Accessibility, the Good News

The gen­eral aware­ness of online acces­si­bil­ity issues has come along way in the past decade– from the iso­lated protests of a small group of zealots to an almost essen­tial aspect of good web design. Why the change? It wasn’t the legal require­ments of ADA or Sec­tion 508, nor the wealth of resources on the topic spewed forth by a vari­ety of orga­ni­za­tions. No doubt these voices have been influ­en­tial, but acces­si­bil­ity is where it is today pri­mar­ily because of:

  1. Evolv­ing stan­dards and tech­nolo­gies that require a return to the sep­a­ra­tion of con­tent from pre­sen­ta­tion and
  2. An explo­sion of con­sumer devices with the same require­ments for infor­ma­tion access as many assis­tive technologies

While a few devel­op­ers were able to see the advan­tages to mak­ing their con­tent acces­si­ble to every­one early on, the major­ity will only to do so under finan­cial, tech­nol­ogy and peer pres­sure. Already, there are many lead­ers in the web design com­mu­nity who are cham­pi­oning the ben­e­fits of design­ing con­tent that is acces­si­ble to everyone.

Will these pres­sures even­tu­ally solve all access prob­lems? No, but they have us headed in the right direc­tion faster than ever before, and that is good news for accessibility.

  1. Matt says:

    In the UK I reckon the fol­low­ing fac­tors have been sig­nif­i­cant for the change in pro­file of accessibility:

    - the 1995 DDA

    - the active pur­suit of high acces­si­bil­ity stan­dards by the RNIB and other pio­neer­ing organ­i­sa­tions like the Employ­ers Forum on Dis­abil­ity and the Dis­abil­ity Rights Commission

    - aware­ness by a grow­ing num­ber of web devel­op­ers that acces­si­bil­ity is a vital, moral and even legal aspect of their busi­ness offering

    - inspired clients who com­mis­sion acces­si­ble sites as part of their cor­po­rate respon­si­bil­ity strategy.

  2. Matt,
    Sorry it has taken me so long to get back to you, although I am not as famil­iar with acces­si­bil­ity laws in the UK, I read over a brief arti­cle on your site and would agree with all of your com­ments made above as being factors.

    I apre­ci­ated your choice of words in describ­ing some of the moti­va­tions behind acces­si­ble web design, ‘vital’, ‘moral’ and ‘inspired.’ Hope­fully more and more devel­op­ers are mak­ing the extra effort to make their con­tent acces­si­ble for these rea­sons. How­ever, I would tend to go with a some­what more pes­simistic view that out­side of a small com­mu­nity, the major­ity of acces­si­ble web design is dri­ven pri­mar­ily by profit, evolv­ing stan­dards and pro­fes­sional development/credibility.

  3. mike says:

    heh, A fast-spreading mutant strain of syphilis has proved resis­tant to the antibi­otic pills that are offered to some patients. The increase in the mutant strain was largely among gay or bisex­ual men with mul­ti­ple partners.