Legal
Accessibility
Last updated: June 2, 2026
We want this site to be usable by as many people as possible, including people who rely on assistive technology. This statement explains the standard we work toward and how to tell us when something falls short.
The Standard We Aim For
We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at Level AA. These guidelines explain how to make web content more accessible to people with a wide range of abilities, and they are the standard most widely referenced for this kind of work.
Accessibility is something we treat as ongoing rather than finished. As we add and change pages, we check new work against the same standard.
What We Have Done
The site is built with accessibility in mind, including:
- Semantic, structured HTML so screen readers can navigate by headings and landmarks.
- Text alternatives for meaningful images.
- Visible focus states and keyboard access for interactive elements, including the contact form and the cookie controls.
- Color and type chosen with contrast and legibility in mind.
- Layouts that adapt to mobile screens and to larger text sizes.
Known Limitations
Some parts of the site may not yet fully meet every Level AA criterion, and third-party components we rely on are outside our direct control. Where we find a gap, we work to close it. If you run into a barrier we have not listed, we would like to hear about it.
Tell Us About a Problem
If you have trouble using any part of this site, or you use assistive technology and something does not work as it should, let us know through the contact page. Please describe the page, what you were trying to do, and the assistive technology or browser you were using, so we can reproduce and fix the issue. We will do our best to respond and to provide the information you need in a format that works for you.