1 / 32

State of Connecticut Web Site Accessibility Committee

State of Connecticut Web Site Accessibility Committee. Our Approach to Making Online Government Accessible Technology Accessibility Conference - SCSU October 12, 2007 Kathleen Anderson. History of the State of Connecticut’s Web Site Accessibility Policy. Version 3.1 – December 1996

gisela
Download Presentation

State of Connecticut Web Site Accessibility Committee

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. State of ConnecticutWeb Site Accessibility Committee Our Approach to Making Online Government Accessible Technology Accessibility Conference - SCSU October 12, 2007 Kathleen Anderson

  2. History of the State of Connecticut’s Web Site Accessibility Policy • Version 3.1 – December 1996 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/policies/accesspolicy31.html • Version 4.0 – July 2000 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/policies/accesspolicy40.html • Version 5 (proposed) – 2005 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/wg/proposal.asp • Version 6 (in progress) – 2007 • Section 508 http://www.section508.gov/

  3. Version 3.1 • Written in August 1996 • Adopted in December 1996 • Based on the TRACE Center Unified Web Site Accessibility Guidelines • No training given to state webmasters • Not rigorously enforced • No compliance date set

  4. Version 4.0 • Committee formed in October, 1999 • All Committee members are volunteers • Policy written by Committee members in the Spring of 2000 • Adopted on July 26, 2000 • Incorporates the W3C WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines – Priority 1 Checkpoints • Encourages the use of valid HTML • Requires a valid DOCTYPE declaration • Target date for compliance was January 2002

  5. Version 5 (Proposed) • Working Group formed in December, 2004 • Proposal developed in 2005 • Incorporates: • All WCAG Priority 1 Guidelines • Some Priority 2 and Priority 3 Guidelines • Section 508 Standards that are not WCAG P1 • One Guideline from WCAG 2.0 (Draft)

  6. “Why not Section 508?” “Why not wait for WCAG 2.0?” • State Policy Version 3.1 – December 1996 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/policies/accesspolicy31.html • Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 – May 1999 • http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/ • State Policy Version 4.0 – July 2000 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/policies/accesspolicy40.html • Section 508 Rules – February 2001 • http://www.section508.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=Content&ID=12#Web • Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 – June 2005 (Working Draft) • http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/ • State Policy Version 5 (Draft) – 2005 • http://www.access.state.ct.us/wg/proposal.asp • Refresh of Section 508 Standards • http://www.access-board.gov/news/508update.htm • State Policy Version 6 (in progress) – 2007 • Section 508 http://www.section508.gov/

  7. Version 4.0 Implementation • Communications • Web Site: http://www.access.state.ct.us/ • Listserv: CT-Access http://www.access.state.ct.us/listserv/subscribeform.htm • Monthly face-to-face meetings open to all state webmasters

  8. Version 4.0 Training • Training provided to state webmasters • External – New Horizons – Fall, 2000 – Funded by the Department of Information Technology (DOIT) • Internal – All day “Refresher course” taught by Committee members – Fall, 2001 • Resources, Tools and Tutorials available on web site

  9. Version 4.0 Testing • Testing Center set up • All hardware and software donated by state agencies • Test Center Hardware: • PC running Windows 98 • Power Mac G4

  10. Version 4.0 Testing (Continued) • Test Center Software • Browsers/Emulators • Internet Explorer • Netscape(s) • Opera • Lynx • WebTV Viewer • Bobby Worldwide • JAWS (PC), OutSpoken (Mac)

  11. Compliance • Tutorials written by Committee members • Six Steps to Accessibility Certification • How to run Bobby against large web sites • How to install the Lynx browser • How to code a default DOCTYPE in FrontPage • How to create Accessible PowerPoint presentations • How to create Accessible PDF documents

  12. How to obtain Compliance Certification • Agency webmaster writes to the Committee Chair requesting a site review • Chair posts the request to the listserv • A committee member volunteers to do the review • The process is then taken off-list • All communication is private, between the reviewer and the reviewee

  13. Compliance Negotiation • Occasionally, the Chair is called in during the process as an arbitrator, by either the reviewer or the reviewee: • Some webmasters use the compliance certification request as a way of finding out what’s wrong with their site, instead of doing a preliminary assessment themselves • Differences of opinion – “spirit of the law” • Most reviews have a successful outcome

