Accessibility statement
This accessibility statement applies to the Government Wildebeest Urban and Suburban Relocation Programme website.
How accessible this website is
This website is designed to be accessible to all users, including wildebeest. We have made the following adjustments:
- All text is displayed in a font size visible from a distance of 3 metres (for wildebeest viewing from the garden)
- Buttons are large enough to be activated by a hoof (although we do not recommend this)
- Colour contrast meets government standards, which are “higher than you would expect from a service about wildebeest”
- All images have alt text, including the one of Hilary Tomkinson looking disappointed
What we do not do
- We do not provide a wildebeest-language version of the website (the Department has not yet determined what language wildebeest speak, and early research has been “inconclusive but surprisingly emotional”)
- We do not provide a version of the website formatted for consumption (several wildebeest have attempted to eat the application form and the Department considers this a misuse of government property)
- The application form does not work with Internet Explorer 6. If you are still using Internet Explorer 6, the Department recommends updating your browser, and also examining your life choices.
Reporting accessibility problems
If you find an accessibility issue with this website, please contact the Digital Inclusion Officer:
- Email: [email protected]
- Phone: 0800 111 AACC
- Post: Digital Inclusion Team, Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Wildebeest, PO Box 4472, Nuneaton CV11 4WB
If you are a wildebeest experiencing difficulty with this website, please contact the Digital Inclusion Officer. If you are not a wildebeest but are experiencing difficulty, please also contact us. We cannot help, but we would like to hear about it.
Technical information
This website is designed to meet WCAG 2.1 AA standards, except for the following known issues:
- The application form contains a question about tea that may cause distress to non-tea-drinkers (we consider this justified)
- The Phase 3 guidance contains a word that is 47 characters long and does not wrap correctly on very small screens (the Department has discussed this at length and concluded that the word is “worth it”)
- The confirmation page generates a reference number that is difficult to read aloud (this is deliberate, to prevent phone-based fraud)