New Australian Government Web Publishing Guide
A new Web Publishing Guide has been released for Australian Government (ie: Commonwealth) agencies. This covers legal and policy requirements, as well as accessibility and some technical standards. This consolidates the content of a number of previously separate guides, without adding any new mandatory requirements.
The new guide practices what it preaches with a new clean, efficient XHTML and CSS standards based web site. There is minimal, but effective use of graphics on the web pages, such as the use of arrow icons to indicate external links and tick box icons for mandatory items.
However, some of the guidance is unclear. The accessibility page gives a good overview of issues with access to the web by the disabled. But while the page is marked as as "Mandatory" it does not state exactly which one of the three levels of compliance in the cited W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines is required for government agencies. I would guess it is Level AA (Priority 2). However, in the absence of an explicit statement, some agencies may only meet the far less stringent Level A (Priority 1) of the standard or waste effort unnecessarily trying for Level AAA (Priority 3).
Topics covered:
The new guide practices what it preaches with a new clean, efficient XHTML and CSS standards based web site. There is minimal, but effective use of graphics on the web pages, such as the use of arrow icons to indicate external links and tick box icons for mandatory items.
However, some of the guidance is unclear. The accessibility page gives a good overview of issues with access to the web by the disabled. But while the page is marked as as "Mandatory" it does not state exactly which one of the three levels of compliance in the cited W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines is required for government agencies. I would guess it is Level AA (Priority 2). However, in the absence of an explicit statement, some agencies may only meet the far less stringent Level A (Priority 1) of the standard or waste effort unnecessarily trying for Level AAA (Priority 3).
Topics covered:
Adapted from: Web Publishing Guide, AGIMO, 2007
- e-Government Policy
- Planning
- Types of Sites
- Users
- Marketing
- Visual Design and Branding
- Legal Issues
- Managing Content
- Types of Content
- Accessibility and Equity
- Technical Development
- Archiving and Preservation
- Maintaining and Evaluating
Labels: Australian Government, ICT Policy, web design, web standards
1 Comments:
Tom Worthington said...
I commented that the new Australian Government web publishing guide failed to state exactly level of accessibility is required. Tim Dale, Assistant Director of Online Services at the Australian Government Information Management Office responded, changing the web page to say:
"Agencies must achieve level "A" conformance (all Priority 1 checkpoints are satisfied), and it is recommended that agencies achieve level "AA" conformance (all Priority 1 and Priority 2 checkpoints are satisfied)."
Most agencies are now managing to achieve this level (unlike their private sector equivalents who are failing to comply with the guidelines). It would be reasonable for AGIMO to lift the bar for agencies to Level AA (Priority 2).
That would take a change in policy and ideally agreement by state governments. It would take some effort, but might be worthwhile as it could help provide online services and consultation for remote indigenous communities.
June 29, 2007 4:53 PM
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link or bookmark with Digg, del.icio.us, Newsvine or News Feed
<< Home