Robin Camille Davis writes: “So you’ve heard about the upcoming new accessibility requirements for US state and local government websites, and you’ve implemented an automated accessibility checker and fixed all the issues you found. You’re done, right? Wrong! Automated accessibility checkers are really useful for spotting common issues, such as color contrast problems and broken web forms. But there are some things that automated checkers can’t determine. Here are five simple but significant things to check when you’re creating or editing web content.”
