[nfbmi-talk] Fw: another article on the issue

Terry D. Eagle via nfbmi-talk nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org
Tue Jun 3 01:31:05 UTC 2014


Hmmmmm, makes one wonder, if the state follows the lead, or lack thereof, of
the federal government, or vice versa.  Either way, there is no leadership,
and of course, no compliance of the laws and regulations, and of course
intended recipients and beneficiaries of services suffer, and even die
waiting.  If only, as much leadership effort existed to fix uncompliance, as
leadership among government officials exert to point fingers at each other,
and pin the blame on the donkey! 

-----Original Message-----
From: nfbmi-talk [mailto:nfbmi-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of joe
harcz Comcast via nfbmi-talk
Sent: Monday, June 02, 2014 9:49 AM
To: nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org
Subject: [nfbmi-talk] Fw: another article on the issue


----- Original Message ----- 
From: joe harcz Comcast 
To: blind democracy List 
Sent: Monday, June 02, 2014 9:48 AM
Subject: another article on the issue


One mistake though here. The ADA does not apply to the feds. However, Both
Section 504 and Section 508 do.

Joe Harcz

Most VA Websites Still Inaccessible to Blind Vets | Military.com

Military.com Mar 24, 2014 | by Bryant Jordan

 

More than a year after waivers temporarily exempted the Department of
Veterans Affairs from laws mandating its websites be accessible to blind and
vision-impaired

veterans, the agency is still lagging behind, veterans' advocates say.

 

"The fact of the matter [is] the electronic health records of the blind
veterans, as well as the websites the blind veteran population must
navigate, are

still not ... compliant [with the Americans With Disabilities Act]," Blinded
Veterans Association spokesman Glenn Minney said.

 

By law, federal agencies must provide disabled workers and the public access
to electronic information and services comparable to that provided to
non-disabled

people.

 

For blind and visually impaired vets, websites would need to accommodate
screen readers and refreshable Braille displays or terminals used to read
text

output from a computer.

 

To meet these requirements, the VA would have to label all buttons, icons or
graphics in a way that screen readers could understand and then interpret
them

for the user.

 

GovX_CPA-2014_ROS_Traffic-Driver/GovX_300x100_Featured-Placement_Brands

Under Section 508 of the ADA, federal agencies are supposed to ensure equal
access to electronic and information technology developed, procured,
maintained

or used in the federal environment, BVA National President Mark Cornell told
a joint Senate-House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing on March 6.

 

Cornell told lawmakers that his group "has repeatedly requested in its
annual resolutions that VA information technology be fully compliant with
Section

508."

 

"We appreciate the fact that both of these committees have requested VA
briefings and required updates on the status of its efforts to comply," he
said.

"This problem of lack of compliance, however, has still not been fixed."

 

In a January 2013

memo,

VA Deputy Chief Information Officer for Product Development Lorraine
Landfried notified Roger Baker, the VA's assistant secretary for IT, that
all VA Section

508 waivers expired as of Jan. 1, 2013, and that "all electronic and
information technology must conform to the Section 508 standards."

 

The requirement extended to "grandfathered" technology, as well, she wrote,
meaning systems developed prior to 2001.

 

She said VA sites that were under development would have to self-certify
they are compliant, show a signed waiver and a plan for reaching compliancy.
Alternatively,

the websites would have to attain a valid exemption for the 508 requirement.

 

Tom Zampieri, director of government relations for the Blinded Veterans
Association, said it appears the VA had only begun putting more people and
resources

toward meeting these requirements after a 2012 Justice Department report
highlighted the failures of the VA to meet its obligations.

 

Even as the VA has increased the number of services available to veterans --
including those related to filing claims -- "the majority of them are not
able

to be accessed by blinded veterans," Zampieri said.

 

In a statement to Military.com, the VA said it has made real progress in
making online services accessible to blind veterans.

 

"Since January 2013, VA has reduced its need for waivers by 90 percent. The
increased use of enterprise tools and training has assisted with this
effort.

VA continues to make progress in meeting the Section 508 requirements," the
VA's statement said.

 

The VA has been scanning its websites and improving them over the last two
years, utilizing templates and standardized processes, VA officials said.
The

agency has improved access to the

MyHealthEVet

site by 95 percent.

 

The VA also said there are no expired waivers with respect to websites and
neither websites nor content are exempted under Section 508.

 

In his testimony on March 6, Cornell told lawmakers that the 2012 Justice
Department report found continuing problems with Section 508 implementation
at

the VA and elsewhere in the federal government.

 

The Blinded Veterans Association has grown increasingly frustrated with the
VA over the past several years as the department has dragged its feet on
supporting

the Vision Center of Excellence.

 

The center, which is supposed to work in tandem with the Defense Department
Vision Center of Excellence, has been in existence for more than four years

but has never been fully staffed. Last summer, Veterans Health
Administration Under Secretary Dr. Robert Petzel claimed to be unaware that
his department

had never filled four of the six positions in the center.

 

VA spokeswoman Victoria Dillon said last week that all but one position is
now filled and interviews are underway for that job.

 

-- Bryant Jordan can be reached at Bryant.Jordan at monster.com.

 

Source:

http://www.military.com/daily-news/2014/03/24/most-va-websites-still-inacces
sible-to-blind-vets.html
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