Accessibility Statement.
RegLeg Solutions, Inc. is committed to making regleg.com usable by as many people as possible, regardless of ability or technology. This statement describes our conformance target, the measures we take to support accessibility, known limitations, and how to reach us if you encounter a barrier.
1. Our Commitment.
RegLeg believes that regulatory intelligence should be accessible to the people who read, write, and rely on regulation. We design and build regleg.com to meet recognized accessibility standards, treat accessibility as a feature rather than an afterthought, and listen to feedback from people who use assistive technology. We hold ourselves to the same expectations we hold our partners: measurable standards, published status, and a clear path to raise issues and have them resolved.
2. Scope.
This statement applies to the public RegLeg™ marketing website at regleg.com and to web properties that explicitly link to this statement (together, the “Site”). The statement does not cover the authenticated RegLeg platform delivered to Partner tenants, which is assessed separately and accompanied by its own Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT) or Accessibility Conformance Report (ACR) delivered on request. This statement also does not cover third party websites linked from the Site, which are governed by their own accessibility practices.
3. Conformance Status.
The Site is designed to conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at Level AA. The WCAG standard, published by the World Wide Web Consortium, defines requirements for people with disabilities, including people with visual, auditory, cognitive, motor, speech, and neurological conditions. Conformance Level AA is recognized as the benchmark for public sector and enterprise web content in the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and most other major jurisdictions.
Conformance summary
- Standard
- WCAG 2.1
- Target level
- AA
- Current status
- Partially conformant, improving continuously. Some content areas do not yet fully meet the target; known exceptions are listed in Section 7.
- Self assessed by
- RegLeg Solutions, Inc.
- Statement prepared
- June 11, 2026
- Last reviewed
- June 11, 2026
4. Measures We Take.
RegLeg integrates accessibility across how regleg.com is designed, built, and maintained.
- Governance. Accessibility is owned by the engineering and design leads for the Site, with a named executive sponsor and periodic review by the RegLeg Chief Legal Officer.
- Standards. We adopt WCAG 2.1 AA as our baseline and track WCAG 2.2 and emerging WCAG 3.0 developments to anticipate future requirements.
- Design system. Our design system encodes accessibility primitives, including typography scale, color contrast, focus treatment, and semantic component patterns.
- Build practices. Our authoring and engineering workflows include linting for semantic HTML, axe-core style automated checks in continuous integration, and manual review before release.
- Training. Designers and engineers on the Site team complete accessibility training and participate in periodic refreshers.
- Vendor selection. Third party components are evaluated for accessibility before adoption, and we prefer vendors that publish conformance reports.
- Continuous testing. We run periodic manual testing with keyboard navigation and screen readers, and we engage external assessment on a scheduled cadence.
5. Accessibility Features.
Features intentionally built into regleg.com to support accessibility include:
- Semantic landmark regions (header, navigation, main, footer) on every page.
- A skip to content link that becomes visible on keyboard focus and jumps directly to the main content region.
- Visible keyboard focus on all interactive elements, with a consistent focus outline that meets contrast requirements.
- Logical reading and tab order that reflects the visual flow of each page.
- Page titles, heading structure, and section labels that support navigation by screen reader users.
- Text alternatives for meaningful images and decorative images marked appropriately so they are not announced.
- Color and contrast that meet or exceed WCAG 2.1 AA contrast requirements for body text, links, and interface components.
- Content that adapts to reflow at zoom levels up to 400 percent without loss of information or functionality.
- Form labels, instructions, and error messages associated with the fields they describe.
- Table markup that identifies row and column headers, with captions for complex tables.
- Descriptive link text rather than “click here” or URL fragments.
- Support for prefers-reduced-motion so animations are suppressed when the operating system signals a preference.
6. Compatibility.
We design regleg.com to work with recent versions of major browsers and assistive technologies, including:
- Recent versions of Chrome, Safari, Edge, and Firefox on Windows and macOS.
- Recent versions of Safari on iOS and Chrome on Android.
- Screen readers including NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver, and TalkBack in recent versions.
- Operating system accessibility settings including high contrast, text resizing, and reduced motion.
Older browsers and older assistive technology versions may not receive full testing coverage. If you need to use an older environment, please let us know so we can consider it in our next review cycle.
