[Electronics-talk] Fwd: Federal Government Not Complying with Web Site Accessibility Requirements, Study Indicates
David Andrews
dandrews at visi.com
Fri May 20 00:22:40 UTC 2011
>
>FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
>CONTACT:
>Chris Danielsen
>Director of Public Relations
>National Federation of the Blind
>(410) 659-9314, extension 2330
>(410) 262-1281 (Cell)
><mailto:cdanielsen at nfb.org>cdanielsen at nfb.org
>
>Federal Government Not Complying with Web Site
> Accessibility Requirements, Study Indicates
>
>National Federation of the Blind Expresses Outrage, Demands Swift Action
>
>Baltimore, Maryland (May 19, 2011): A study that has just been
>published online in the journal
><http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0740624X>Government
>Information Quarterly has found that of one-hundred Web sites
>operated by federal government agencies, over 90 percent do not
>comply with government accessibility guidelines and likely cannot be
>used by people who are blind or have other perceptual or motor
>disabilities. The study, entitled "Accessibility of U.S. federal
>government home pages: Section 508 compliance and site accessibility
>statements" and coauthored by Doctoral Student Abiodun Olalere and
>Professor Jonathan Lazar of Towson University, found that the home
>pages of over 90 percent of the Web sites they evaluated contained
>violations of the government's own guidelines for compliance with
>Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. That law requires
>that government electronic and information technology be accessible
>to people with disabilities.
>
>Dr. Marc Maurer, President of the National Federation of the Blind,
>said: "Blind Americans are outraged that the government is failing
>to comply with its own guidelines to make government information and
>services available to citizens with disabilities. Given the clear
>legal requirements of Section 508 and the fact that use of the
>Internet is critical to education, employment, access to government
>benefits and services, and all other aspects of modern life, there
>is no excuse for failure to follow and rigorously enforce these
>guidelines. We demand that officials in all branches of government
>take immediate steps to bring all federal Web sites into compliance
>with the law, and we pledge to continue to hold the federal
>government accountable if it continues to treat the blind and others
>with disabilities as second-class citizens."
>
>The study evaluated the home pages of one-hundred government Web
>sites across all three branches of the federal government, including
>executive agencies, independent agencies, government corporations
>(e.g. Amtrak), the United States Congress, the United States Supreme
>Court, United States federal courts, and "open government" Web sites
>like <http://www.usajobs.gov>www.usajobs.gov and
><http://www.ready.gov>www.ready.gov. The authors utilized both
>automated-software tools and human-expert inspections on each home
>page, and determined that over 90 percent of the home pages were not
>in compliance with the Section 508 regulations.
>
>Most of the accessibility problems were common ones that are easily
>resolved, such as unlabeled images, mislabeled forms or tables,
>videos without captioning, flash without any textual equivalents,
>and lack of keyboard equivalents for mouse-over actions. The authors
>noted that this is not a problem unique to one agency. Similar
>problems occur on multiple agency Web sites, and the core problem is
>the lack of consistent compliance activities and enforcement
>throughout the federal government.
>
>The study makes several recommendations to increase compliance,
>including improved resources on complying with the guidelines;
>better documentation of best practices; publishing of information
>about which agencies are compliant and noncompliant with
>accessibility guidelines as part of the open government dashboard;
>and better enforcement and monitoring procedures within government
>agencies, such as the loss of Web-posting privileges for repeatedly
>posting inaccessible content.
>
>
>###
>
>
>About the National Federation of the Blind
>
>With more than 50,000 members, the National Federation of the Blind
>is the largest and most influential membership organization of blind
>people in the United States. The NFB improves blind people's lives
>through advocacy, education, research, technology, and programs
>encouraging independence and self-confidence. It is the leading
>force in the blindness field today and the voice of the nation's
>blind. In January 2004 the NFB opened the National Federation of
>the Blind Jernigan Institute, the first research and training center
>in the United States for the blind led by the blind.
>
>
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