055 – Philippines’ Accessible Web Design Guidelines, Philippines
Responsible body:
The National Council on Disability Affairs and DOST-Information and
Communications Technology Office (ICTO); implemented by government
agencies
Country of implementation:
Philippines
Beneficiaries targeted:
Persons with disabilities
S
UMMARY
Philippines’ Accessible Web Design Guidelines Joint Circular No. 1 of 2010 makes it mandatory for all government
agencies to implement an accessible website design that makes website information accessible to persons with
disabilities. It is a strategy to make government offices aware of website accessibility and to provide web designers with
clear cut guidelines that can easily be followed, without the need to make drastic changes to the relevant websites
which would entail a lot of costs.
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In 2010, the National Council on Disability Affairs (NCDA, formerly National Council for the Welfare of Disabled Persons)
issued a joint Circular with DOST-Information and Communications Technology Office (ICTO, formerly National
Computer Center) - the Accessible Web Design Guidelines Joint Circular No. 1, series of 2010 - enjoining all government
agencies in the Philippines to implement an accessible website design to make website information accessible to
persons with disabilities in accordance with the technical guidelines set in the policy.
Persons with disabilities have been involved in every stage from the interregional workshops to the drafting of the
recommendations by the web designers up to the board level for the approval of the policy. During the workshops
persons with disabilities served as resource persons and they demonstrated how they are using technology to access
websites, the blind introduced their screen reader software and demonstrated how it reads web information. The deaf
also expressed their issues especially with motion pictures and on the necessity of video captions. During the drafting of
the policy, persons with disabilities were represented at the NCDA board level and were very vocal on accessibility
issues and concerns prompting both government agencies to issue a joint circular on web design accessibility.
The policy is the result of collaboration between two government agencies based on an interregional workshops done
across the country participated by web masters coming from different government agencies.
The recommendations were based on the perceived difficulties being encountered in each government institution
considering that most government executives have limited understanding about accessibility for persons with
disabilities. Moreover, this policy is also a reflection of the commitment of government webmasters to make their
websites accessible to persons with disabilities even without the instruction from their upper management.