[Nfbo-linn-benton] FW: [Nfbnet-members-list] Seattle Times: Blind Parent Wins Battle for Access to Online Seattle School Resources

Kristen Jocums kjocums at icloud.com
Sun Sep 27 05:23:43 UTC 2015


Three cheers for being able to support our kids the way the schools request
all other parents to participate in their kids’ education!!!

  Check out this article forwarded earlier today:

 

 

 

Blind Parent Wins Battle for Access to Online Seattle School Resources 
Originally published September 23, 2015 at 5:14 pm Updated September 23,
2015 at 6:33 pm 
Seattle Public Schools will hire an accessibility coordinator as part of a
consent decree between the district and a blind parent of a Seattle student.
By Paige Cornwell <http://www.seattletimes.com/author/paige-cornwell/>  
Seattle Times staff reporter
Seattle Public Schools will make its website and other online resources more
accessible to blind students, faculty members and parents as part of an
agreement tied to a lawsuit filed by a blind parent last year. 
The Seattle School Board voted Wednesday to enter into a consent decree to
settle the lawsuit, which alleges the district’s websites and an online math
program weren’t accessible to those who are blind. The lawsuit was filed by
Noel Nightingale, a blind parent of a Seattle student, and the National
Federation of the Blind. 
Under the agreement, the district will make its current websites accessible,
hire an accessibility coordinator and create a website portal to help
faculty and staff communicate effectively with people with disabilities. 
The district estimates it will cost from $665,440 to $815,400 to implement
the 3½-year decree. That includes funds to pay for an accessibility
coordinator, staff training and attorney fees. Nightingale will receive
$5,000 from the district for monetary relief. 
Nightingale notified the district that its websites weren’t accessible in
2012. She said she had been able to use the website with a “screen reader,”
which allows websites, documents and applications to be read aloud or
displayed in Braille on another device. Changes to the website in 2012 made
the site incompatible with the technology she used.
The district said it relayed the information to its website provider, which
didn’t fix the problem. It alleges the provider breached its agreement by
failing to provide a website compliant with the standards outlined in the
Americans with Disabilities Act. 
Nightingale sued the district in August 2014, alleging discrimination. Her
lawyers said cheap, available programs were available to make the site
compatible.
The agreement to settle the case is subject to the approval of the U.S.
District Court for Western Washington. 
Nightingale and the National Federation of the Blind applauded the board’s
vote, which they called historic and comprehensive.
“This landmark agreement with the Seattle Public Schools should serve as a
model for the nation and should put school districts on notice that we can
no longer wait to have equal education for blind students and to have access
to information, use of school services, and full participation in school
activities by blind faculty, personnel, and parents,” federation President
Mark Riccobono said in a statement. 
http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/education/blind-parent-wins-battle-
to-get-access-to-online-school-resources/#content 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nfbo-linn-benton_nfbnet.org/attachments/20150926/40d0cd86/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
An embedded and charset-unspecified text was scrubbed...
Name: Untitled attachment 00128.txt
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nfbo-linn-benton_nfbnet.org/attachments/20150926/40d0cd86/attachment.txt>


More information about the NFBO-Linn-benton mailing list