| The Project Manager, Digital Accessibility will coordinate and facilitate institution-wide initiatives that enable respective departments to achieve and sustain compliance with ADA Title II, WCAG 2.1 AA, and related standards. This role is designed as a collaboration-first, enablement-focused project manager who ensures that areas responsible for the work maintain ownership while the PM guides planning, alignment, timelines, accountability, and cross-functional communication. Characteristic Duties: The Project Manager will not perform most of the technical or remediation tasks directly. Instead, they will: - Partner with functional areas to clarify roles and responsibilities
- Ensure progress, alignment, and follow-through
- Facilitate planning, prioritization, and governance
- Coordinate with external consultants doing document or instructional content remediation
- Maintain project visibility, reporting, risk management, and executive updates
Key Responsibilities:
1) Program & Project Leadership - Manage the overall accessibility program plan, with an emphasis on supporting and coordinating work performed by functional owners (e.g., IT, HR, Marketing, Academy for Teaching Excellence, Access & Disability Services).
- Maintain timelines, dependencies, risks, and status reporting without assuming direct ownership of remediation or technical tasks.
- Facilitate taskforce meetings and ensure decisions, roles, and commitments are documented.
2) Web & Intranet Accessibility (Coordinating Role) - Coordinate with Information Technology and Marketing to schedule, track, and report on accessibility audits, defect remediation, and monitoring.
- Ensure website "page" owners remain accountable for corrective actions within their areas (e.g., program pages, departmental pages).
- Support IT in updating Accessibility Statements and governance assets, rather than completing these directly.
3) HR Onboarding & Enterprise Training - Collaborate with Human Resources and Information Technology to integrate accessibility expectations into onboarding.
- Support departments that create training materials by defining standards, timelines, and review cycles.
- Coordinate the rollout of trainings while HR, IT, and Academy maintain content ownership.
4) Document Remediation, Content Standards & Procurement Accessibility - Partner with IT, Procurement, and departments producing high-impact content to ensure standards, templates, and workflows are implemented.
- Collaborate with the Procurement department, Digital and Adaptive Technology Coordinator, and IT to help develop and support a process that ensures all newly purchased software and technology tools meet current WCAG accessibility standards.
- Coordinate with internal and external remediation teams; the PM does not perform remediation work.
- Track progress and ensure departments, including Procurement, remain accountable for the documents and technology tools they own and implement.
5) Faculty Materials & LMS Support - Collaborate with the Academy for Teaching Excellence, Digital Accessibility Coordinator (faculty), Digital and Adaptive Technology Coordinator, and external vendors supporting instructional materials.
- Ensure faculty-support areas lead and complete remediation, training, and process integration, in collaboration with academic deans as needed.
- Monitor milestones and provide structured communication and alignment.
6) Sustainability & Governance - Lead development of a long-term ownership model where divisions retain responsibility for maintaining accessibility in their respective domains.
- Facilitate RACI definitions, governance rhythms, and KPIs--without assuming operational ownership.
- Consolidate inputs from IT, HR, Marketing, and academic units to produce sustainability documentation.
7) Communications & Change Management - Coordinate with Marketing & Communications to create and deliver communication plans.
- Ensure units develop necessary change content while the PM supports timelines and alignment.
8) Reporting & Executive Updates - Provide visibility to the Taskforce and Executive Cabinet by synthesizing updates from responsible areas.
- Maintain decision logs, risk registers, and overall program status.
Reporting & Collaboration: - Reports to the Digital Accessibility Taskforce Lead or Provost's Office designee.
- Works closely with IT, Human Resources, Marketing & Communications, the Academy for Teaching Excellence, Access & Disability Services, and external remediation partners.
Working Conditions/Physical Requirements: Work is primarily indoor and sedentary in nature. Occasional travel may be required. Equipment/Tools Used: Utilizes standard office equipment, including computers, in order to perform the duties of the job.
Supervision: Works under the supervision of the Digital Accessibility Taskforce Lead or Provost's Office designee. Receives oral and written instructions as necessary. Schedule Information: This is a temporary, contingent (part-time) position. The term of employment begins Spring 2026; ends no later than May 31, 2027. Hours Per Week: Part-time (up to 20 hours/week), hours may vary weekly with hybrid/on-campus presence based on project needs (workshops, trainings, audits). Contingent employee hours may not exceed 1,040 per year. Occasional early/late meetings to accommodate faculty and staff. Hourly Rate: $40-$50 per hour based on academic and professional experience. About the Team: The Project Manager will work primarily with the Digital Accessibility Taskforce, a cross-functional team led by the Interim Manager of Access and Disability Services. Minimum Acceptable Qualifications: - Bachelor's degree in project management, information systems, communications, instructional design, or a related field--or equivalent experience.
- 2+ years of experience leading cross-functional projects in complex organizations.
- Knowledge of ADA Title II, Section 504/508, and WCAG 2.1 AA.
- Strong skills in stakeholder alignment, facilitation, and change management.
Preferred Qualifications: - Experience in higher education or public-sector environments.
- Experience coordinating (not necessarily performing) accessibility testing, training programs, or document remediation initiatives.
- Familiarity with LMS platforms (e.g., Canvas, Blackboard) and accessibility-review tools.
- Certification, such as PMP/CAPM, CSM, or IAAP CPACC/WAS.
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