7. Known Limitations.
Despite our efforts to meet WCAG 2.1 AA across regleg.com, some content may not yet fully conform. Known limitations are listed below with the reason and our remediation approach.
- Historical insights content. Earlier articles in the Insights section may contain images without text alternatives or heading structures that predate our current standards. We are remediating these on a scheduled backlog.
- Third party embedded content. Some embedded videos, interactive data visualizations, or third party forms may not fully meet our conformance target. Where this is the case, we provide alternative access routes described in Section 11.
- Scanned or legacy documents. Certain downloadable documents (including older case studies and PDFs) were produced before our accessible authoring pipeline was in place and may have limited text recognition or tagging. Accessible alternatives are available on request.
This list is maintained as a working inventory and is updated as issues are identified and resolved.
8. Third Party Content.
Parts of regleg.com incorporate content or components provided by third parties, including embedded videos, maps, analyst reports, social media players, and form processing services. RegLeg selects vendors with accessibility in mind, but we do not control the accessibility of third party content in the same way we control our own. If you encounter a barrier in third party content, please let us know and we will either work with the vendor on remediation, offer an alternative way to access the information, or replace the component.
9. Assessment Methodology.
RegLeg assesses the accessibility of regleg.com through a combination of methods:
- Self assessment. The RegLeg Site team conducts ongoing internal review using automated tooling and manual keyboard and screen reader testing.
- External evaluation. We engage independent accessibility professionals on a scheduled cadence for in depth review and, where appropriate, to help produce conformance documentation.
- User input. We invite and incorporate feedback from people who use the Site with assistive technology, including through the channels described in Section 10.
10. Feedback.
We welcome feedback on the accessibility of regleg.com. If you encounter a barrier, something that is confusing, or content that is not usable with your assistive technology, please contact us. In your message, please include:
- The URL or page where you experienced the issue.
- A description of what you were trying to do and what happened.
- The assistive technology and browser you were using, if you know.
- Your preferred way for us to respond, including any accessible format you need.
Send feedback to accessibility@regleg.com. We aim to acknowledge feedback within five business days and to propose a resolution or workaround within ten business days, recognizing that complex issues may require a longer remediation timeline. We will keep you informed of progress until the matter is resolved or closed.
11. Alternative Formats.
If content on regleg.com is not accessible to you, we will work with you to provide the information in a usable format at no cost. Alternative formats may include plain text, tagged PDF, large print, or a direct voice or email conversation with a member of our team. Send requests to accessibility@regleg.com and let us know the preferred format and any deadlines. We aim to acknowledge within five business days and to deliver the requested format within ten business days.
12. Escalation.
If you are not satisfied with the initial response to accessibility feedback, you may escalate to the Chief Legal Officer, RegLeg Solutions, Inc., at legal@regleg.com. Please include a short description of the issue, what has happened to date, and what outcome you are looking for. The Chief Legal Officer will review the escalation and respond within ten business days.
13. The Authenticated RegLeg Platform.
The authenticated RegLeg™ platform is delivered to Partner tenants and their end customers and is not covered by this statement. Accessibility conformance for the platform is reported separately through a VPAT or ACR produced in alignment with WCAG 2.1 AA and, where applicable, with Section 508 of the U.S. Rehabilitation Act and EN 301 549. Partners and customers may request the current conformance report through their RegLeg account team or at accessibility@regleg.com.
14. Formal Complaints and Enforcement.
This statement and the feedback channels described above are the RegLeg process for resolving accessibility issues. Nothing in this statement limits any right you may have under applicable law, including the Americans with Disabilities Act, Section 504 of the U.S. Rehabilitation Act, the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, the European Accessibility Act, the UK Equality Act, or any other applicable accessibility law. Where a local law provides a formal complaint or enforcement mechanism, you retain the right to use it.
15. Changes to this Statement.
RegLeg will update this statement as the Site evolves, as we remediate known limitations, as new assessment results are published, and as standards progress. Material changes are reflected by updating the “Last updated” date at the top of this page. We keep a record of substantive changes and will provide that history on request.
16. Contact.
For feedback, alternative format requests, and accessibility questions, contact accessibility@regleg.com. Formal legal notices must be addressed to the Chief Legal Officer, RegLeg Solutions, Inc., at the notice address published on our Contact page, with a copy to legal@regleg.com.