This is practical accessibility guidance for first-pass triage. It is not legal advice, a formal audit, WCAG certification, or a conformance guarantee.

What this means

The page does not appear to link to an accessibility statement.

Why it matters

A statement can explain current status, known limitations, and how users can report barriers.

How to fix it

  • Create a practical accessibility statement.
  • Link it from a predictable place such as the footer.
  • Keep it honest and updated.

What automated checks can detect

A checker can search for obvious accessibility statement links.

What still needs manual review

This is not a WCAG requirement by itself; review your organization context before treating it as a formal obligation.

Automation cannot prove a statement is accurate, current, or legally sufficient.

Canadian context

Some Canadian organizations may have accessibility planning or feedback-process expectations depending on context. Get qualified advice for formal obligations.

Related tools and guides