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YOUR MONTHLY WEB ACCESSIBILITY UPDATE

June 2021

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Good morning <<First Name>>,

We hope you are having a fantastic start to your Friday, getting things done and watching that sweet sweet weekend get closer and closer!

This month's e-newsletter has a special section from our General Manager about Global Accessibility Awareness Day, which we had lots of involvement in, as well as an interesting piece on sustainability in the disabled community.

We are busy getting ready for our annual function in July here at Web Key, this year it's hosted by the beautiful Guildford Hotel in WA. It's always a big night to celebrate achievements, both as employees but also the business as a whole. We'd love to hear how your workplace celebrates individual and group achievements, please let us know. It's so important to keep each other motivated and encouraged in this accessibility journey.

Have a great month!

- Emma Murray
Employee photo, Amanda with shoulder-length brunette hair in a dress smiling at the camera
This month's author is Amanda Mace.

Amanda Mace is the General Manager at Web Key IT. Her role includes overseeing both the website analyst team and the usability analyst team, project management, day to day operations, public speaking, training and providing accessibility consultation.

Amanda has co-authored a number of research papers and a textbook chapter on document accessibility. She continues to present at conferences and events on both the practical implications and technical solutions for accessible digital products. Amanda has had the honour of serving as a judge in the Accessibility category for the Australian Web Awards as well as judging in the Australian Access Awards. She is also certified by the Australian Computer Society (ACS) as a Certified Professional. This means her expertise has been independently assessed and validated by Australia’s professional association for the Information and Communication Technology sector.

As one of only two Australian based W3C evangelists, Office Manager for the W3C Australian Western Region and a member of W3C working groups, Amanda continues to contribute standards and guidelines to ensure a more accessible future for all.

You can find Amanda on LinkedIn , Twitter, or follow her updates on our Facebook Page.

It’s All About Awareness

14th of June, by Amanda Mace

Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD) is one of my favourite days in the calendar, in fact it’s one of my favourite weeks. Web Key IT was invited by several of our clients to present and be part of various GAAD events, increasing awareness and sharing stories. Each year we see more and more organisations using this day to bring awareness into the workplace. My challenge to you, is to ensure this is a year-round endeavour. Accessibility is not just important to talk about on GAAD. Let’s make this the year that we talk about inclusivity with every project. I often say that the first step in an organisations journey with us is when people are asking “Is it accessible?” It’s not about knowing whether it is, how to test it or whether it complies with WCAG, to begin with, it’s creating an environment where there is an awareness that digital accessibility is something to be considered.

At Web Key IT, we know we need to continually get the message out about what digital accessibility is, why it’s important and how to unlock the web, so this is your friendly reminder that we always happy to come in to your business or organisation and present an absolutely free Learn at Lunchtime session. This is a great way to engage an expert in the field to help you explain to colleagues and staff what accessibility is. If you are interested in one of our free Learn at Lunchtimes please email us at info@webkeyit.com 

In W3C news, I am incredibly excited to attending the virtual workshop being put on by the W3C on smart cities. It’s teeing up to be a fantastic presentation and with Australian friendly times! Be sure to have a look and see if it’s for you https://www.w3.org/2021/06/smartcities-workshop/index.html. As proud host of Australia W3C Chapter Office - Western Region we can tell you that a virtual event is in the works so watch this space!

A quick training update: We are currently seeking expressions of interest for our ‘Accessibility for InDesign’ course. it provides guidance in creating InDesign files with accessibility in mind from the very start. A source file that is accessible will make for a better, more accessible final PDF. If you are interested in signing up for this course or would like more information, please get in touch with us.

See you next month!

 

Icon of a cup of tea Why the sustainability conversation is failing to consider the needs of the disabled community


9th of June, by Emma Clifton

This story was originally published on Capsule and is republished with permission.

Care, dignity and the value of “Everybody deserves nice things” are the backbone of Kiwi company Brolly Sheets, whose new product Texi are designed for adults with incontinence. When it comes to the varied needs of the disabled community, we may be getting better at representation but we need to be better at talking about ‘the messy bits’, say disability advocate Grace Stratton and creator of Brolly Sheets, Diane Hurford.

The conversation around climate change and sustainability has picked up pace rapidly in the past few years, with both brands and society at large making big leaps to replace single-use items with reusable ones.

But there is a large swathe of the population who rely on disposable items in order to bring a little bit of ease or a little bit of dignity to their daily lives and all too often, their needs aren’t even considered.

Take straws, for instance. “A lot of people with different disabilities, when they go out to restaurants, they rely on having a straw to be able to independently drink a drink at a restaurant. But often restaurants don’t have them anymore,” says Grace Stratton, Director of Inclusive Fashion Company and Marketing Agency All Is For All.

