Accessibility Goal
DataSplinter is built to make public government records easier to read, navigate, and compare. The site aims to support common accessibility needs, including keyboard navigation, readable structure, visible focus states, mobile reflow, and plain-language content.
Standards Used
The site is reviewed against practical Web Content Accessibility Guidelines principles for perceivable, operable, understandable, and robust content. This page describes the steps taken. It is not a legal certification or a guarantee that every user experience is barrier-free.
Steps Taken
Current public pages include page titles, one main heading, main-content landmarks, skip links, named navigation regions, visible keyboard focus styles, reduced-motion support, accessible link text, responsive layouts, and chart labels or fallback text where charts appear.
Public-Records Content
DataSplinter uses plain-English summaries, source links, and neutral labels to help readers compare summaries with original public records. Project pages should avoid claims stronger than the records support and should preserve privacy rules, including masked board labels where required.
Known Limits
Some source documents linked from DataSplinter are external public records, PDFs, filing portals, or agency websites controlled by others. DataSplinter cannot control the accessibility, availability, or later changes of those external sources.
Ongoing Review
Accessibility should be reviewed when new project pages, charts, tables, maps, documents, or interactive tools are added. Updates may include better labels, clearer headings, improved contrast, simpler language, or alternate ways to access visual data.
Report a Barrier
If a page is hard to use, the accessibility contact address can be used to identify the page, the problem, the device or browser if known, and what would make the information easier to access.
View contact options
View correction guidance