Accessibility in the News — 5/15/2020.
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― Confucius
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Feature Stories
Oldest braille printing press up and running remotely to keep reading accessible
May 8, 2020 | Source: Boston 25 News
During the shutdown, reading is one of the leisure activities many of us are still grateful to have. For people who are blind, it’s essential they have access to books printed in braille. The National Braille Press, founded in Boston in 1927, was the first of its kind. Officials there have had to figure out how to keep their presses running even as the country shut down. Tim Vernon, who is blind and lives in Mansfield, said reading is an escape and one he’s particularly happy to have during the shutdown, “Reading has always been an important part of my life.”…
Doctoral candidate wants to help blind people, just like himself
May 8, 2020 | Source: Penn State News
JooYoung Seo, a doctoral candidate at Penn State in the College of Education’s Learning, Design, and Technology program, has secured a highly competitive internship with RStudio that will allow him to help people just like himself — those with severe visual impairments. Boston-based RStudio is a software firm that makes statistical packages used widely in academia. “While I have made some code contributions to RStudio’s open-source packages on GitHub, I thought I would be able to help RStudio make their products more accessible through my programming skills and accessibility expertise…
Read my lips: Local company designs PPE for the hearing-impaired
May 9, 2020 | Source: Juneau Empire
A skeptical raised eyebrow, a shy twinkling smile, a snarling flash of teeth. A huge portion of communication is nonverbal. But what do you do when everyone around you is wearing a mask? Especially if you’re one of the thousands of Americans experiencing hearing loss? “As soon as you put a mask on, you lose about 10-15 decibels from having that mask on your face,” said Kaia Rongstad, one of the owners of Northland Audiology and Hearing Service. “In communication, people rely on hearing, but they also rely on facial cures.”…
Deaf Philly teen’s TikTok dance challenge goes viral, posted by Lil’ Kim
May 11, 2020 | Source: The Philadelphia Tribune
Philly native Justina Miles’ phone started blowing up like crazy with texts and calls from her friends on May 3. Her version of the TikTok #crushonyouchallenge had gone viral on Twitter. And she didn’t even have a Twitter.
“All my friends were like, ‘You’re on my timeline,” Miles told BILLY PENN in a phone interview. “I was like, what’s a timeline?” Miles’ take was unique for a couple of reasons. First, the 17-year-old didn’t have the blue, yellow, green and red outfits signature to the challenge, a play on Lil’ Kim’s colorful 1997 “Crush on You” music video. She used orange, yellow, pink and mint instead…
Penn researcher’s breakthrough enables blind to ‘see’ letters, shapes
May 14, 2020 | Source: Philly Voice
Researchers have found a way to bypass damaged eyes and deliver visual information directly to the brain, enabling people who are blind to recognize shapes and letters. Dr. Daniel Yosher, the incoming chair of neurosurgery at Penn Medicine, led a research team that used implanted electrodes to deliver visual forms from a camera to the visual cortex, the portion of the brain that processes visual information from the eyes. Yosher led the research while at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. The team’s findings are being published in an upcoming edition of the journal Cell…
National News (U.S.)
