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Thanks, Bethany!

I'm afraid that will be a continuous struggle. One idea I try to promote in my articles is that inaccessible pages are broken pages to that to use assistive technology.

That may take some convincing. Even for some, they may still prioritize the aesthetic to the accessible (or functional).

As for WCAG, I know it can be overwhelming and difficult to wade through. I wrote an article titles "How a Developer Should Read WCAG" that I hope will be helpful: https://uxdesign.cc/how-a-developer-should-read-wcag-b1aec621b9d2.

Thank you for wanting to do the right thing! :)

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Daniel Berryhill
Daniel Berryhill

Written by Daniel Berryhill

Web Developer, Accessibility Tester, QA, DHS Trusted Tester v5, Autism Dad - www.linkedin.com/in/daniel-b-7ab009226 - https://twitter.com/danielb_508

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