Title: Compliance, Accessibility
1Compliance, Accessibility the LawThe Legal
View
MediaCorp/Click-2-Learn Seminar Centre for Life,
Newcastle 16 December 2003
- Martin Sloan
- Trainee Solicitor
- martin.sloan_at_brodies.co.uk
2Outline of Presentation
- What is Web Accessibility?
- The legal argument under the DDA
- Maguire v SOCOG
- Education
- Employment
- Latest developments in the UK
- Summary and final thoughts
- Useful links
3What is Web Accessibility?
- Original concept of the Internet
- platform (ie hardware) independent
- universal (ie for all)
- method of sharing information irrespective of
disability - Erosion of these principles
- Proprietary technologies can be inaccessible
- eg Java, Flash, Shockwave, PDFs
4Web Accessibility Initiative
- World Wide Web Consortium (W3) Web Accessibility
Initiative (WAI) - Set of guidelines for the design of Web pages
(Content) and browsers (User Agents) - Designed to promote good design practice
- But low awareness
- Legal argument
5The Act and its Obligations
- Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA)
- a universal, all embracing right of
non-discrimination against disabled
peopleapplicable to all providers of goods,
facilities and services to the general public - Minister for Social Security and Disabled People,
- Hansard, H.C. Standing Committee E col. 290
6The Act and its Obligations
- Part III introduced on 1 October 1999
- Code of Practice (the Code)
- fleshes out the Act
- provides guidance
- aims to avoid legal action
- not an authorative statement of the law
- latest version uses an airlines e-booking Web
site as an example of a service
7Who is a Service Provider?
- Not defined in either the Act or the Code
- Non-exhaustive examples listed
- access to and use of information services
- drafted in pre-Internet era
- Act explicitly includes free services
- Part III does not generally apply to educational
institutions (Part IV) but does apply to local
authorities/public sector
8The American Approach
- Carparts Distribution Center Inc..
- It would seem irrational to conclude that
persons who enter an office to purchase services
are protected by the ADA, but persons who
purchase the same services over the telephoneare
not. Congress could not have intended such an
absurd result - Carparts Distribution v Automotive Wholesalers
Association of New England Inc - No. 93-1954 37 F.3d 12 1994 US App LEXIS 28319
- Analogous to the Web and e-commerce
- But - Southwest Airlines case
9Discrimination Defined
- s.20 A provider of services discriminates against
a disabled person if - for a reason which relates to the disabled
persons disability, he treats him less
favourably than he treats or would treat others
to whom that reason does not apply and - he cannot show that the treatment in question is
justified
10Duties under the Act
- s.19(1) Service provider has a duty
- not to refuse to provide or deliberately not
provide any service which he provides or is
prepared to provide to the public - to comply with any s.21 duty to make reasonable
adjustments - not to provide a lower standard or manner of
service
11Refusal to Provide a Service
- Where a service provider has deliberately chosen
not to make his site accessible - Requires knowledge
- But in reality very few sites cannot be made
accessible - Where accessibility is deliberately ignored by
the service provider
12Lower Standard of Service
- Analogy in the Code
- a bookshop which orders books for customers, but
refuses to order a large print book for a
visually impaired person - Could apply in several situations
- supermarket home shopping service
- online current account offering advantageous
interest rates
13Reasonable Adjustments
- s.21
- (1) where a provider of services has a practice,
policy or procedure which makes it impossible or
unreasonably difficult for disabled persons to
make use of a serviceit is his duty to take such
steps as it is reasonableto have to take in
order to change that practice, policy or
procedure so that it no longer has that effect.
14What is a reasonable adjustment?
- Reasonableness is an objective term
- Is it reasonable to provide an accessible Web
site where it had previously been inaccessible? - Main opposition is cost and work involved
- Question has been considered by a court in
Australia
15Maguire v SOCOG
- Visually impaired computer user
- Action under the Commonwealth DDA
- Site was inaccessible
- no ALT attributes on images used for navigating
- index of Sports was inaccessible from the
schedule page - tables used in layout of results were inaccessible
16Maguire v SOCOG the findings
- Commission found that
- SOCOG was intending to offer a service to the
public by creating the Website - the site was inaccessible
- SOCOGs claims of unjustifiable hardship were
rejected
17Unjustifiable hardship
- SOCOG argued fixing the site would cost Au2m
- Expert witnesses disputed this
- W3C Guidelines
- Evolutionary site
- Continuing duty to comply
18Relevance of Maguire v SOCOG
- Reference to WAI Guidelines
- first time the Guidelines have been referred to
in a court of law - gives an indication of the standard for
accessibility expected by a court - Strict interpretation of undue hardship
- Likely to followed by UK courts when presented
with the issue
19Education
- Originally excluded from the DDA
- SEN and Disability Act 2001 introduced a new Part
IV of the DDA - Reasonable adjustments to student services -
includes - lectures
- course materials ? applies to Web/intranets
- examinations
- Part III relevant to interpreting Part IV
20Remedies
- Legislation gives civil remedies rather than
criminal proceedings - Specific implement
- Damages
- injury to feelings
- derivative economic loss
21Employment
- Employment dealt with under Part II of the DDA
- employers duty to make adjustments
- DDA does not just apply to customer-faced Web
sites - may also apply to internal
intranets/extranets used by employees in the
course of employment - Need to consider the accessibility of internal IT
provision including hardware/software
22Current position in the UK
- Local authority Web sites
- DRC/City University London Formal Investigation
into Web access - first ever Formal Investigation by the DRC under
its powers - option to take enforcement action, but aim is to
identify recurrent barriers to Web access - RNIB are preparing a case
- Likely to focus on specific issues
23Summary
- Strong case for arguing that the DDA applies to
the Web - Test case likely in the near future
- Duty is evolving and continuous
- Successful defence unlikely
24Further Information
- Disability Rights Commission (DRC)
- http//www.drc-gb.org
- RNIB See It Right Campaign
- http//www.rnib.org.uk/digital/siraccess/
- W3C Web Accessibility Initiative
- http//www.w3.org/wai/
- UK Resources for Web Accessibility and the Law
- http//www.web-access.org.uk
25Compliance, Accessibility the LawThe Legal
View
Centre for Life, Newcastle 16 December 2003
- Martin Sloan
- Trainee Solicitor
- martin.sloan_at_brodies.co.uk