Home\ACCESSIBILITY POLICY
Policy
In response to the need to insure equal access to electronic and
information technologies, the state of Oklahoma has developed a set of
standards for Web page design. Just as environmental obstacles have
inhibited individuals with disabilities, the Web poses an entirely new
set of obstacles. In recognition of those individuals with visual,
physical or developmental disabilities OK.gov has adopted a policy to
make government information accessible to all.
It has been estimated that 54 million people or 20.6 percent of all
Americans have some level of disability. According to the Disability
Statistics Center:
- People with disabilities will work in greater
numbers, in part because of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
Between 1991 and 1994, the number of disabled Americans employed
increased by more than 1.1 million, according to the Census Bureau.
Employment rates for young adults with severe disabilities are triple
that of their older counterparts.
- Education rates for people with disabilities are
increasing: 75 percent of them finished high school in 1994, up from
60% in 1986; their college enrollment leapt from 29 percent to 44
percent.
- Technological advances are eliminating many of the
physical and informational barriers that have long existed for people
with disabilities.
- Public awareness of disability issues is growing and changing.
- America's
population is aging, and disability increases with age. The number of
Americans aged 65 and older is projected to increase 135% between 1995
and 2050, according to the Census Bureau. Instructions will be provided
for individuals with disabilities, visual disabilities and for those
who are deaf or hard of hearing.
Design Standards
These standards are influenced by those recommended by the W3C and
Access Board Section 508 Guidelines. The Access Board is responsible
for developing the standards outlined by the amended Rehabilitation Act
of 1998. Universal design calls for appropriate use auxiliary aids and
services where necessary to ensure communication.
Oklahoma has adopted the Design of HTML Pages to increase accessibility
to users with disabilities as the primary guideline to meet the
objectives of the Universal Access for State Design policy. These
published guidelines are maintained by professionals trained in the
area of assistive and information technology.
Oklahoma embraces these standards and will be evaluating our site on a
regular basis, increasing the opportunity for all individuals to access
information over the Internet. The Universal Access Design Standards
are being integrated into OK.gov and will continue to evolve as new
technologies and opportunities emerge.
- A text equivalent for every non-text element shall be provided via
"alt" (alternative text attribute), "longdesc" (long description tag),
or in element content.
- Web pages shall be designed so that all information
required for navigation or meaning is not dependent on the ability to
identify specific colors.
- Changes in the natural language (e.g., English to
French) of a document's text and any text equivalents shall be clearly
identified.
- Documents shall be organized so they are readable without requiring an associated style sheet.
- Web pages shall update equivalents for dynamic content whenever the dynamic content changes.
- Redundant text links shall be provided for each active region of a server-side image map.
- Client-side image maps shall be used whenever possible in place of server-side image maps.
- Data tables shall provide identification of row and column headers.
- Markup
shall be used to associate data cells and header cells for data tables
that have two or more logical levels of row or column headers.
- Frames shall be titled with text that facilitates frame identification and navigation.
- Pages
shall be usable when scripts, applets, or other programmatic objects
are turned off or are not supported, or shall provide equivalent
information on an alternative accessible page.
- Equivalent alternatives for any multimedia presentation shall be synchronized with the presentation.
- An
appropriate method shall be used to facilitate the easy tracking of
page content that provides users of assistive technology the option to
skip repetitive navigation links
- Background colors will be avoided since color schemes can create problems with legibility.