Disability Accessibility Act
of 1995
With the gradual introduction of rights under the Disability
Discrimination Act 1995 ("the Act"), businesses are adjusting
their operations to comply with the Act, typically by improving
physical access to buildings and services for both employees and
customers alike. However, many businesses remain unaware that the
duty not to discriminate against disabled persons extends to other
areas, including equal access to electronic information and services,
such as web sites.
Reasonable steps must be taken by web site operators to ensure
that they do not discriminate against disabled persons. Disability
organisations have recommended certain practical steps which can
be taken in respect of web sites including the use of a text based
and frame-free web sites, descriptive hyperlinks (not simply "click
here"), multimedia having transcripts of audio and video,
and descriptions of images.
If a business operates a web site which does not comply with the
requirements of the Act, not only do they run the risk of facing
an action for disability discrimination, but also the associated
negative adverse publicity.
Background Disability Discrimination Act 1995 ("the Act")
imposes a duty on service providers not to discriminate against
a disabled person. A service provider includes every person who
provides services to the public or to a section of the public,
whether in the private, public or voluntary sector, irrespective
of whether the service is provided for a charge or not. The Act
provides examples of services, which include "access to and
use of information services" and "means of communication":
as such, the design and functionality of web sites fall within
the ambit of the Act and therefore web site operators are under
a duty
to ensure compliance.
Discrimination - The meaning of discrimination in relation to
the provision of services is described in section 20 of the Act.
In brief, a provider of services discriminates against a disabled
person if, without justification,
(i) he treats the disabled person less favourably than he treats
others; or
(ii) he has a practice, policy or procedure which makes it impossible
or unreasonably difficult for disabled persons to make use of the
service, and fails to take reasonable steps to address such obstacles.
Although the Act sets out when discrimination may be justifiable,
including incapacity and endangering health or safety, none appears
to be relevant in relation to web sites"Reasonable steps" Under
s.21, service providers must take "such steps as is reasonable,
in all the circumstances of the case" to remove any discriminatory
practice, policy or procedure. The Act does provide some limitation
as to the extent to which steps must be taken.
The Disability Rights Commission has issued guidance in the updated
Code of Practice (Rights of Access, Goods, Facilities, Services
and Premises) ("the Code"). The Code indicates that what
is a reasonable step for a particular service provider will vary
on a case-by-case basis depending on, the type of services being
provided; the nature of the service provider and its size and resources;
and the effect of the disability on the individual disabled person.
The Code elaborates further and provides a non-exhaustive list
of factors to be taken into account when considering what is reasonable:
whether taking any particular steps would be effective in overcoming
the difficulty that disabled people face in accessing the services
in question; the extent to which it is practicable for the service
provider to take the steps; the financial and other costs of making
the adjustment; the extent of any disruption which taking the steps
would cause; the extent of the service provider's financial and
other resources; the amount of any resources already spent on making
adjustments; and the availability of financial or other assistance.
Although financial constraints may be considered reasonable in
respect of certain physical adjustments to buildings etc., it is
unlikely that web site operators would be able to rely on such
a reason as web sites evolve with new layouts and new attributes
being
introduced on a relatively frequent basis: as such, web site operators
will have little excuse for not taking account of the guidelines
in their second and third generation web sites Although there are
no hard and fast rules for compliance with the Act, guidance on
design can be taken from the Code and the recommendations issued
by disability organisations such as Royal National Institute for
the Blind and by the international Internet body, the World Wide
Web Consortium In summary:
Text and colours
The text should be easily legible, and the fonts should be changeable.
A plain background is preferable to contrast with the text. Patterned
backgrounds should be avoided, as they are difficult to read.
Images and animations
All images should have attributed text to allow speech synthesisers,
which read text aloud to visually impaired users, to describe
the image to disabled users
Multimedia
Provide transcripts of audio and descriptions of video
Scripts, applets and plug-ins
Although they provide a more sophisticated interface, they also
impede software which assists disabled users accessing the web.
Hyperlinks
Descriptive hyperlinks are more beneficial than non-descriptive "click
here" hyperlinks.
Frame or frame-free?
If frames are used on your web site, provision should be made for
an option to use a frame-free version as many speech synthesisers
packages are unable to read frames.
Check the web site
The Centre for Applied Special Technology has a free online tool
called, Bobby which conducts an instant and automated review
of a web site and highlights design problems that may cause problems
for disabled users.
Consider an additional purely text based web site
Tesco.com provides an alternative text-based only homepage as an
alternative to its principal "all-singing all dancing" homepage:
this specific homepage contains links to the entire tesco.com
web site in an easy to access and navigate text format. This
is not only of benefit to people with disabilities, but also
to
Internet users who access the web over a slow connection (text
downloads much faster than images).
Conclusion
The Act seeks to create a level playing field in the provision
of services so that all persons are able to benefit from services
without regard to disability. Given that the Internet is a flexible
and evolving medium, web site operators should undertake to conduct
an audit of their web sites to assess accessibility and develop
the design in light of recommendations and guidelines. Although
the threat of legal action for disability discrimination should
provide the necessary impetus for change, the commercial advantages
should not be overlooked: by improving accessibility not only
sends out a positive image about an organisation, but equally
it ensures that more users (and therefore potential clients)
are able to benefit from the services offered on the web site
| Home | Design | Portfolio |
Price Guide | Privacy | Testimonials | Contact | Helpful
Links | Site
Map |
|