New Bill Attempts To Ensure People With Disabilities Get Equal Ventilator Access
May 5, 2020 | Source: The Center for Public Integrity
U.S. Senator Ben Sasse, R-Neb., has drafted legislation meant to ensure states do not discriminate against people with disabilities when deciding which patients get ventilators if supplies run short during the coronavirus pandemic. The senator’s announcement of the bill Tuesday cited a Center for Public Integrity investigation showing that as of early April, half of states had emergency policies to ration care in ways that disability advocates had denounced. “A just society is measured by how we treat the most vulnerable, and now is the time for Congress to step up,” Sasse told Public Integrity in an emailed statement…
To get federal benefits for disabilities that prevent them from filling out paperwork, they have to fill out paperwork, so they are suing
May 6, 2020 | Source: The Washington Post
William Ashlock can’t walk across a parking lot without getting winded. He also can’t lift more than 15 pounds without feeling pain, or see well enough up-close, even with glasses, to read a newspaper. In the past, he has worked as a roofer, warehouse supervisor and kitchen staff member at a pizza restaurant. Now, the 60-year-old stocks shelves for two to three hours a day, earning about $75 a week. It is enough for him to buy food and put gas in his 2005 Dodge truck, where he is living. It is not enough for him to pay for his blood pressure medication…
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds’ coronavirus testing program poses accessibility issues for the elderly, immigrants
May 8, 2020 | Source: Des Moines Register
Jimmy Wall was watching television last month when a news report came on about a new coronavirus testing program in Iowa. The 88-year-old was intrigued. Gov. Kim Reynolds’ administration was leading the effort, according to the segment. Iowans just had to fill out an online health assessment to see if they qualified for a test under the “Test Iowa” program. That made Wall pause. The retired police officer and his 84-year-old wife, Barbara, do not have a computer or a cellphone…
Feds Warn States That Online Voting Experiments Are ‘High-Risk’
May 11, 2020 | Source: NPR
The federal government is letting states know it considers online voting to be a “high-risk” way of running elections even if all recommended security protocols are followed. It’s the latest development in the debate over Internet voting as a few states have announced they plan to offer it to voters with disabilities this year, while security experts have voiced grave warnings against doing so. An eight-page report distributed to states last week recommends mail-in ballots as a more secure method of voting…
Committee IDs employment, accessibility among priorities for next budget
May 11, 2020 | Source: City Monitor
The city board overseeing services for the disabled wants funding for better accessibility at City Hall, improved street crossings and more employment opportunities included in the next city budget. Last week the Mayor’s Committee for People With Disabilities moved forward with drafting budget request language for six priorities for the upcoming budget talks, with unaddressed or partially funded requests from last year returning to the list even as most city watchers expect tight spending as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic…
Blind and Deafblind Students Set to Take Advanced Placement Tests File Civil Rights Complaint Against College Board
May 11, 2020 | Source: National Federation of the Blind
Five blind high school students and the National Federation of the Blind, the nation’s leading advocate for equal education of the blind, have filed a complaint against the College Board with the United States Department of Education Office of Civil Rights (OCR) on behalf of themselves and all other blind and deafblind students who are registered to take the May 2020 advanced placement (AP) tests from the College Board. The complaint alleges that the College Board, which is primarily administering the AP tests digitally because of the coronavirus pandemic, is refusing to grant the students approved accommodations to which they are entitled…
Deaf Broadway Works to Bring “Truly Full Visual Entertainment for The Deaf, By The Deaf” with New Levels Of Accessibility
May 11, 2020 | Source: Broadway World
Theatre can be a world of fun and imagination, but only if it’s accessible to be enjoyed. I recently spoke with Garrett Zuercher, Co-founder, Producer, and Director of Artistic Sign Language (DASL), of the new theatre company Deaf Broadway about what they are doing to provide access to theatre in a new way. Deaf Broadway was created with the goal of creating theatre that is a “truly full visual entertainment for the Deaf, by the Deaf” with new levels of accessibility, and inclusion into the world of theatre…
Judge orders Cuomo to make Covid-19 briefings more accessible to deaf New Yorkers
May 11, 2020 | Source: Buffalo News & Times Union
