[blindlaw] Textbooks for disabled, Particularly College Students

Mike Freeman k7uij at panix.com
Sun Sep 13 16:53:58 UTC 2009


You're absolutely right. However, there's an additional wrinkle: people 
keep innovating and coming up with technologies and appearances of 
documents and/or web pages that screen reading technology can make 
neither hide nor hair of.

I've reluctantly come to the conclusion that ultimately, to legislate 
true accessibility, one must mandate that technology stays fixed.

Ain't a-gonna happen!

Mike Freeman, President
NFB of Washington

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "James Pepper" <b75205 at gmail.com>
To: "NFBnet Blind Law Mailing List" <blindlaw at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2009 8:05 AM
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] Textbooks for disabled, Particularly College 
Students


The other problem here is that what people deem to be accessible is not
actually accessible.  Just because a document or a webpage complies with
section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act does not make it actually 
accessible
to the blind.  It is infuriating when you deal with people who insist 
that
they followed all the rules and that the documents are certified even by 
the
Access Board as being accessible to the blind using the legal definition 
of
accessibility and yet when you actually try to use it, it is useless.

This separation between the law and reality is the problem.

James Pepper
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