Article by thewall street journal about Web accessibility from the ADAI got 
this from a friend of mine and thought you’d like to see it.
Hello All,

Just received this article and wanted to share it with all of you. It is great 
to see web accessibility highlighted in a national publication. My friend DeAnn 
Elliott is the author and she quotes Brian too <smile>

 

Kim 

 

On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the ADA, please see the opinion 
piece below from the BSCB’s very own Dean Elliott which appeared in this 
morning’s edition of the Wall Street Journal. At the bottom of the article is 
included the URL to the website where you can also check out reader comments. 

 

***********

 

The Challenges of Surfing While Blind. My seeing-eye dog can't help me with 
your website. Please code it for accessibility.. By Dean Elliott . The other 
day while going about my business on the Internet, I hit a brick wall: a map of 
the United States. I was diagnosed at 28 with retinitis pigmentosa and declared 
legally blind at 41. I no longer see the screen well enough to use my mouse to 
point and click. But with a standard laptop and some software that reads the 
screen to me in a voice that sounds like Stephen Hawking's, I can accomplish 
nearly everything that I once did with a mouse using memorized key commands. 
But to make a purchase on this particular website, I was asked to choose my 
home state not from an alphabetical list, but by clicking on a map. For a blind 
person, that's akin to being in a wheelchair and encountering a flight of 
stairs. A well-designed website that conforms to the Web Content Accessibility 
Guidelines 2.0 (WCAG) permits use by people of all abilities. In my case, text 
labels that identify the buttons and graphical features allow me to "see" 
what's on the screen. The code is hidden and need not interfere with the way 
the website works for sighted customers. But without these features, a site 
that works beautifully with a mouse is useless to me. Technology has removed 
many of the barriers that people with disabilities face in the physical world, 
making life in the mainstream tantalizingly close. Can't drive to the mall? 
There's Amazon! Can't read the electric bill? Bank online! As my guide dog and 
I contemplate the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act 
(ADA), the landmark civil-rights law signed July 26, 1990, the gap between 
sight and blindness has never been narrower. The ADA requires government 
websites to be accessible. Sadly, the law provides little guidance to the 
private sector on this point, since it was passed before the Internet became 
ubiquitous. It applies to a "place" of public accommodation-but is the Internet 
a place? That question has been wending its way through the courts. Disability 
advocates have worked to broaden the law's applicability, with some success. In 
April, Harvard University and M.I.T. announced plans to voluntarily make their 
edX website for online courses compliant with the WCAG after deaf advocates 
filed federal lawsuits alleging discrimination. In 2010 the Justice Department 
announced it would consider issuing Web-accessibility regulations under the 
ADA, though the rule-making process lumbers on. With the number of websites 
growing rapidly, change isn't coming fast enough. "More than 50 percent of the 
websites on the Internet are either inaccessible or unusable for people who use 
adaptive technology," Brian Charlson, director of technology at the Carroll 
Center for the Blind in Newton, Mass., told me in his office a few months back. 
The consequences range from inconvenient to significant. When I can't place an 
online order at my favorite Vietnamese noodle shop, I get Chinese instead. If a 
task is urgent, I pester family and friends for "favors. When they hover over 
my screen to help me navigate around a virtual barrier, I'm keenly aware that 
my charge-card number and the details of my transaction are on display. At 
work, unequal access in an increasingly networked economy contributes to an 
unemployment rate that's more than twice as high for people with 
disabilities-and that's not counting many who have given up looking for work. 
Recently I met a Web programmer who confessed that she omitted accessibility 
features because they weren't explicitly required. Deadlines were tight. 
Budgets were tighter. Most customers liked the graphics. I appreciated her 
candor. I explained that making a site accessible shouldn't be seen as a 
bother. Rather, compliance helps a company reach the largest number of 
customers. As techno-savvy baby boomers age into vision and hearing loss, many 
more people will need accommodation. Companies that fail to adjust risk 
squandering years of accumulated goodwill. Further, accessible websites often 
perform better in search results, since images are tagged with descriptive 
text. These features benefit people who have limited English proficiency or are 
using technology in places where they have difficulty reading the screen. 
Several organizations, including the nonprofit Carroll Center, offer 
accessibility consulting to help businesses. "The changes are often cheaper and 
easier than people think," Mr. Charlson says. There are three levels of WCAG 
conformance, and though the highest level might look intimidating, settlements 
to accessibility lawsuits usually recommend the middle one. In the 25 years 
since the passage of the ADA, businesses have removed brick-and-mortar barriers 
to their facilities, erecting ramps and installing elevators. Now it's time to 
finish the job and tear down the virtual barriers. Besides, I'd rather shop 
than sue. Ms. Elliott is a Boston-based disability advocate who blogs for the 
Carroll Center for the Blind. . 

 

Article URL:

http://www.wsj.com/article_email/the-challenges-of-surfing-while-blind-1437950347-lMyQjAxMTA1NDI5NzMyNDc2Wj

 

 

__._,_.___

“Life is either a daring adventure or nothing”.

Helen Keller

 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I am using the Free version of SPAMfighter.
SPAMfighter has removed 30 of my spam emails to date.

Do you have a slow PC? Try a free scan! 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


     This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. 
      www.avast.com 
     

 
_______________________________________________
ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

Reply via email to