Partner with the
alliance.
An alliance is built by who joins it. We're working to get voice impairment recognized as a civil rights category alongside vision, hearing, and mobility. Two partner tracks: people who help shape the work, and people who help it reach the field. Both are how this scales.
We don't speak for the community.
We open the door.
Stroke survivors. AAC users. People with aphasia, ALS, apraxia, dysarthria, brain injury, cerebral palsy, late-stage dementia, selective mutism. Autistic individuals who don't speak or speak differently than expected. We won't pretend to represent any of these communities — they represent themselves. What we can do is build the platform, and partner with the people already doing the work.
And in the field, we partner with the towns, integrators, and accessibility specialists who can put real tools on real counters. Both kinds of partner make the alliance bigger than any single org.
Pick the door
that fits you.
If you carry lived experience or speak for a constituent community — that's Coalition. If you place tools into towns, schools, libraries, or businesses — that's Channel. Some partners do both.
Coalition Partners
Disability advocacy organizations, lived-experience leaders, community groups, clinicians and educators serving the named communities. We're building shared governance with you — that work is in motion, not finished.
See what coalition looks likeChannel Partners
Government IT integrators, library systems vendors, accessibility consultants, and municipal advisors who already work the rooms where access decisions get made. Modest referral compensation — operator-grade, not income-theater.
See how channel worksFor people who carry the
lived experience.
Coalition partners are the constituent communities and the people already organized inside them — disability rights groups, AAC parent networks, stroke recovery centers, clinicians and SLPs, autistic advocacy orgs, ALS associations. You don't pay us anything. We don't pay you a commission. The exchange is governance.
We are building shared governance with lived-experience leaders. That structure isn't finished yet — anyone who tells you otherwise is over-claiming. What we can promise today: the door is open, the language we use on every page is reviewed against community preference, and the products are not shipped against you. Where you tell us we got it wrong, we change it.
- 01Never sell, license, or transfer user data to third parties.
- 02Never monetize the people we serve through ads, profiling, or data brokering.
- 03Never be acquired by any entity that won't honor these commitments.
- 04Dedicate revenue from products to fund advocacy and coalition work.
- 05Build shared governance with lived-experience leaders from the constituent communities.
For partners who already work
the rooms we need to be in.
Government IT vendors, library systems, accessibility consultants, ADA coordinators, municipal advisors. You know which town, which clerk, which procurement window matters. We bring the validated platform; you bring the relationship.
What channel partners get
- A platform validated by the Connecticut State ADA Coordinator and deployed across 151 CT munis
- Procurement-grade pitch deck and pilot proposal templates — no fear-funnel
- Live demo kit pre-loaded with TinkyTown so a 5-minute walkthrough actually demonstrates the product
- A direct line to our deployment team for technical and procurement questions
- Modest referral compensation on signed deployments — terms set per agreement, no income theater
No ADA-lawsuit fear-pitch. No insurance product. No income-claim brochures.
If you've seen our old partner page promising "$25K coverage," "$100K lawsuit protection," or "12 signups a week" — that page is gone. We don't sell insurance. We don't pretend a town hall procurement looks like a door-to-door commission cycle.
If a procurement-grade access platform is a fit for the rooms you already work, talk to us. If you need a fear-funnel, we're not the right partner.
From conversation
to deployment.
Same shape for both tracks. The difference is what we're doing together — shaping the work, or placing the tools.
Apply
Tell us who you are, what community you're rooted in, and what you'd want from partnership. Real reply within a few business days.
Real conversation
A call with a human, not a pitch deck. We listen first. Coalition or channel — we want to know what success looks like to you, not just to us.
Written agreement
Coalition: a partnership memo with the charter commitments. Channel: a referral agreement with terms in plain language. Either way — written, not handshake.
Work in the field
Coalition partners shape the work. Channel partners place the tools. Both keep the alliance growing — and both get the door held open in return.
Tell us
who you are.
Same form for both tracks — pick the one that fits. We read every application. A real human will get back to you within a few business days.