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Web Owners warned:

Web Accessibility issues

WEBSITE operators who fail to make their sites user-friendly for disabled customers face unlimited compensation payments and legal costs of up to £50,000.

The Disability Rights Commission (DRC) served notice on private and public service operators that it intends to get tough with the 81 per cent of British-based sites that currently fall foul of accessibility standards for disabled web users.

A survey of 1,000 sites jointly conducted by the DRC found that the average internet home page had not been designed to work with software and hardware systems used by disabled computer users and contained 108 obstacles to ready access.

Many web pages failed to allow those with poor sight to use software which reads out text on the screen or transcribes it into Braille. Poor colour contrast between text and background was found to confuse people with dyslexia and the partially sighted.

The survey also found that site navigation systems that relied too much on the mouse impeded those with arthritis or restricted movement who depend on their keyboards.

The Disability Discrimination Act requires all businesses to provide equal physical access to their products and services or face the threat of prosecution. The legislation does not set a maximum limit to the amount of compensation that companies found guilty of discrimination can be made to pay.

The Royal National Institute of the Blind won out-of-court settlements last year after launching legal action on behalf of two people claiming discrimination against organisations with inaccessible websites. The DRC survey, which found little awareness among site operators of their responsibilities under the Act, presages more cases. Only 9 per cent of website developers had tested their sites on disabled users. The web operators running inaccessible sites are turning their back on the £50 billion a year spent by Britain 's 8.7 million disabled people, the DRC said.

Bert Massie, the commission's chairman, said that the survey's findings were unacceptable: "Eight in ten sites are next to impossible for some disabled people to use - that means no last-minute holidays, cheaper car insurance or lower rates of interest on credit cards....Next

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