  14. Compliance Certification • Site is certified to be compliant with the policy • Webmasters place a compliance statement and a link to the policy on their site • Webmaster and their agency head are presented with certificates at quarterly statewide webmaster meetings • A list of all compliant (and non-compliant) web sites is available on our web site for all to see

  15. The Pros and Cons of Policy vs. Law • Funding • Buy-in • Training • Compliance

  16. Funding • No funding for a Policy • All goods and services are donated • Hardware • Software • Time • Like Blanche DuBois, we depend on the kindness of strangers

  17. Buy-in • A Law leaves no doubt whether or not to comply • A Law normally has funding attached • Provides an avenue and redress for complaints

  18. Training • Training needs to be funded • Training needs to be mandatory • Training needs to be offered on an on-going basis • New hires • New technologies • New consultants

  19. Compliance • A Law mandates compliance • A Policy mandates compliance; however, • Scope is unclear • different branches of government • Internet vs. Intranet vs. Extranet • Physical location of server (state server or vendor server) • Not a priority for agencies in an era of budget cuts • No penalty for non-compliance

  20. External Issues • Vendors • Training • Software

  21. Vendors • Difficult to find qualified consultants already on state contract • Proposals submitted by vendors were unrealistic in terms of: • Hours • Scope of work • Dollar amount of the proposal • Raised the questions: • Did the vendors really know what they were being asked to do? • Did they think we didn’t know what we were asking for?

  22. Vendor Training • Problem solved in Connecticut by requiring vendors to be trained in how to make Accessible web sites • Training was provided by the State at no cost to vendors • Test center made available for use by vendors • Committee web site and listserv available as resources for follow-up

  23. Vendor Training Issues • Billable hours • Vendors thought the State should pay for the time the consultant was in class • We said: “We don’t pay for your database training, accessibility training isn’t any different – it’s a skill set required to qualify for a state contract” • Attitude • Some consultants walked into class with a “low enthusiasm level” • 99% walked out “getting it” and thanking us for the learning opportunity

  24. Keys to Training Successes • Webmasters must experience the barriers in a hands-on environment • Take them out of their comfort zone (out of their office, away from their PC) • Take away the mouse • Turn off the speakers • Turn off images • Training can be effective in either a classroom environment or online

  25. How did we do? • Summer 2002 • 81 consultants representing 35 companies were trained in less than 3 months • 2004 - 2005 • Vendors are asking for training for new hires so they can remain qualified • They are given a choice of Acceptable courses to choose from

  26. Web Site Accessibility - Acceptable Training Programs • HTML Writers Guild: http://www.hwg.org/ • Introduction to Designing Accessible Websites • Key-Logic: http://www.key-logic.com/ • Universal Web Site Accessibility Training

  27. Web Site Accessibility - Acceptable Training Programs • New Horizons Computer Learning Center: http://www.newhorizons.com/content/index.aspx • State of Connecticut – Web Site Accessibility Training • Email: kathleen.anderson@po.state.ct.us • Phone: (860) 622-2159

  28. Software • “It is just as important that all people be able to author content as it is for all people to have access to it.” • W3C Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 - http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203/ • Questions to ask • Does the web page authoring tool create accessible web pages? • Is the web page authoring tool itself accessible to people with disabilities?

  29. How to choose an Accessible Authoring Tool • Conformance Reviews done by the WAI Authoring Tools Working Group: http://www.w3.org/WAI/AU/2002/tools • Section 508 Buy Accessible: http://www.section508.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=Content&ID=2

  30. What factors contributed most to our success? • Committee participation is voluntary • Policy development • Writing tutorials • Web site reviews • Support from DOIT: • Agreement to adopt a statewide IT policy • Funding for state webmaster training • Mandating vendor training

  31. And, strange as it sounds … • Change in the way state agencies communicate (email, web, listservs, etc.) • Information available faster and accessible to more people • Discussions held (and decisions made) online instead of waiting for a meeting • Greatly reduces bureaucracy – and things get done!

  32. For more information • Visit our web site: http://www.access.state.ct.us/ • Subscribe to the CT-Access listserv: http://www.access.state.ct.us/listserv/subscribeform.htm • Come to a meeting: http://www.access.state.ct.us/meetings/2005meetings.html • Send me an email: kathleen.anderson@po.state.ct.us • Call me: (860) 622-2159

More Related