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The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 requires agencies to ensure people with disabilities have the same access to information and services as others in the community. It is a requirement for all Government government sites to meet WCAG AA guidelines.

This process will help guide you through the process for handling pages that do not meet government accessibility requirements.

Process

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for accessibility failures

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Alert the content editor via

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the Jira ticket that the page does not meet our standards

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  1. update the page to meet the standards, or

  2. proceed with the publishing. Before publishing, the content owner will need to provide the following:

    1. an email to acknowledge that they are in breach and would still like to proceed with publishing

    2. contact details (to be published) for any accessibility requests

    3. accessibility disclaimer added to page

    4. page details and exception reason added to the table below.

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update the Jira ticket, set the due date and place it on hold.

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review the ticket at the due date to ensure the page meets standards. Send a reminder email if it hasn’t been resolved.

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Info

This email should be sent from the digital@dpc.vic.gov.au mailbox

Tip

For ease of use, a copy of this email is saved in the Drafts folder in the digital inbox.

by sending the below template.

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Jira response template

Hi ______,

Unfortunately, the page you have submitted for review does not meet accessibility requirements and is unable to be published at this time.

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[Describe where the standards are not being met]

The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 requires agencies to ensure people with disabilities have the same access to information and services as others in the community. It is a requirement for all

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government sites to meet WCAG AA guidelines.

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To meet the

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requirements and have your page published, you will need to [add guidance, e.g. “provide the contents of the PDF as a web page.”]

If you are unable to make your page accessible at this time and would still like to proceed with publishing, we require you to respond to this email with the following acknowledgement. A disclaimer notice will

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be placed on the page with the contact information.

I understand that the following page does not meet WCAG AA standards and is in breach of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992. I accept the responsibility for any action that may be initiated by failing to comply. I also agree to provide contact details for anybody seeking an accessible version of our information. These contact details will be published publicly on the web page, along with an accessibility disclaimer.

I commit to providing an accessible version by: [date]

Page title & link:
Reason for exception:

Contact email:
Contact phone number:

Authorised by:
Date:

If you have any questions, please

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let me know. If you or your team needs any guidance on meeting accessibility requirements, you can book in for a consultation with an SDP content team member: https://outlook.office365.com/owa/calendar/SingleDigitalPresencevicgovau@vicgov.onmicrosoft.com/bookings/

Many thanks,

[your name]

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Set the

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CMS

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Once the email has been sent, set the page back to Draft with the following revision note . This (this will let the rest of the team know that this person has already been contacted):

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This page does not meet accessibility requirements and cannot be published.

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Please see my email for further detail.

The editor has the option to either:

  • update the page to meet the standards

  • proceed with publishing, with an accessibility failure disclaimer added to the page.

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Publishing with disclaimer

  1. Before publishing, the content owner will need to respond to your message about the breach with:

    1. acknowledgement that they are in breach and would still like to proceed with publishing

    2. contact details to include in the published accessibility failure disclaimer

  2. Add the accessibility disclaimer to the page with “call-out” formatting and publish.

Note

The Victorian Government is committed to providing a website that is accessible to the widest possible audience, regardless of technology or ability. This page may not meet our minimum WCAG AA accessibility standards.

If you are unable to read any of the content of this page, you can contact the content owners for an accessible version:

Contact email:
Contact number:

Jira ticket

  1. Change the ticket status to On Hold.

  2. Change the Component to accessibility Issue. Note: you need to open the ticket to change this fieldAccessibility issue.

  3. Change the Date required to the date the editor has committed to fix the issue.

View all current accessibility issues in Jira for examples

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  1. The day before the Date required, Jira will email the Assignee to let them know the date has arrived.

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  1. Check to see if the issue has been resolved:

    1. if resolved, you can close the ticket

    2. if not resolved, send them a reminder email.

Escalating non-compliance or other issues

Talk to your manager

Your first point of call if an exemption is required should be your digital manager. They will make a decision on behalf of your department that should be recorded in the CMS and Jira ticket.

If an exemption is needed it should be brought to the publishing round table so we can start to understand the most common accessibility issues and look at ways to help improve our product and government systems.

This exemption should also If an exemption is granted, it should be recorded in the revisions field in the CMS so that other approvers are aware of it.

If the editor has commited committed to fixing the breach after publishing (due to a tight deadline, etc.), a the date the breach will be fixed be should be agreed and recorded. recorded in the CMS notes and the Jira ticket.

Historical accessibility breaches

If a page with old accessibility breaches comes through to you , use your discretion (or refer to your manager if unsure) based on the age of the content, audience size, impact of the breach and effort required to fix.

Make a note of your decision in the Revision tabCMS revision field.

Accessibility exemptions

In some instances, a separate discussion can be had with a department or agency if the content is niche or if a HTML summary covering key messages could suffice for large/complex documents.

If an exception has been discussed and approved, update the Decision log - exceptions tab on the accessibility process and register spreadsheet.

Examples of appropriate exemptions

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  • plain Plain English/year 8 readability where content is already approved. Particularly , particularly for documents, media releases etc

  • very Very large reports/documents written for a public sector audience

  • templates Templates where a user is more likely to use a word document than a html version e.g. procurement, teacher or health practitioner resources.

Examples of

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breaches that should be fixed

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  • 4-page fact sheets not in html

  • translated Translated content not in html

  • closed Closed captions and transcripts missing for video/audio

  • alternative/descriptive Missing alt text for images that aren’t descriptive, including diagrams and infographics

  • FAQ pages where content is duplicated and there are more than 10 FAQs

  • any Any documents created for a digital and/or inclusive audience e.g. digital strategies, inclusion guides for family violence, LGBTI equality, etc.

Publishing round table

Outstanding accessibility issues and recorded exemptions are discussed in the monthly publishing round table. This is an opportunity to discuss any challenges you are having with editors.

If the editor replied to your email/hasn’t committed to resolving the issue

If you’ve attempted to contact the editor twice (via email) and haven’t received a reply, escalate the email to Emma. Emma will contact the editor to discuss the breach further

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For non-Accessible pages, the following notice is to be placed on the page in a callout:

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If you are unable to read any of the content of this page, you can contact the content owners for an accessible version:

Contact email:
Contact number:

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The following pages do not meet WCAG AA standards. The content owners acknowledge and accept that they are in breach of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 and have requested to have their page published anyway.

Accessibility exceptions

In some instances, there are exceptions to creating an HTML document. Generally, this includes:

  • fact sheets

  • grant guidelines

  • video transcripts

  • forms - visit the Design forms digital guide for designing best-practise online forms

  • speeches

  • newsletters

In some instances, a separate discussion can be had with a department or agency if the content is niche or HTML summaries can be added for large documents to cover key messages.

If an exception has been discussed and approved, update the Decision log - exceptions tab on the accessibility process and register spreadsheet.

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Accessibility exceptions register (excel spreadsheet)

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Victorian Government digital accessibility requirements

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HTML first obligations

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