When this point was raised, she says, people “had no time for this conversation, that for a percentage of the population, disposable items are necessary. And until you’ve dealt with an adult who needs those products, or until you know the disability community, you really don’t have any right to comment or to judge them”.

When Diane Hurford, creator of the Kiwi company Brolly Sheets, first mentioned the idea of producing disposable nappies for adults living with a disability, the push-back was immediate, she says; her advisors and even her friends couldn’t reconcile the idea that throwaway products fit with the brand’s ethos.

“I said to them, ‘Did you use disposables for your babies?… If you wouldn’t use cloth for a baby, why would you expect someone to use cloth for an adult.’ People are fine with using disposables for babies, without stigma, but then there’s kick back when it comes to using them for adults. I don’t understand it at all.”

Diane created Brolly Sheets in 2006 when she designed a reusable bed pad with wings, to help save parents time when their children wet their bed in the middle of the night. The range expanded to create products for adult incontinence and special needs as well, with the brand’s belief of ‘care and dignity’ prioritised in every item.

This new addition to the range, Texi, (sold through sister brand Independently You), are disposable nappies that are meant for youth and adults. Brolly Sheets were the first of their kind when they designed a waterproof top sheet for ease of use but also because they were comfortable and didn’t crinkle, meaning that they were not only practical but pleasant to use.

This very simple value – that everyone deserves nice things – is paramount to everything that comes out of the Brolly Sheets stable.

Diane references a mum she’s close to, who has an 11-year-old son with disabilities that mean he’s in a gravity chair and he also has up to five seizures a night. This is hard – it’s hard for the boy, and it’s hard for his mum. Disposable items can make life that little bit quicker and easier for those who need convenience the most.

 
The team at Texi know disposables aren’t great for the planet, but they are a necessity of life for some.

“It’s about having conversations with the people out there who have these issues, and giving them a voice to say, ‘Hey, we care about the planet as much as everyone else but there are some things we need to make life a little easier,’” says Diane.

Diane and her team at Texi know disposables aren’t great for the planet, but they are a necessity of life for some. Texi are sourced with over 30 per cent sustainable components, and they plant a tree in New South Wales for every four packs sold. This is early days in the product life of Texi, but the team has plenty of ideas on how they can improve the footprint.

“It’s really about broadening the sustainability conversation to say that just because you have these needs, it doesn’t mean your ability to advocate for the planet is any less,” Grace adds. “We have to be responsible for the lives that we lead and this is just the reality.”

Grace has cerebral palsy and is a wheelchair user, so advocating for the disability community is not just her professional life, it’s part of her personal life as well. She and the All is For All team work with a range of inclusive fashion, beauty and lifestyle brands and starting working with Brolly Sheets when they launched their Independently You products.

The imagery that advertises the Texi product was done with tremendous care and attention. (Grace jokes that it’s the first advertisement for adult nappies that also includes a Gucci necklace). The models, model Mamie Rose and Paralympian Rebecca Dubber both live with disabilities and the photographer, Becki Moss, is a visual storyteller and invisible chronic illness advocate.

The photos are glossy and glamorous, showing stylish and independent women meeting up for a coffee. All of this is a deliberate leap away from the kinds of photos usually used to demonstrate incontinence-related products, which normally feature an aesthetic that Grace describes as “sad-looking people with disabilities or products with cartoons all over them!”

“When we were thinking about what we wanted to do with the photos, what we really wanted to do was figure out a way to break through that shame and stigma. Because there’s so much,” Grace says.

“People hate talking about the realities of disability and the messy bits – and there are so many messy bits when it comes to disability, whether you’re talking about toileting or dealing with your period. There are so many bits that are so much harder but until we’re able to break through that shame and stigma, we won’t be able to have an accessible society where people are able to have equal opportunities.”

“We wanted these images to show that you can be a successful person, going to work or going out to dinner with your friends, and wear Texi – these two things can go together,” she continues. “But the fact is, we live in a society that just assumes that everyone who is disabled or needs to use this kind of product has a lower expectation for the products that they buy – and for their lives.”

Diane recalls a conversation she had with the mother of the 11-year-old in the gravity chair. Her son needed to use a bib, due to excessive saliva, but the only option available to him at the time, was something meant for a small child. It prompted Diane to add youth and adult bibs, plus bandanas to the Brolly Sheets range, but there was a particular line the mother said that Diane still finds moving to this day.

“She said, ‘When he goes out, I want him to look nice, so that people know he’s loved.’ And she’s right, you don’t want to put a baby bib on an 11-year-old, with ducks on it or something. But it’s really stuck with me: ‘I want people to know that he’s loved.’”

Icon of a calender Upcoming Events 

 

Perth Web Accessibility & Inclusive Design Meetups

22nd June, 2021

Dome Cafe, Northbridge, WA

7:30-9:00am

Read more about the Accessibility Meetup group


WA Local Government Convention

20th-21st September, 2021

Crown Perth, WA

More information here

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