Veylor builds its public websites to be used by everyone, on a keyboard, with a screen reader, at any zoom. This statement sets the standard the sites are held to and how to report a barrier.
Commitment
Veylor Group holds its public websites to a single accessibility standard and treats access as part of the work, not an afterthought. The same discipline that runs the rest of the platform applies here.
Standard
The target is WCAG 2.2, Level AA, with AAA contrast where it does not fight the dark interface. As an Ontario group, Veylor works toward the digital requirements of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA).
How the sites are built
- Keyboard. Every interactive element is reachable and operable by keyboard, with a visible focus state.
- Contrast. Text is set in bone on a warm near-black, never pure white on pure black, so contrast stays comfortable. Meaning is never carried by color alone.
- Motion. Animation is gated behind the operating system reduced-motion setting. With it on, the sites settle to a static state.
- Structure. Pages use semantic headings and landmarks, labeled controls, and alt text on meaningful imagery.
- Controls. An accessibility control sits in the corner of every page. It reads the page aloud, raises contrast, enlarges text, and reduces motion. The settings are remembered.
Known limitations
The interactive field map draws on third-party map tiles, and a small number of surfaces lead with motion. Each provides a reduced-motion fallback and a text equivalent. Veylor is working to close the remaining gaps and records them as it goes.
Assistive technology
The sites are checked against keyboard-only navigation and current screen readers, including VoiceOver and NVDA, at standard browser zoom levels up to 200 percent.
Report a barrier
If any part of a Veylor website is hard to use, use the form below, or email accessibility@veylorgroup.com. State the page and what failed. Veylor will respond, and will provide the information in an alternate format on request.
Tell the accessibility office directly.
Report something hard to use, or request a page in a format that works for you. Veylor replies by email. Only your email and a description are required.