-Caveat Lector-

Source:

http://www.lucianne.com/


Is Your Site Accessible?

Wheelchair ramps for the Information Superhighway

By Adam Clayton Powell III

Some day soon, you may open your morning newspaper and discover a
few features are missing:

=Sports scores will be mostly gone, with only the home teams'
games and national championship results reported.

=The color weather map will be replaced by a black-and-white
version with 1950s-era isobar lines.

=The stock tables will have been dropped in favor of lists of the
five most active stocks traded, and perhaps the day's biggest
winners and losers.

What will have happened? Under an order from the U.S. Department
of Justice, your local newspaper will have been forced to drop
those and other features because they are not accessible to
people with disabilities.

So say goodbye to small type (too hard for some to read), thus
ending comprehensive lists of sports statistics and securities
trading. And of course that weather map has to go: It's not
accessible to the color-blind.

Sound crazy? Does the Justice Department really have the power to
review the design of newspapers? Well, maybe--though not yet the
print versions. It may well be assuming the power to review any
newspaper's online design.

Webmasters, Uncle Sam wants you to make your Web site more
accessible to those who are blind, deaf, or otherwise disabled.
And it's not a suggestion: It's the law. The new rules are
mandated by a little-known provision of the Workforce Investment
Act enacted by Congress last year. Under Section 508 of that law,
the new rules will apply later this year to all Web sites
operated by federal agencies, by anyone doing business with the
federal government, and by many--perhaps all--state governments.

But those guidelines might also soon apply to everyone who puts
up a Web site anywhere in the country. For now, the Section 508
rules will be voluntary guidelines. But members of the new
federal Web site commission were quoted by the trade news service
Ziff Davis in April as asserting that companies and individuals
who do not adopt the rules "voluntarily" could soon face a legal
mandate to comply--or be exposed to lawsuits filed by any
disabled individual who could not read all of the information on
a site.

Section 508 is one of those laws that sounds as controversial as
apple pie: It simply requires that Web sites be adjusted so that
disabled persons can read them. Web site designers will be
required to restructure their content, design, and underlying
technologies to allow individuals with disabilities "to have
access to and use of information and data that is comparable to
the access to and use of the information and data by such members
of the public who are not individuals with disabilities." Who
could object to helping the disabled?

But the real question is: Just how should the Internet be "fixed"
to be more accessible? The new federal Web site committee
established by the U.S. Architectural and Transportation Barriers
Compliance Board (the people who regulate wheelchair ramps and
hallway widths) offered its answer in May, drafting new rules for
online publishing. Provisions required that streaming audio or
audio files be accompanied by simultaneous text, including,
"where appropriate, in tactile form"; that streaming video be
captioned; that the use of color to convey information be
restricted; and that webmasters "provide at least one mode that
does not require user vision" by formatting all information so
that it is compatible with braille and speech synthesis devices.

Other regulations ban touch screens, prohibit moving text or
animation (unless the user can go to a static display with the
same information), and require all Web sites to "provide at least
one mode that minimizes the cognitive, and memory ability
required of the user."

Web site problems that need fixing were discussed in an
attachment to a memorandum from Attorney General Janet Reno that
explained the new law. "For example, a system that provides
output only in audio format would not be accessible to people
with hearing impairments," reads the explanation, "and a system
that requires mouse actions to navigate would not be accessible
to people who cannot use a mouse."

So say goodbye to streaming audio and video, unless you can
provide simultaneous text translation. Say goodbye to graphical
user interfaces, unless you can provide simultaneous keyboard
commands--available in braille and audio.

Who is affected by the new rules? Advocates of last year's
legislation say it applies only to federal Web sites. That may
(or may not) have been what Congress intended, but that is
clearly not what is being planned. For example, the U.S.
Department of Education asserts that "states which receive
Federal funds under the Technology Related Assistance for
Individuals with Disabilities Act of 1988, are required by that
Act to comply with Section 508." Those words open the scope of
the law to every state.

The people drafting the rules believe they should apply to
everyone. Who are they? As is customary, the federal government
asked interested individuals to nominate themselves to serve on
the drafting committee. In this case, Section 508 required
consultation with "public or nonprofit agencies or organizations,
including organizations representing individuals with
disabilities." Not surprisingly, most of those appointed were
representatives of such groups as the American Council of the
Blind, the American Foundation for the Blind, Easter Seals, the
National Association of the Deaf, the National Federation of the
Blind, and the United Cerebral Palsy Associations.

Members of the committee assert that the federal government has
the power to regulate the form and content of online
information--as opposed to print, where the government does not
have such power-- because the federal government paid for the
development of the Internet. "The Internet is subject to market
forces, but it didn't start through market forces, it was started
by the federal government," said Jenifer Simpson, a committee
member and manager of technology initiatives at the President's
Committee on Employment of People With Disabilities, in an
interview with Ziff Davis. Simpson added that the rights of the
disabled must prevail over other considerations. "This is really
a civil rights issue," she said.

And if online publishers decline to adopt the committee's new
guidelines voluntarily, the guidelines could become mandatory
under federal law for all Web sites, according to both Simpson
and Judy Brewer, another committee member who is also director of
the Web Access Initiative.

Janet Reno believes the new law covers more than just Web sites.
"The scope of Section 508 is expansive," she wrote in the
memorandum describing the law's jurisdiction, and "potentially
includes all telecommunications devices (including telephones,
voice-mail systems, pagers, facsimile machines, and related
technology) and any technology used to convey, transmit, or
receive any kind of information."

The new rules will become final early next year, but it is
already possible to see how they would work. For those inside the
government, Attorney General Reno announced the creation of a
federal Web site (www.508.org) to help Webmasters ascertain
whether they are in compliance with the new law. But this site
was only accessible from government computers--specifically,
according to the attorney general's memorandum, from .gov and
.mil domains.

For everyone else, the Web Access Initiative developed and
published its own set of proposed guidelines that could be
adopted as federal law (www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT). The first
guideline requires Web sites to supply text alternatives for all
images and graphics. "Thus, a text equivalent for an image of an
upward arrow that links to a table of contents could be `Go to
table of contents,'" the provision reads. A second provision bars
the use of color to convey information unless explanatory text is
also available, because "people who cannot differentiate between
certain colors and users with devices that have non-color or
non-visual displays will not receive the information."

Other requirements prohibit using multiple languages on the same
page, because that can hinder translation by braille readers, and
discourage the "use (or misuse)" of tables and other formatting
that "makes it difficult for users with specialized software to
understand the organization of the page or to navigate through
it." Yet another provision requires webmasters to "ensure that
moving, blinking, scrolling, or auto-updating objects or pages
may be paused or stopped" and to design all pages so they are
"usable by people without mice, with small screens, low
resolution screens, black and white screens, no screens, with
only voice and text output, etc."

Another Web site lets online publishers test their sites using
some of the suggested guidelines that soon may have the force of
federal law behind them. The Center for Applied Special
Technology (www.cast.org) has posted free software it calls
Bobby, illustrated with an image of a jovial waving policeman.
That cheerful logo doubles as a seal of approval that can be
downloaded and used by Web sites that meet Bobby's accessibility
guidelines. Bobby has already flunked a number of widely used Web
sites, including the White House site, where the software
identified "13 accessibility problems that should be fixed in
order to make this page accessible to people with disabilities."

Bobby may be waving with his right hand, but in his left hand,
not visible in the logo, may be a billy club: Section 508.

Adam C. Powell III is vice president of technology and programs
at The Freedom Forum, a nonpartisan international foundation
dedicated to free press and free speech.

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   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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