ASL Interpreting Services
RID-certified American Sign Language interpreters for education, legal, healthcare, nonprofit, and government settings — on-site and remote, across California.
Communication access
is a civil right.
The Americans with Disabilities Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and Section 508 of the Workforce Rehabilitation Act establish that Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals have the right to full and equal communication access in education, employment, healthcare, legal proceedings, and public services. Meeting that obligation requires more than a willing communicator — it requires a credentialed professional.
AccessBridge prioritizes RID-certified ASL interpreters and places only qualified, vetted professionals across all settings. Whether you are a school district scheduling an IEP meeting, a law firm preparing for a deposition, or a hospital navigating an informed consent conversation, we connect you with the right interpreter for the setting.


ASL interpreting for every setting
We provide on-site, video remote, and virtual ASL interpreting services across California, including:
- IEP and IFSP meetings
- Parent-teacher and school board meetings
- Student assessments and cognitive evaluations
- Legal depositions and deposition preparation
- Trials, hearings, and arbitration
- Witness statements and IMEs
- Healthcare appointments and informed consent
- Mental health and therapy sessions
- Nonprofit board meetings and community workshops
- Government and public agency meetings
- Employment interviews and workplace meetings
- Self-determination and regional center meetings
How we deliver ASL access
On-Site
Interpreting
A certified interpreter attends your location for in-person assignments. Preferred for legal proceedings, medical appointments, assessments, and any setting where physical presence improves communication accuracy and rapport.
Video Remote
Interpreting (VRI)
A certified interpreter joins via secure video connection. Available on short notice for settings where on-site scheduling is not feasible — including hospital rooms, urgent legal matters, and multi-site organizations.
Virtual Meeting
Interpreting
Certified interpreters integrate directly into Zoom, Teams, WebEx, and other platforms. Ideal for remote IEP meetings, virtual hearings, and hybrid events.
Why RID certification is
the standard that matters
The Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf sets the professional and ethical standards for the interpreting field. RID certification requires demonstrated language proficiency in both ASL and English, formal interpreter education, a rigorous written and performance examination, and ongoing continuing education. RID-certified interpreters operate under a Code of Professional Conduct that governs confidentiality, accuracy, impartiality, and professional boundaries.
For organizations navigating ADA compliance, many state and federal agencies specifically require or strongly prefer RID-certified interpreters. AccessBridge prioritizes RID certification as our standard and discloses interpreter credentials to clients in advance so you can make informed decisions for your specific compliance requirements.

AccessBridge prioritizes RID-certified
ASL interpreters for all assignments.
When scheduling requires a non-certified interpreter, we place only qualified professionals with demonstrated ASL proficiency, relevant setting experience, and a current background check — and we are transparent with clients about interpreter credentials before every assignment.

Compliance you can document
AccessBridge helps education, legal, healthcare, and nonprofit organizations meet their communication access obligations under:
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) — Titles II and III
- Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
- Section 508 of the Workforce Rehabilitation Act
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
- California Education Code
- California Government Code Section 11435 (state proceedings)
We provide booking documentation, interpreter credentials on request, and scheduling confirmation that supports your compliance recordkeeping.
Common questions about ASL interpreting
Q: Is my organization legally required to provide an ASL interpreter?
Q: What is a Certified Deaf Interpreter (CDI) and when do I need one?
Q: What is the difference between on-site interpreting and VRI?
Q: How far in advance do I need to book an ASL interpreter?
Q: Does AccessBridge serve areas outside of California?
ASL Interpreting — Frequently Asked Questions
Download our guide to common questions about ASL interpreting services, ADA compliance, RID certification, and how to request an interpreter for your organization.

Request an ASL interpreter
Tell us about your assignment — setting, date, location, and any specific credential requirements — and we will match you with the right interpreter.
