Accessibility Statement

The Nar-Anon Family Groups in Central California are committed to compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

We believe the Nar-Anon Central California web site (www.NarAnonCentralCA.org) satisfies all the “Level A” success criteria for web content accessibility guidelines 2.0.

Web Site Accessibility

  • Accessibility using UserWay
    UserWay makes available an accessibility the UserWay Accessibility Widget that is powered by a dedicated accessibility server. The software allows the site to improve its compliance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.1).

  • Enabling the Accessibility Menu
    UserWay's accessibility menu can be enabled by clicking the accessibility menu icon that appears on the corner of the page. You may also enable the UserWay accessibility menu by tabbing into the page, selecting “Open the accessibility menu,” and pressing the Enter key on the computer keyboard. After triggering the accessibility menu, please wait a moment for the accessibility menu to load in its entirety.

  • Simple and Consistent
    Our web site uses simple information architecture with uniform navigation and reliable headings throughout. Content layout and graphical design are consistent on every page.

  • "Skip to:" Links
    The Skip to navigation appears at the top of each page. It allows the user to jump to the content area, accessibility page, or footer, and skip the navigation and other header elements, which repeat on every page.

  • Main Site Navigation and Sub-Navigation
    The main navigation, located just below the title banner, and sub-navigation, usually located at the left column of the page content area, uses lists. Lists make it easier for screen readers to literally read down the list without having to sort through unnecessary code. Lists also allow the users to use the tab key to move from link to link.

  • Images with Alternative Text
    Photographs and other relevant images on the site are accompanied by alternative text (the alt attribute of the Image <img /> tag). Alt tags provide a written description of the image, which is accessible to screen readers, and it is visible when the mouse is placed over the image. This is also useful for people who have images turned off on their browser, in which case a description will display where the image used to be.

  • Style Sheets
    Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are used for content layout and many graphical elements (color, font styles, custom titles and subtitles, etc.) Using CSS for styling keeps our HTML clean, streamlined, easier to maintain, and it downloads faster. Style sheets can be replaced by the user's own styles.

  • Access Keys
    Access keys are keyboard shortcuts that help you navigate the site.

    • Use Alt+1 to access the Skip to Content link.

    • Use Alt+2 to access the Skip to Footer link.

    • Use Alt+3 to access the Skip to Accessibility Statement link (this page).

    • Use Alt+4 to access the Web Site Policies link.

  • No Sound? No Images?
    It may not be pretty, but all content is accessible without sound, color, scripts or graphics.

Meeting Place Accessibility

Whenever possible, meeting sites that are wheelchair accessible are chosen.

Links on this Site to Other Web Sites

The Nar-Anon Central California Region assumes no responsibility for the content or Accessibility of the external web sites or external documents linked to on this web site.

Web Browser Plug-ins

This is a list of web browser plug-ins that you will need to access all of the elements and assets in this site.

Some or all of the documents linked from this site are Adobe Portable Document Files or PDFs. To properly view and print these PDFs you should have the latest version of Adobe Reader (formerly Acrobat Reader) installed on your computer. Adobe Reader is available as a free download from the Adobe web site. Please click here to download Adobe Reader.