
The Business
Problem
The Commonwealth
Office of
Technology (COT)
for the
Commonwealth of
Kentucky offers
enterprise-wide
IT leadership
and services to
Kentucky state
government
agencies.
Infrastructure,
security,
development,
policies,
training and
project
management are
just some these
services.
COT develops and
maintains
numerous web
applications for
state agencies.
COT also is on
the forefront of
Accessibility in
Kentucky:
defining
standards,
raising
awareness,
correcting
problems and
training other
agencies.
Recently, COT in
conjunction with
the Web
Standards
Committee has
created a final
version of the
7025
Accessibility
for
Internet/World
Wide Web Design
and Publishing
(.DOC version:
http://gotsource.ky.gov/dsweb/Get/Document-37147/7025_Accessibility.doc,
HTML version:
http://gotsource.ky.gov/dsweb/GetRendition/Document-37147/html).
Once the
Enterprise
Architecture and
Standards
Committee
reconvenes, the
final version
will be
submitted for
adoption.
The 7025
Accessibility
Standard
requires all
pages to meet
Section 508 of
the Federal
Rehabilitation
Act and the
World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C)
Web
Accessibility
Initiative (WAI)
Web Content
Accessibility
Guidelines
(WCAG) 1.0
Conformance
Level Double-A.
However, the
7025 standard is
nothing new.
This level of
Accessibility
required of all
Executive branch
state agencies
has been in
place since
2002, with
references to
Accessibility
requirements
going back to
2000. This
latest version
is an attempt to
separate and
clarify the
Accessibility
standard from
Kentucky's
Design standard.
One of the first
priorities of
the COT was to
develop a
strategy for
managing and
monitoring the
accessibility
status of
Kentucky Web
sites,
administered by
hundreds of Web
managers. Needed
was a tool or
set of tools for
verifying the
current
compliance
levels with
Section 508 and
a tool to allow
web developers
to check their
own work. They
chose
HiSoftware’s
AccMonitor and
AccVerify/AccRepair
products to meet
this need.
The Solution
COT purchased an
unlimited
license for
AccMonitor
Server and has
begun a rollout
of
AccVerify/AccRepair
at several of
its
installations.
AccVerify
provides for the
verification of
accessibility
policy and
standards
required for Web
Sites under the
Rehabilitation
Act Section 508
and W3C® WCAG
1.0 Priority 1-3
guidelines.
AccRepair uses
the reporting
and verification
components of
AccVerify to
launch a repair
“wizard”
interface, which
prompts the user
to correct
accessibility
errors.
AccRepair also
uses a library
that “learns” as
repairs are
made. These
applications are
available as a
stand-alone
desktop solution
and as an
integrated
add-on for
Microsoft
FrontPage.
AccMonitor is an
automated
accessibility
testing solution
for Web sites or
for use in
conjunction with
intranet servers
or file servers.
Using a crawler,
AccMonitor tests
sites for
compliance with
Section 508 and
W3C
accessibility
standards.
AccMonitor
spiders, or
crawls over,
entire Web sites
and reports on
their
accessibility
status.
AccMonitor
particularly
benefits
organizations
that need to
monitor multiple
servers that
host information
via the World
Wide Web.
AccMonitor is a
server solution
that is designed
to run with no
user interaction
once configured.
AccMonitor can
be scheduled to
crawl Web sites
daily, weekly,
or monthly. It
also allows
users to log-on
for on demand
reports on the
accessibility
status of their
Web pages.
The Bottom
Line
HiSoftware’s
solutions
provided the
comprehensive
testing and
reporting
features that
COT required,
through a simple
to use
interface.
Additionally,
HiSoftware’s
applications
provided great
flexibility in
user-driven and
automated
reporting, and
also provided
flexibility for
Enterprise Wide
deployment and
mass
distribution.
COT uses
HiSoftware
solutions to
monitor
compliance with
the 7025
Accessibility
standard. Severs
errors are
prioritized for
repair, and
egregious sites
do not go live.
Since COT uses
the software to
audit numerous
sites for
compliance, the
numbers of users
that access
these sites are
not known. It is
certainly quite
a few.
“Tools like
HiSoftware's
AccVerify,
AccMonitor and
AccRepair
provide Kentucky
with an
unambiguous,
consistent
process of
checking for
Accessibility.
While there are
still a number
of Accessibility
points that
still need to be
judged by a
person,
automated tools
carry the
majority of the
load.” Mark
Darbyshire, IT
Systems
Engineer,
Division of
Centers of
Expertise, Web
Development
Group,
Commonwealth
Office of
Technology.
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