Signing of the times: New cast member in Cuomo show
May 14, 2020 | Source: Politico
A federal judge Monday evening ordered Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to follow the lead of what governors, mayors and county executives across the United States routinely offer every day: the prominent use of a sign language interpreter during his daily Covid press briefings so tens of thousands of deaf New Yorkers can keep up to date on the latest coronavirus updates from Albany. The Cuomo administration had pushed back against a lawsuit by Disability Rights New York, an advocacy group that last month sued the Democratic governor to try to force him to share the broadcast frame with an ASL interpreter during his coronavirus press briefings…
COVID-19 Exposes How Many Unemployment Websites Are Truly Terrible
May 11, 2020 | Source: HuffPost
As soon as Diane completed her unemployment application, she knew something was wrong. Each time the 65-year-old disabled North Carolina resident reached the final page of the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) application, the website wouldn’t let her select “submit.” But when she, like many others, contacted the state’s Division of Employment Security for help, she reached the same voicemail over and over: All of their lines were busy, no one could talk to her and she would have to try calling back later. Click…
Accessibility matters when it comes to voting
May 12, 2020 | Source: Asbury Park Press
The COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally altered when and how we vote in New Jersey. To reconcile public health and safety with the public’s right to vote, on March 9, 2020, Governor Murphy’s Executive Order 105 postponed certain elections to May 12 and made those elections exclusively vote-by-mail. Although vote-by-mail has long been an option for New Jersey residents, for people with certain disabilities — those with vision or dexterity limitations, for example — voting-by-mail presents barriers that prevent them from voting secretly and independently…
The Restaurant Business Can’t Afford to Exclude Anyone
May 13, 2020 | Source: Wine Enthusiast Magazine
Opening a restaurant in New York City is one of the hardest challenges anyone can take on, and, in my opinion, you have to be partly insane to do it. The market is wildly competitive, and the amount of red tape that surrounds even the most miniscule decision can be a headache. Trying to obtain an NYC liquor license, for example, can take six months or more. Everything requires permits and licenses, and each comes with its own fees. The bottom line is, you never have enough money when you’re about to open a restaurant…
Serial ADA Plaintiff Declared Vexatious Litigant in Federal Court in California
May 13, 2020 | Source: Jackson Lewis
On April 19, 2020, Judge James V. Selna of the United States District Court, Central District of California, granted a motion to declare pro se plaintiff Peter Strojnik, Sr. a vexatious litigant, requiring him to obtain the permission of the Court before filing any future accessibility lawsuits with the District Court. Federal courts by statute have the discretion to enjoin vexatious litigants. See All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. §1651(a). Defense attorneys and hotel owners and operators, especially in California, are very familiar with Mr. Strojnik as he has filed hundreds of nearly identical lawsuits and claims against hotels…
How Does the Co-Occurrence of Visual Impairment, Dementia Affect Disability Risk?
May 14, 2020 | Source: AJMC
Older adults with dementia and self-reported visual impairment (VI) may be at high risk for disability, while the co-occurrence of the 2 conditions may potentiate this risk, according to a study published in JAMA Ophthalmology. VI is estimated to affect around 1 in 11 US adults aged 65 and older and is associated with an increased risk of falls, social isolation, loss of independence, disability, and dementia. As the population of older Americans increases, the number of individuals affected by VI and blindness is projected to more than double by 2050, authors write. Currently, VI and dementia co-occur in around 4% of older adults in the United States…
Pandemic safety measures can be difficult for hard-of-hearing. Here’s how to help
May 14, 2020 | Source: CNN
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that all Americans wear face coverings when in public. Hospitals across the country are assuming everyone who walks through the door is a potential Covid-19 case, so they are requiring patients to wear a mask and come alone. These changes pose potential communication problems for about 60 million Americans who are living with hearing loss, ranging from mild trouble to severe loss or deafness in one or both ears…
Jack Fact — According to the Centers for Disease Control, 61 million adults have some form of disability which include mobility, cognition, independent living, hearing, vision, or self-care. This makes up 26% of the population not counting children nor, un-diagnosed cases.
