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The Department’s most highly viewed or otherwise important public engagement websites for October 15 – November 15, 2021, are as follows:

Public Engagement Pages Page Views*

Oct 15-Nov. 15, 2021

Visits**

Oct 15-Nov. 15, 2021

travel.state.gov 62,986,001 48,731,733
state.gov 5,130,066 4,339,306
mx.usembassy.gov 2,972,879 2,620,872
history.state.gov

1,949,181

1,617,781
china.usembassy-china.org.cn***  1,044,982

412,572

careers.state.gov 734,133

272,573

*A page view is a visit to a website page. When a user navigates to a different page on the website and then returns to the original page, this action counts as another page view.

**A visit is a sequence of consecutive page views without a 30-minute break. A visit always contains one or more page views.

***The Chinese government blocks .gov and other U.S. URLs. Therefore we host this website on a local domain.

Travel.state.gov: Travel.state.gov is in compliance with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act. Improvements were made to make important information about visas, passports, and travel safety easier to find, understand, and use. The changes include: compatibility for both desktop computers and mobile devices (phones and tablets); cleaner, easier-to-read format and consistent appearance; faster and more accurate site navigation and site-wide search; and fully accessible web templates, reinforcing the Department’s commitment to meeting federal Section 508 compliance standards. This website is accessible only through an industry standard secure connection. While the site has been built to Section 508 standards, it has not yet been fully reviewed by the Department’s Section 508 compliance testing team to determine whether any remediation is required.

Public engagement website and digital services have been recently modernized or have modernization plans underway:

State.gov: The Department’s flagship website was recently modernized and launched for public use in May 2019 and complies with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act for accessibility for individuals with disabilities (Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 508), consistent appearance, non-duplicative purpose and functionality, secure connection, user search function, user-driven design and mobile-optimized. As part of the state.gov modernization, the Department continues to review existing websites to determine which ones can be aligned with the new design, branding, and infrastructure, and adopt the same content management infrastructure.

Embassy websites: For the U.S. missions, embassies, and consulates, usembassy.gov and all associated websites in that domain were modernized and launched for use beginning in 2017. This includes the highly viewed website for the U.S. embassies and consulates in Mexico (mx.usembassy.gov) and China (china.usembassy-china.org.cn ). They now operate on the modern WordPress content management system and comply with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act for accessibility for individuals with disabilities (Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 508), consistent appearance, non-duplicative purpose and functionality, secure connection, user search function, user-driven design and mobile-optimized. All such sites will be further upgraded beginning in 2020 to align with the new state.gov redesign.

History.state.gov: This site for the Office of the Historian is one of the Department’s most highly trafficked public engagement sites. It was most recently modernized in April 2016 leveraging the General Services Administration’s U.S. Web Design System and is in compliance with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act for accessibility for individuals with disabilities (Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 508) and consistent appearance.  The site’s mobile-friendly, responsive design and its scalable server architecture was crafted around the needs of users by employing data-driven site management and development decisions.  At the same time, the site adopted the HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) standard, which guarantees secure-only connections for all users, a full year before this requirement went into effect.  In December 2017 the site launched new date-based search options for the Congressionally-mandated Foreign Relations of the United States series full text archive, demonstrating that the site has continued to modernize by offering enhanced search functions and new options for a customized digital experience.  In every other respect, too, the website complies with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act.

Careers.state.gov: This site serves as a gateway to information about working at the Department of State. It was moved to a modernized platform using WordPress in 2016 and complies with the requirements listed in Section 3(a) of the Act for Accessibility for individuals with disabilities (Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 508), is consistent in appearance, and uses the same search and content subscription service functionality as state.gov. It is not duplicative of any other sites and uses the Foresee Customer Satisfaction Survey and usability testing to regularly improve the user experience.

The Department will report its progress on website modernization and consolidation efforts in the annual report to Congress. In the interim, requests for new public facing websites are reviewed and authorized if they are determined to be justified as appropriate and necessary to meet mission objectives.

U.S. Department of State

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