Accessible By Design
Michael Colibraro
Let’s change the way we think about accessibility. Westpac’s Access and Inclusion Director, Majella Knobel notes “People assume accessibility is only about the 18% of people with disability. But everyone, to some extent, will experience what it’s like to live with disability. It could be a change in eyesight, an injured wrist or a recovery from surgery. Disability and accessibility requirements will impact all of us at some point in our lifetime.”
Web accessibility is a measure of how effectively all people, including those with disability, are able to access and use web pages and applications. Web accessibility means that people can perceive, understand, navigate, and interact with the web. It is a legal requirement that all Australian websites be accessible in order to provide equal access and equal opportunity to people with disability.
Why we care
because it’s a social responsibility
Accessible websites ensure that people living with disability can access our products and services independently. Such independence is especially important in financial and banking settings.
As set out in our Human Rights Position Statement and Action Plan, our focus is to provide equal access, inclusion and dignity for our customers, employees and community with disability.
Recognising disability
there are many different types
At Westpac, we take a broad view of disability. This means that we consider visible and invisible disabilities, as well as temporary and situational impairment that people may experience during their lifetime.
We also subscribe to the social approach to disability. Moving away from a focus on medical definitions, the social model instead explains disability as the environment creating the physical, attitudinal, communication and social barriers that people living with impairments face.
Plan for accessibility
The GEL Design System is rigorously tested to achieve our Group Access and Inclusion Plan initiative by meeting WCAG 2.1 AA standards; from brand design, to interaction design and coded components.
Projects integrating with or replicating the GEL frameworks React code can be assured that the components are compliant, however this does not guarantee an accessible design or code solution. Using components in customised layouts and different contexts can result in new accessibility requirements and will change the level of compliance. At Westpac, projects engage our specialised internal Access and Inclusion team at the design and build phases to evaluate the end-to-end customer experience.If your organisation doesn’t have a specialised Access and Inclusion team, engage certified accessibility experts to review your designs and build.
A focus on accessibility should be included in all phases of a project. Here are some considerations at each stage that can help to minimise accessibility risk:
Planning
User Experience
Content
Design
Front end development
Listen to the experts
there’s a wealth of information available
There are plenty of free resources out there to help you get started and to steer you in the right direction. You can start with the formal guidelines to make sure your understanding of accessibility compliance is current. There are also tools to assess your work.