Accessibility Statement for crandonparktennis.com
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WCAG 2.2 Level AA
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EN 301 549 v3.2.1 (European standard)
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Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act (United States)
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Title II and III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
- Weekly automated scans identify all critical, machine-detectable issues across pages using WCAG logic
- A defined set of 22 manual checks is conducted internally by our team based on guided instructions from the platform
- Ongoing issue tracking automatically detects regressions and recognizes resolved items between scans
| WCAG Criterion | Issue Description | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Best Practice | Ensure visible labels match the element accessible name for voice control users | Automated |
| Best Practice | Detect paragraphs styled as headings instead of using proper heading elements | Automated |
| WCAG Criterion | Issue Description | Pages Affected |
|---|---|---|
| Best Practice | Evaluate text and background color combinations meet the 4.5:1 AA contrast ratio | 5 |
| Best Practice | Confirm that all hyperlink elements have meaningful, discernible text content | 8 |
| Best Practice | Check that the page includes at least one level-one heading to establish content hierarchy | 2 |
| Best Practice | Verify all button elements have accessible text content for assistive technologies | 1 |
| Best Practice | Verify that iframe and frame elements have an accessible name via the title attribute | 1 |
| Best Practice | Check that heading levels follow a logical hierarchical sequence without skipping levels | 1 |
| Best Practice | Confirm that scrollable content areas can be reached and navigated using keyboard controls | 1 |
| Best Practice | Validate that assigned ARIA roles are appropriate and permitted for the given HTML element type | 3 |
| Best Practice | Identify focusable elements inside aria-hidden containers that confuse screen reader users | 3 |
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Automated Testing:
Conducted weekly using the AccessibilityChecker.org testing platform, covering both mobile and desktop interfaces to identify machine-detectable issues. -
Manual Testing:
A set of 17 essential manual tests is performed to assess aspects that require human judgment, using popular browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari) on both desktop and mobile devices. -
Interactive Element Testing (User-Performed):
Interactive components (such as forms, menus, dialogs, and dynamic content) are evaluated through user testing using the AccessibilityChecker browser extension. -
Assistive Technology Compatibility:
Tested with major screen readers (e.g., NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver) and across popular browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari) on both desktop and mobile devices.
AccessibilityChecker.org provides automated testing results and supports manual and interactive testing; however, completion of all manual and interactive tests remains the sole responsibility of the customer. The customer is also fully responsible for implementing any recommended corrections or remediation actions.
This tool is not all inclusive, and does not constitute legal advice, a legal guarantee, or certification of compliance with any accessibility laws, regulations, or standards. Accessibility requirements may change over time, and compliance depends on ongoing maintenance and review. The customer is solely responsible for ensuring the contemplated domain is reviewed periodically and remains compliant with applicable accessibility requirements.