International News
‘You Don’t Look Deaf’ is something I’ve been told countless times – Luke Christian
May 8, 2020 | Source: The GayUK
I created DEAF IDENTITY last September 2019 as I took redundancy from my old job and came to a bit of a standstill where I had an idea of mixing my love for fashion whilst raising deaf awareness. The goal is to highlight the deaf community by breaking down the barriers and stigmas surrounding us and to show that there is no right or wrong way to be deaf! I also wanted to create a brand that felt fresh, modern and relevant and to show that being deaf isn’t all people may think it is…
Making Cutting-Edge Technology Approachable: A Case Study of Facial-Recognition Payment in China
May 10, 2020 | Source: Nielsen Norman Group- China
Recently, facial-recognition payment (FRP, or Scan the face to pay) has gained popularity in China as a new digital-payment method at physical stores. Unlike the United States, China already has widespread mobile payment as a primary method of making purchases. In some places, cash isn’t accepted — only mobile payment. A Chinese shopper can leave home without her purse, as long as she has her phone. This wallet-free reality is largely due to QR-code scanning: people scan the QR code of a shop and pay the amount of the order on their phones…
Audio Described Aotearoa goes online
May 11, 2020 | Source: Scoop- New Zealand
Royal New Zealand Ballet’s announcement in April that it would livestream videos of previous productions, making them available to a global online audience, was seen by Audio Described Aotearoa as an opportunity to include blind patrons in the audience. Aucklanders Nicola Owen and Paul Brown, co-directors of Audio Described Aotearoa, contacted RNZB and asked if it could include an audio described option of the ballet videos so blind and low vision people would also have access to them…
A balancing act between accessibility and authenticity
May 11, 2020 | Source: Planning, BIM & Construction Today- UK
A popular misconception about accessibility issues is the notion that the aim is to give disabled people an advantage over non-disabled people. It’s not. The aim is to make reasonable adjustments to try to ensure that disabled people have the same opportunities as everyone else. As part of that, and perhaps bizarrely, sometimes there’s a case to be made for not making any adjustments at all. With any museum, gallery or stately home it’s clear that efforts should be made to ensure disabled people can make their way around the property safely with the use of ramps and lifts where possible…
Virus exacerbates challenges for people in Japan with disabilities
May 12, 2020 | Source: The Japan Times- Japan
When Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike in late April asked residents to grocery shop three times a week to limit unnecessary outings to curb the spread of coronavirus, Toshiya Kakiuchi, 31, who has dysosteogenesis, or defective bone formation, worried the measure would pose challenges to his daily routine. He has spent most of his life in a wheelchair. The coronavirus outbreak in Japan is creating new hurdles for people with disabilities, adding to the already existing challenges in their everyday lives…
Online service increasing accessibility for visitors
May 13, 2020 | Source: Derry Now- England
A website that allows users to preview a venue and check its suitability for a visit before they travel has been developing its presence in County Derry. See Around Britain has built up a large gallery of photographs from venues across Britain, Ireland and Europe and is covering County Derry with the help of local volunteers. Chloé Taylor, who lives in Dungiven, is one of those who has been helping the service to improve accessibility to venues locally. “It allows people, especially those with an impairment, who might be worried about going out to go and view a place or go to a beach, or a library or museum,”…
Community based workers can help disabled people access services during COVID-19
May 13, 2020 | Source: The Conversation- Africa
People with disabilities face stigma because of their impairments. They are often marginalised, more so if they have psycho-social disabilities. This makes it difficult for them to access basic services such as healthcare. But community based workers have specialised skills and experience working at a household and community level. They are able to identify, screen and support vulnerable individuals and families. These workers are part of an essential service in health systems across Africa. They include community health workers, home based carers, community rehabilitation workers and community development workers…
Why coronavirus may make the world more accessible
May 13, 2020 | Source: BBC News- UK
I once asked a previous employer if it was possible to work from home. I live with a progressive neuromuscular condition called Charcot-Marie-Tooth that causes the muscles in my feet, ankles and lower legs to gradually atrophy. I had recently been fitted with an ankle-foot-orthotic – a lower leg splint – to improve my walking and prevent frequent trips and falls. Wearing it all day long in the office was proving uncomfortable. Working from home seemed like the best solution and I was sure I could be more productive…
