Standard we follow
We target the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA as our baseline. WCAG 2.1 AA is the standard most U.S. regulators and courts treat as the accepted bar for public websites.
What we've done
- Semantic HTML structure with a single
<main>landmark and a logical heading hierarchy. - A “Skip to content” link as the first focusable element on every page.
- Visible keyboard focus indicators on every link, button, and form control.
- Color combinations chosen to meet contrast requirements against our cream and dark-green palette.
- Form fields with visible labels and clear error messages.
- Alternative text on all meaningful images; decorative images marked as such for screen readers.
aria-expandedandaria-controlson the mobile menu toggle so assistive tech announces its state.- Respect for the
prefers-reduced-motionsetting — animations are reduced for visitors who request it. - Responsive layouts that work down to 320px wide and support browser zoom up to 200%.
Known limitations
We are aware of areas we are still improving:
- Embedded video on the home page does not currently include captions or an audio description track. The video has no spoken audio, but a text transcript of the visual action is something we plan to add.
- Some older project photos may have brief, generic alternative text that we plan to expand.
If you run into a barrier we haven't listed, please tell us — see below.
Tell us about a problem
If you have trouble using any part of this site, we want to hear about it so we can fix it. Please include the page you were on, what you were trying to do, and what went wrong.
Phone: (352) 663-2274
Contact form
We aim to respond within five business days and to resolve valid accessibility issues as quickly as we reasonably can.
Continuous improvement
We re-check the site against the WCAG 2.1 AA criteria when we ship significant changes, and we welcome feedback at any time.