Accessible Websites, One Small Law Firm, and the U.S. Department of Justice
Posted on October 6, 2010
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This is a post about how LFLegal.com is designed to be accessible for people with disabilities. This is a website of a small business. The United States Department of Justice is proposing rules to make websites more usable to blind people and others. The DOJ has asked questions about how website access affects small businesses. This post can help answer that question. [Back to post about the accessibility of LFLegal.com]
Can a small law firm’s website help the United States Department of Justice in its web accessibility rulemaking process? When the website — LFLegal.com — has been designed to meet Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0, Success Criteria AAA, I think the answer is yes.
In its July 26, 2010 Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) about web accessibility, the United States Department of Justice asks several questions about how web accessibility regulations might affect small businesses. The Law Office of Lainey Feingold is a small business – a one lawyer law office. The office’s website has been designed to meet all Success Criteria of the WCAG 2.0 (AAA Conformance).
This post provides information about the accessibility [...]