Department
of Law
120 Broadway
New York, NY 10271
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Department of Law
The State Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
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For More
Information:
(212) 416-8060 |
For Immediate
Release
August 19, 2004 |
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SPITZER AGREEMENT TO MAKE
WEB SITES ACCESSIBLE TO THE BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED
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Attorney General Eliot Spitzer today announced settlements with two
major travel web sites that will make the sites far more accessible to
blind and visually impaired users.
The web sites, Ramada.com and Priceline.com, have agreed to implement
a variety of accessibility standards that will permit users of assistive
technology, such as screen reader software, to more easily navigate
these web sites.
"Accessible web sites are the wave of the future and the right thing
to do. We applaud these companies for taking responsible and proper
steps to make their web sites accessible to the blind and visually
impaired," Spitzer said. "We urge all companies who have not done so to
follow their lead."
The Attorney General opined that the Americans With Disabilities Act
requires that private web sites be accessible to blind and visually
impaired Internet users. The ADA generally dictates that all "places of
public accommodation" and all "goods, services, facilities, privileges,
advantages, or accommodations" of places of public accommodation, must
be made accessible to disabled citizens, absent undue hardship. New York
law provides similar civil rights protections.
Many blind and visually impaired individuals use assistive
technology, such as "screen reader software," to operate computers and
surf the Internet. Screen reader software converts text into speech and
reads pages upon display -- usually from top to bottom and left to
right, as if reading a book. To be accessible to the blind and visually
impaired, a web site must utilize a computer code that is comprehensible
to screen reader software.
During investigations conducted in 2003 and earlier this year, the
Attorney General found that portions of the Ramada.com and Priceline.com
web sites were not accessible to this type of assistive technology.
Under the terms of the agreements, the companies will implement a range
of accessibility standards authored by the Web Accessibility Initiative
("WAI") of the World Wide Web Consortium ("W3C"), an organization that
recommends Internet standards. For instance, graphics and images must
have comprehensible labels, tables must have appropriately placed row
and column headers, and edit fields (boxes where the Internet user
inputs information) which must be labeled to indicate which information
is requested. The companies must also implement a wide variety of other
initiatives, based on guidelines authored by the W3C.
Advocates for the visually impaired applauded the settlements.
"By implementing design standards that allow screen reader software
and other assistive technology to function effectively with interactive
web sites, companies will make tremendous strides in closing the
‘digital divide' for visually impaired users," said Carl Augusto,
president and CEO of the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB). "As
the Internet continues to become an increasingly important tool for
business, commerce, and leisure activities, it is imperative that all
companies ensure their web sites are accessible for all users –
including people who are blind or have low vision."
The Attorney General also extended his thanks to the American
Foundation for the Blind, for its invaluable assistance, as well as to
the Baruch College Computer Center for Visually Impaired People.
In addition to the steps outline above, Ramada.com and Priceline.com
will pay the State of New York $40,000 and $37,500, respectively, as
costs of the investigation. The Attorney General emphasized that once
the companies were notified of the accessibility issues by his office,
they worked cooperatively and creatively with his Internet Bureau to
correct the issues.
Both cases were handled by Assistant Attorney General Elizabeth
Nieliwocki of the Attorney General's Internet Bureau, under the
direction of Kenneth Dreifach, Chief of that bureau, with assistance
from the Civil Rights Bureau.
Attachments:

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