Blind man sues over Flight Centre website
May 13, 2020 | Source: Financial Review- Australia
Many an Australian company has sputtered in making the jump across the Pacific Ocean – Eddy Groves’s failed childcare operation ABC Learning Centres springs to mind among examples. But one operation making a decent fist of it is Graham “Skroo” Turner’s Flight Centre. Its Americas division, made up of the iceberg nation of Canada along with Donald Trump’s messy US, posted a $24 million pre-tax profit in the last half-year results. Yet even Flight Centre cannot avoid the US class-action lawsuit industry. Rear Window can reveal it has been targeted in an ongoing lawsuit from a blind man…
Lockdown challenges an opportunity to innovate, say these organisations employing disabled people
May 13, 2020 | Source: Newz Hook- India
The extended lockdown due to Covid-19 has brought unexpected challenges for companies. But these challenges could also throw up the possibility of new opportunities for India’s disabled workforce. We spoke to a few organisations skilling/employing people with disabilities to find out how. For Richa Bansal, Founder-CEO, Saarathee, a customer contact centre employing people with disabilities, the lockdown offered the perfect moment to formalise a concept she had been working on…
‘I was so deaf, at line-outs I read lips’ – Mark Regan reveals deafness during playing days
May 14, 2020 | Source: The Rugby Paper- England
My dad looks back on his 2003 and 2007 World Cup campaigns with a smile as he tells me: “Benny Kay, the line-out leader was watching me as I got ready to throw the ball and was no doubt thinking, ‘Why is he looking at my lips?’ Well, I just couldn’t hear his call!” Dad says most of his teammates and the people he played with at Bristol and Bath had no idea he was severely deaf. He spent most of his time lip-reading! “I took a lot more concentration than most other hookers needed at line-out time… but it couldn’t have been too bad as I had some of the best throwing averages…
‘I have a deaf heart’: An artist caught between two worlds finds a balance
May 14, 2020 | Source: CBC- Canada
Jodee Mundy was about five when she got separated from her mother Gillian at a K-Mart. Mundy went to the front desk and a store employee made an announcement over the microphone in hopes of reuniting the girl with her mother. They waited for a while before the employee made a second announcement. When her mother finally came, she was shouting, “Where have you been? I’ve been worried about you.” When Mundy told Gillian about the announcement, her mother replied, “I’m deaf. You know that.”…
Masks can be a barrier for Peterborough people hard of hearing
May 14, 2020 | Source: Peterborough Examiner- Canada
Masks being worn as a result of COVID-19 are creating barriers for communicating with those who are deaf or hard of hearing. Amanda Motyer, chair of Peterborough’s Accessibility Advisory Committee, is deaf and uses lip-reading. Motyer recently had COVID-19 symptoms and had to be assessed at Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) by health care workers wearing protective masks. While Motyer was glad she tested negative for the illness, understanding health care workers at the PRHC Assessment Centre wasn’t easy, since she uses a technique called speechreading…
COVID-19 Resources and Information
- Covid-19 Considerations For Employers
- Latest Coronavirus News- Inside Higher Ed
- A11Y COVID-19- Accessible Pandemic Data Bulletin
- The ADA at Work: Considerations for COVID-19- EARN
- #COVID19 Tips: Mental Health- U.S. Department of Labor (YouTube)
- 8 disability living aids and products to help you through lockdown
- #COVID19 Tips: Reasonable Accommodations- U.S. Department of Labor (YouTube)
- Mask-Making & PPE Portraits for Healthcare Workers- The Human Element Project
- How COVID helped make Maine more accessible for people with disabilities- Beacon
- How the COVID-19 will effect accessible navigation systems for the blind?- RightHear (YouTube)
- Providing A Safe Workplace For Employees To Return To Work In A Covid-19 World
- Global Disability Inclusion Survey Reports People with Disabilities Are More Negatively Affected by The Economic Impact of COVID-19
Accessibility Blogs and Information
- International Disability Alliance
- 1st Annual Yale ITS GAAD Challenge
- IPOEF Inventor of the Year- Inventors Digest
- Age-Friendly Smart Cities- Smart Cities Library
- Enhancing inclusion and accessibility- Quality Assurance Agency
- Automated Testing’s Strength Comes From Efficiency- Karl Groves
- For Apple, Accessibility Awareness Happens All Year Long- Forbes
- Is Your Website ADA Compliant?- American Booksellers Association
- The 5th Annual ICT Accessibility Testing Symposium Call for Proposals (PDF)
- How to write a top web accessibility statement- Open Access Government
- It’s time to move the needle on disabled representation- Museums Association
- Changing Or Removing A Reasonable Accommodation In The Workplace- JAN
- Voluntary Self‐Identification of Disability Form- Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
- Policy Change From HHS Puts The Health And Financial Security Of Millions At-Risk- Forbes
