Accessibility

GATFire is committed to easy access and making our website as accessible as possible to everyone, including those with visual, hearing, cognitive and motor impairments. We are constantly working towards improving the accessibility of our website to ensure we provide equal access to all of our users. As part of our commitment to accessibility, we ensure that our website is compatible with recent versions of popular screen readers, operating system screen magnifiers, speech recognition software and operating system speech packages.

We always make sure that our website follows accessibility best practices by following the principles of universal design. This ensures the site is flexible and adaptable to different users’ needs or preferences and is accessible through a variety of different technologies, including mobile devices or assistive technologies. During the development phase we endeavour to follow WebAIM’s Principles of Accessible Design, and also try to help improve the accessibility of our website for users with disabilities by: retaining the ability to adjust the font size, maintaining colour/contrast ratios for text, providing keyboard accessible navigation, providing skip to content links at the top of the page and exposing information to the accessibility API through the use of ARIA attributes.

WEB CONTENT ACCESSIBILITY GUIDELINES (WCAG) 2.0
Wherever possible, Age Partner's site will adhere to level AA of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.0). These guidelines outline four main principles that state that sites should be:

Perceivable - Information and user interface components must be presentable to users in ways they can perceive
Operable - User interface components and navigation must be operable
Understandable - Information and the operation of user interface must be understandable
Robust - Content must be robust enough that it can be interpreted reliably by a wide variety of user agents, including assistive technologies

HOW TO ZOOM IN YOUR SCREEN
Some people like to zoom into the screen or web browser in order to see things better. Here are a few ways of doing it depending on your setup:

On Windows, press the Windows key and plus sign (+) at the same time to zoom in. You can also use the "Magnifier" application under "Accessories".

On Mac, go to "System Preferences", open "Universal Access" and select the "Seeing" tab. Check the box under "Zoom" to "On". On your Apple device, tap "Settings", then "General", then "Accessibility". Tap the "Zoom" button and toggle it "On".

Another trick is to use "Ctrl" ("Cmd" on Mac) plus the plus (+) or minus (-) keys when you're in a web browser. How to change the colours or fonts on the page.

Some people like to change colours or fonts to see words more clearly. Most major web browsers have options to do this:

In Internet Explorer, go to "Tools", then "Internet Options", on to "General". From here, select "Colours, Fonts, or Accessibility".

In Mozilla Firefox, choose "Options", then "Content", then finally "Fonts & Colours". In Safari, select "Preferences", "Appearance" tab, and then hit the "Select…" button next to the font fields. In Chrome, go to "Preferences", activate the "Show advanced settings" link, go to the "Web content" heading and change the "Font size", "Customize fonts" in other ways, or set default "Page zoom". We recommend a mixture of settings like enlarging font size and zooming into the browser for a better experience.

HOW TO FIND AND USE A SCREEN READER
Screen readers are text-to-speech software that allow people to read and interact with content in different ways. Many people who cannot perceive what is on the screen will use them to allow audible access to web content. Capital One designs and codes for accessibility. We strive to ensure that our content is accessible to screen readers. There are free options available including NVDA for Windows and VoiceOver for Mac. What we recommend is JAWS for Windows. You can use this with your favourite web browser. Screen readers accept input in a variety of ways, but one of the most common forms is through your keyboard. By pressing the down arrow in JAWS, for example, you are able navigate through items on the page. JAWS will also accept Braille input.

HOW TO USE ACCESSIBILITY TOOLS ON MOBILE DEVICES
There are a lot of great features right on your smart phone. iOS and Android alike provide many tools to help you access what you love. Let’s have a look at a few of those tools. VoiceOver for iOS and TalkBack for Android are the screen readers that come built-in. To turn on VoiceOver, go to "Settings", then "General", to "Accessibility", and then turn "VoiceOver" on. You can set the “Accessibility Shortcut” to “VoiceOver” from the "Accessibility" page in order to triple-click the "Home" button to toggle VoiceOver on and off. TalkBack has a similar feature. "Zoom", "Magnifier", "Invert Colours", "Colour Filters", and "Reduce White Poifnt" are other features and tools on iOS that you can use. These are also available through the “Accessibility Shortcut”.