VITAC

VITAC is one of the United States' largest closed captioning and media access companies. The company is headquartered in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, with additional facilities in Washington, D.C. and North Hollywood, California. The company captions over 220,000 hours of programming each year for over 1400 customers, including cable channels CNN and MSNBC, cable network Discovery Communications, productions for ABC Studios, syndicated and cable productions for Fox and CBS Television Distribution, off-network productions for NBCUniversal and cable and out-of-state productions for Warner Bros.. The company has captioned the Olympics. VITAC [1] is a division of Merrill Corporation and employs 321 people.

History

VITAC was founded in 1986 as CaptionAmerica, a small company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with one captioning contract for KDKA local news and a commitment to develop closed captioning services and solutions.

By 1993, CaptionAmerica became the country's largest for-profit captioning company and had broadened its focus. To reflect the change, a new corporate identity was selected. The new name, VITAC (for VITal ACcess), reflected the company's recent growth into new markets, including video description and subtitling.[1]

Events and milestones

Community

In 2008, VITAC launched CaptionsON, a public information campaign detailing the benefits of closed captioning. The website associated with the campaign provides advice to viewers with caption problems and contact information for many networks.

VITAC is a member of the Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology, COAT, and a coalition of over 240 national, regional, state, and community-based disability organizations. COAT advocates for legislative and regulatory safeguards that will ensure full access by people with disabilities to evolving high speed broadband, wireless and other Internet Protocol (IP) technologies. Part of this initiative is the introduction of new legislation, HR3101.[4] Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski has appointed three VITAC employees to serve a two-year term on the Video Programming and Emergency Access Advisory Committee (VPEAAC), an advisory committee required by the Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (the Accessibility Act).[5]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 14, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.