What we heard report: Standard on Information and Communication Technology Accessibility (SICTA)
Between October 31 and November 30, 2022, the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat - Office of the Chief Information Officer (TBS-OCIO) Digital Policy & Performance Division undertook a targeted engagement on the Standard on Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Accessibility. This page details the key themes that emerged and next steps to be taken in relation to the standard.
March 2023
Purpose
Between October 31 and November 30, 2022, the TBS-OCIO Digital Policy & Performance Division undertook a targeted engagement on the Standard on Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Accessibility.
The following provides a summary of the key themes and points of feedback from the engagement, as well as steps taken by TBS to address them.
Participant feedback has been instrumental in the further development of the standard, and this page represents an opportunity to share some of it with our industry partners and the GC community.
Context
The Standard on ICT Accessibility will come into effect under the Policy on Service and Digital in Summer 2023, replacing the Standard on Web Accessibility
- The main objective of this engagement was to gather feedback, insights, and comments on phase one of the Standard on ICT Accessibility, while identifying potential gaps
- The Standard on ICT Accessibility contains requirements for making all ICT that is developed, procured, or owned by the GC accessible.
- Consistent with the Policy and Directive on Service and Digital and leading practices from other jurisdictions (EN 301 549 v3.2.1).
- Operationalizes the principle of "nothing without us"
- Builds on lessons learned
Purpose of the Standard
The purpose of the Standard on ICT Accessibility is to identify, remove and prevent ICT accessibility barriers across the GC and support the third pillar in the accessibility strategy for the Public Service of Canada to make ICT usable by all.
Consultation Engagement Summary
- Targeted engagement on Phase One of the draft Standard on ICT Accessibility were held between October 31 – November 30, 2022
- Key stakeholder communities including GC partners, accessibility subject-matter experts, Persons with Disabilities Networks, relevant policy centers, EDI Networks, and select - external industry partners were consulted
- An inclusive engagement approach was applied to engage traditional and non-traditional partners through a combination of targeted communication, bilateral discussions cross-sectoral meetings, and leveraging existing foras. This resulted in higher level of engagement from stakeholders with a wide range of expertise, knowledge, and experience.
- To allow for flexibility, stakeholders were invited to submit feedback through MS form, email and online (via GitHub):
- Approximately 85 responses and 510 unique comments were received
Themes from Commentary Include:
- Simplify the Effective date and deadline for compliance
- Official Language requirements
- Supporting guidance is essential for departments to understand and implement the standard requirements
- Accessibility as an ongoing commitment for the GC
Theme 1: Simplify the effective date and deadline for compliance
Feedback:
- Respondents indicated that the effective date should be included in the standard so that they don’t have go back and forth to look for the timelines and the associated requirements.
- Respondents also noted the current format “effective date + x month” can be confusing to them. Conformance timelines should be stated clearly.
How we adapted:
- The subsection on compliance timelines was removed and compliance dates were incorporated directly into the requirements.
Theme 2: Official Language requirements
Feedback:
- Respondents commented that the EN 301 549 standard is only published in English, which is not accessible to them, and it goes against the spirit of the Official Languages Act. If we want to keep referring to the EN 301 549 in the Standard on ICT Accessibility, we must ensure that there is a French version of the EN 301 549 available as well.
How we adapted:
- TBS-OCIO will be publishing the EN 301 549 requirements in both official languages.
Theme 3: Supporting guidance is essential for departments to understand and implement the standard requirements
Feedback:
- Respondents commented that the EN 301 549 standard is too technical to comprehend and was not written in plain language, including clearer definitions.
- Respondents inquired about the details regarding accessibility training, tools and conformance testing.
How we adapted:
- Implementation guidance will also be published in plain language to better support departments understand the requirements in the EN 301 549 and successfully implement phase one.
- Definitions has been removed in the final version of the standard and will instead be featured in the standard guidance that will follow.
Theme 4: Accessibility as an ongoing commitment for the GC
Feedback:
- Respondents noted our requirements could go further and we could be doing more (especially as it relates to non-web documents).
How we adapted:
- Previously we had a single requirement that required departments to provide existing non-web documents when requested. We've since added two additional requirements to be more proactive in accessibility of the GC's non-web document, which read:
- All new external-facing non-web documents that are produced from a word processing software, spreadsheets, presentations or Portable Document Format (PDF) files in a native digital format after summer 2024, must be accessible in conformance with the EN 301 549 V3.2.1;
- All base templates of non-web documents that are produced from a word processing software, spreadsheets, presentations or Portable Document Format (PDF) files in a native digital format and owned by the GC organisation must conform with the EN 301 549 V3.2.1
Next Steps
- Obtain required approvals for the standard through OCIO policy stewardship process (Summer 2023)
- Publish Phase 1 of the Standard on ICT Accessibility (Summer 2023)
- Publish official standard guidance (Summer 2023)
Page details
- Date modified: