The following is copied from the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF). It explains what the lawsuit Texas v. Becerra is, how Texas v. Becerra threatens Section 504, and why Section 504 is important. Further down on this page, learn what you can do to help. What is Texas v. Becerra? Why Does it Matter? What is Texas v. Becerra? Texas v. Becerra is a court case in Texas. A group of 17 states have sued the United States government. The states are asking the court to get rid of Section 504. What is Section 504? Section 504 is an important law that protects people with disabilities. Section 504 says you can’t discriminate against disabled people if you get money from the United States government. To discriminate means to treat people badly because of who they are. Section 504 says you cannot treat people badly because of their disabilities. Section 504 has rules that explain what disability discrimination is. The rules say that places like schools, hospitals, and doctors’ offices have to include people with disabilities. The rules say what these places have to do to include people with disabilities. Anyone who gets money from the United States government to serve the public or do business has to follow the rules. The United States government finished the first Section 504 rules in 1977. Many disabled people protested so that the government would make the rules strong. The United States government updates the Section 504 rules over time. The government just finished updating the rules in 2024. Many disability advocates wrote to the government about what to put in the rules. The updated rules are stronger and have more examples about what disability discrimination is. Why is Section 504 important? Section 504 covers all parts of society that get money from the United States government. Section 504 and its rules are very important, especially in education and healthcare. Here are some ways that Section 504 and its rules help us. The rules in Section 504 say that: - Schools must include students with disabilities and help them learn.
- Doctors and schools must have sign language interpreters for people who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing who sign. Videos must have captions.
- Doctors must give clear information to disabled people. This includes people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
- Websites for schools and hospitals must work for people who are blind and low vision.
- Doctors and hospitals cannot stop helping someone because they have a disability.
- Doctors and hospitals must have tools and machines that work for wheelchair users. This includes machines that check for cancer.
What Do the 17 States Want? 17 states sued the United States government. They asked the court to get rid of Section 504. The states disagree with a few things in the updated Section 504 rules. But the lawsuit asks the court to get rid of all the updated rules – and to get rid of Section 504 itself, not just the rules they disagree with. The lawsuit says that Section 504 goes against the United States Constitution. The lawsuit says that no one should have to follow any part of Section 504. If the 17 states win, this would be a disaster for people with disabilities. What Will Happen Next? The judge set a schedule for the case. The 17 states and the United States government will give the court papers on February 25, 2025, about what should happen with the case. Other states that support Section 504 may want to file their own papers with the court. Disability groups may want to file amicus briefs. Amicus briefs are papers that people or groups can send to a court during a court case. The people or groups who send amicus briefs are not part of the court case. They are not the people suing or being sued. People and groups use amicus briefs to explain what decision they want the court to make, and why. After the court has all the papers, it will make a decision about the case. What Can I Do to Help? Attend the Community Briefing and Sign Up to Receive Updates DREDF will hold a Disability Community Briefing: What You Can Do to Stop the Attack on Section 504 on February 12, 2025 at 12:30 pm ET. We will talk about the case, the next steps in the case, what the case means for us, and what you can do about it. Register for the February 12 briefing. |