- Best Practices for Creating an Accessible Online Course- Sara Bea Accessibility Services – University of Notre Dame
- Where’s my stuff? Developing AI with help from people who are blind or low vision to meet their needs- Microsoft Research
- With the Swipe of a Tongue, CSUN Prof Makes Touchscreen Capabilities Accessible to Those Without Use of Their Arms- CSUN Today
Accessibility Announcements and Products
- Charter Launches Spectrum Access App
- AudioEye Reports First Quarter 2020 Results
- RMIT named number one for accessibility and inclusion
- HuskyADAPT develops toy adaptation for all children to play
- Deerfield Park District Seeks Feedback For ADA Compliance
- Central Park Visitor Center, Garden To Become More Accessible
- Prevent Blindness Unveils New Brand Identity, Logo and Website
- YouTube Taps Caption Leader Rev.com as ‘Recommended Vendor’
- Accessible travel startup Handiscover secures €1.6M in grant funding
- Apple promotes accessibility tech with dedicated Apple Care team, app curation
- 2019-20’s Top Performers in accessibility and inclusion of people with disability
- “Virtual Accessibility Experience” created for FLW’s Hollyhock House in Los Angeles
- UsableNet Announces Partnership with American Foundation for the Blind to Enhance Web Accessibility
- Apple Celebrates Accessibility Awareness Month with New App Collections, Education Discount, and More
- Israeli startup accessiBe scores $12 million to make web content accessible to the visual, hearing and motor impaired
- Don’t Delay Your Application For Disability Benefits, A Key Message During Disability Insurance Awareness Month
- The American Council of the Blind’s Audio Description Project Announces Call for Nominations for the Twelfth Annual ADP Awards-2020 (PDF)
Accessibility Forums, Tips, and Gaming
- Accessibility Framework
- Creating Accessible Emails
- Website Accessibility Enhancement
- Accessibility 101 for Content Creators
- Bolt-on Accessibility – 5 gears in reverse
- Creating an Accessible Range Slider with CSS
- Why Consistency is Important to Accessible Design
- The Complete Guide to Accessibility for WordPress Websites
- How to Change iPad Mouse Settings Like Disabling Animations
Accessibility Statements
- Ask CPAG
- CalABLE
- Funnelback
- The Tokenist
- Ford Foundation
- Home Affairs Bureau
- Cambridge Open Engage
- Franklin Pierce University
- Western Governors University
- University of California, Santa Barbara Office of the Ombuds
Microassist Digital Accessibility Services
Have you received an accessibility demand letter because of your website or application? Please contact us for any questions you have about our accessibility services and how we might support your organization.
Services include:
- Accessible Website and Application Development— We rely heavily on accessibility best practices and using HTML5 and ARIA (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) standards to build WCAG-compliant and human-tested accessible environments. Our teams are proficient in open source technologies such as WordPress, Drupal and Moodle, as well as custom frameworks in .NET, PHP, AngularJS, and other frameworks. Our Learning and Development team can also help you create accessible custom training.
- Accessible Document Services— Whether you’re dealing with a few or a warehouse of Microsoft Office documents, PDFs, or other files, there are several ways Microassist can enable your team to offer documents and materials that meet stringent accessibility standards.
- Accessibility Remediation— Our accessibility remediation services help you fix existing materials so that they conform to WCAG, Section 504 and 508, Department of Education OCR, and ADA Title II/III requirements. We remediate websites, applications, documents, and elearning, recommending re-creation when that is more efficient and economical. Especially for website and applications, to find out what is in need of remediation, we’ll start with an Accessibility Audit.
- Accessibility Training— With several courses available for developers, testers, and content creators, your team can become equipped to consistently and expertly produce accessible digital products and online environments.
- VPAT®Evaluation Services— Primarily used by government purchasers and government vendors during the procurement and sale of ICT products and services under Section 508, a Voluntary Product Accessibility Template® (VPAT) attests to the accessibility of a given product or service. Contact us to make sure the VPAT you write or review is accurate and meaningful.
Learn More About Digital Accessibility
Our Digital Accessibility Digest blog covers our Accessibility in the News archives as well as expert commentaries on digital accessibility issues.
Our most popular commentaries include:
- The WCAG 2.1 Update: A Brief Look at What’s Changed
- Introducing VPAT®0, the More Stringent Accessibility Reporting Tool Required for Government IT Procurement
- Accessibility in the News, Legal Edition: Updates on ADA Title III News and More
- What Lawyers Need to Know: A Primer on Digital Accessibility Terms and Today’s Legal Landscape
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