn't have the tools. Your compliance officer doesn't have the bandwidth.
"We had no idea our documents were out of compliance. Our web vendor never mentioned it. Foresera found over 400 non-compliant PDFs in the first scan."
— City Clerk, Midwestern municipality (pop. 68,000)
Here's What April 2026 Actually Means for Your City.
We're not here to scare you. We're here to make sure you know what's coming — because most cities don't.
PDFs, forms, agendas, meeting minutes, public records — not just your website. If it's on your domain, it counts.
That's the standard. Documents need proper structure, alt text, reading order, and assistive tech compatibility.
First offense. Up to $150K for repeats. The DOJ isn't sending warnings — they're sending enforcement actions.
Cities over 50,000 go first. April 24, 2026. Smaller entities follow in 2027. The clock is already running.
This isn't about fear. It's about making sure the people in your community who rely on accessible documents — people with visual impairments, cognitive disabilities, motor limitations — can actually use the services their tax dollars fund.
Find Out Where You StandThe Only Platform Built for Municipal Document Compliance at Scale.
Not a scanner that gives you a list of problems and wishes you luck. Not a consultant who charges $20 a page and takes six months. An actual solution — built specifically for cities like yours.
We Find What You're Missing
Our Compliance Concierge crawls your entire domain and finds documents you didn't even know were there. Council packets from 2019. Budget PDFs buried three clicks deep.
We Fix Them — Automatically
Unlimited throughput. 50 WCAG criteria checked. 14 fix categories applied. We don't hand you a report — we hand you compliant documents with a conformance report.
We Keep You Compliant
Compliance isn't a one-time project. Every time your city publishes a new agenda, form, or report, we catch it. Rolling scans, real-time dashboards, compliance exports.
Already have a technology partner? We work with them, not against them. We're not here to replace your CMS or your web vendor — we solve the one problem they're not equipped to handle. Let us talk to them directly.
You're Not the First City to Ask These.
Try It. See What We Find.
You don't need an RFP. You don't need committee approval. You don't even need to commit to anything.
We'll scan a sample of your public documents and show you exactly what we find — the good, the bad, and the "we had no idea."
Let's Start a Conversation
Tell us about your city. We'll tell you what we can do.
Most assessments completed in days, not months. Full engagements typically come in under the $25K single-source procurement threshold — no RFP process, no treasury delays, immediate start.