This is not a product. It is the ramp beside the stairs — for voice. Millions of non-verbal Americans — stroke survivors, autistic kids, ALS patients, deaf visitors, LEP families — walk into public buildings every day and face silence. The ADA already requires auxiliary aids for effective communication (28 CFR § 35.160). The law is on our side. The buildings are not. You can change that in 10 minutes.
The law is already on your side. These aren't favors — these are federal civil-rights obligations your town, your hospital, and your school have owed you since 1990. If you know the statute, you cannot be brushed off.
…must provide "appropriate auxiliary aids and services" so that non-verbal, deaf, blind, or LEP residents can communicate as effectively as anyone else. Not optional. Not "if budget allows." Required since 1990.
…is a "place of public accommodation" and must provide auxiliary aids so disabled customers can be served equally. DOJ actively enforces. Settlements routinely hit six and seven figures.
…owes effective communication to every patient, student, and family — regardless of voice or language. Enforced by HHS OCR, ED OCR, and DOJ. You can file a complaint in 20 minutes.
Their name and contact must be publicly posted. If your town's isn't — that alone is a compliance violation. Find them, email them, ask: "What auxiliary aid is provided to non-verbal visitors today?"
Federally-funded programs must provide "meaningful language access" to LEP individuals. A counter that only speaks English to a Spanish-, Arabic-, or Vietnamese-speaking parent is a Title VI problem, not a logistical one.
DOJ Civil Rights Division: civilrights.justice.gov · HHS OCR (hospitals): hhs.gov/ocr · ED OCR (schools): ed.gov/ocr
We're building toward 100,000 signatures — the threshold that triggers White House response and federal rulemaking pressure. Your name goes on the record. It's delivered, in batches, to every U.S. senator and the DOJ Civil Rights Division. This is how civil-rights campaigns are won: one name, then another, then another.
Now multiply the effect. Share with 5 people — that's how 100,000 becomes real.
Constituent emails are counted. Offices track them. A hundred emails from one ZIP code moves the needle. Below: pick your state, and we'll open a pre-written email to your two U.S. senators demanding a federal mandate. Edit it. Sign it. Send it. Done in 60 seconds.
This is an illustrative preview of how the campaign dashboard will look. Numbers and targets shown are example scenarios — real, opt-in, aggregated activity tracking will replace this view. No individual names or real activity are shown here.
Each letter leads with your rights under federal law — not with any product. It asks the recipient to comply with the ADA by deploying any auxiliary-aid infrastructure at their counter. TinkyTown is listed as one ready-made option — they can choose any compliant solution. The point is compliance, not a sale. Each letter is editable: fill in your name, your town, the recipient. Print. Mail. Hand-deliver. A signed constituent letter is one of the most powerful advocacy tools that exists.
This is not a preference — it's a compliance issue. Failure to provide effective communication under ADA Title II § 35.160 and Title III § 36.303 can trigger formal complaints to DOJ Civil Rights, HHS OCR, or ED OCR — and federal enforcement action, up to and including consent decrees and monetary settlements.
The big one. Addressed to U.S. Senators and Representatives demanding federal rulemaking that requires auxiliary-aid infrastructure at every federally-funded counter. This is the campaign's core ask.
Cites ADA Title II § 35.160. Requests deployment of any compliant auxiliary-aid solution — QR-based, tablet-based, or staff-assisted — at town hall, library, DMV, and public counters.
Individual letter for one senator or one House member. Asks them to co-sponsor a federal mandate and to direct DOJ Civil Rights to prioritize § 35.160 enforcement.
Cites ADA Title III § 36.303 + Section 504. Frames auxiliary-aid deployment as a patient-safety obligation, not a nice-to-have. Mentions HHS OCR as the enforcement backstop.
Cites Section 504, IDEA, and ADA Title II. For non-verbal students, LEP parents, deaf families. Mentions ED OCR as the enforcement backstop. Emphasis on main offices and nurse stations.
Cites ADA Title II § 35.160 as applied to law enforcement. Miscommunication in a stop or interrogation can be lethal. Asks for lobby deployment + patrol-kit cards.
Restaurants, retail, banks, salons. Cites ADA Title III § 36.303. Includes the DOJ-enforcement reality and a simple one-counter ask.
Pick your state (and optionally enter your ZIP). We'll instantly pull up your two U.S. Senators, your House Rep, your Governor, your State Legislature, your ADA Coordinator, and your City — with direct links to their official contact pages and one-click pre-written emails demanding compliance.
Hit all 7 steps and your town has been contacted from every direction — senators, mayor, hospital, school, police, the DOJ petition, and your network. Check the box as you complete each action. Saved privately on your device. When all seven are green, silence is no longer an option for them.
Everything a parent, caregiver, or advocate needs to run this campaign in their own town. Printable. Postable. Shareable. No tech skills required. Bring it to the next PTA meeting, the clinic waiting room, the senior center bulletin board.
Tear-off bottom with QR to this page. Post at the library, laundromat, clinic, church, community center. 90 seconds to print, 90 seconds to hang.
Wallet-sized card you can hand to a shop owner, a school front-desk person, or a hospital registrar when they say "we don't have that." Cites the statute.
What to say, how to say it, what to bring. Two-minute public-comment script + the CFR citation + the counter-argument for every brush-off you'll hear.
Copy-paste text messages to send to five friends, your group chat, your PTA thread, your congregation list. Pre-written. Pre-tested. Just share.
If you can hear this, you can restore someone else's voice. Stroke survivors, non-verbal children, deaf neighbors, parents who don't speak English — they're in every town, every hospital, every school. The ADA already grants them the right to be heard. You are the one who makes that real.
Sign. Email. Deliver. Share. Ten minutes today. A permanent civil right restored tomorrow.
One letter can be ignored. A hundred letters from one zip code cannot. A thousand letters, from every state, asking the same thing on the same month — that's how civil-rights campaigns are won. Not by waiting. By repeating the ask until the answer becomes inevitable.