This site has been designed to follow current World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) web standards and guidelines for compliance and accessibility, where possible. The steps taken to do this are detailed on this page.
This site uses properly formatted and structured code that adheres to current Web Standards. All pages are written in XHTML and use CSS for visual layout. Each page uses well-structured semantic markup, for example using header tags like <h1>, <h2>, and <p> paragraph tags to logically structure the content. If your browsing device doesn't support stylesheets, or if you have them turned off, the content should still be accessible, readable and understandable. Therefore, the site should be easy to use with screen readers such as JAWS and text based browsers such as LYNX.
The archaic practice of using Tables and use of spacer GIF’s for page layout is avoided, as are deprecated tags such as FONT, overuse of line break <BR> tags, etc.
The fonts / text used on this website are specified in relative units, rather than in absolute (pixel) sizes. Therefore, the text on this website can be re-sized and made larger for easier reading.
Many browsers, such as Internet Explorer (version 7) and Mozilla Firefox, support text sizeing using the CTRL (control) and + (plus) and - (minus) keys simultaneously. The size of text can also be changed by holding down the CTRL (control) key and scrolling the middle mouse wheel button, if available. To re-size text on your specific browser, please consult your browser help menu.
HTML and CSS compliance are checked against the W3C’s on-line automated validators, for interoperability across browsers and platforms. Pages have been checked for accessibility against the W3C’s Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) at Level Double-A conformance.
Care has been taken to create interoperable Web pages, that validate in accordance with the W3C automated Markup Validation Service. You may use the icons on the left to check and verify this.
This page complies with all of the automatic checkpoints of the W3C’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 1.0 at Level Double-A Conformance (Priority 1 and Priority 2 checkpoints), as tested and verified by the Watchfire WebXACT service.
Accessibility compliance depends on automated tests as well as a number of other considerations and checkpoints that rely on a subjective human interpretation (for example the use of colours and order of presentation).
Any suggestions, comments and feedback to improve accessibility are always appreciated. If you experience any difficulties accessing the information on my website, please contact us and we will pass your comments on to our site designer.