Client Background
The Law & Judiciary Department of Maryland manages one of the state’s most visited public websites, serving as a central gateway for citizens to access legal information, search cases, and utilize court services.
With over 4 million annual visitors, the website plays a vital role in promoting transparency and ensuring equal access to justice.
Client Need
Objectives
The engagement focused on analyzing, remediating, and future-proofing the Department’s web presence, ensuring compliance with federal and state accessibility regulations.
- Conducting a comprehensive accessibility audit of over 400 web pages and digital PDFs.
- Identifying and remediating non-conformances to WCAG 2.1 AA, ADA, and Section 508 standards.
- Enhancing keyboard navigation, screen reader compatibility, and visual accessibility.
- Implementing a long-term accessibility management system with governance and monitoring.
- Training the Judiciary’s internal staff to sustain accessibility compliance post-remediation.
Challenges
The Department’s website faced several long-standing accessibility challenges:
- Legacy Code Structures: Older HTML templates lacked semantic tagging, ARIA attributes, and proper heading hierarchies.
- PDF Accessibility Gaps: Thousands of downloadable documents had missing tags and incorrect reading orders.
- Navigation Barriers: Screen readers struggled with dynamic menus and unlabeled forms.
- Inconsistent Accessibility Awareness: Content creators and developers needed training to maintain compliance going forward.
Our Solution
Infojini developed a holistic remediation strategy that blended automation, manual testing, and human-centered design to bring the Department’s website into full accessibility compliance.
- Accessibility Audit
- Conducted automated scans using Siteimprove and manual testing across browsers and devices.
- Verified screen reader experience using ChromeVox, JAWS, and NVDA.
- Audited over 400 pages and 200+ PDFs, identifying issues such as missing alt text, low contrast ratios, improper headings, and unlabeled buttons.
- Code Remediation & Optimization
- Updated HTML/CSS and JavaScript to correct structural issues and improve ARIA labeling.
- Enhanced keyboard navigation, focus states, and skip-to-content functionality.
- Rebuilt interactive forms with accessibility-first coding practices.
- PDF Remediation
- Used Adobe Acrobat Pro and CommonLook tools to tag PDFs for accessibility.
- Added descriptive titles, logical reading orders, and alt text for embedded graphics.
- Verification & Continuous Testing
- Performed multi-stage testing — automated validation via Siteimprove, followed by manual verification through assistive technologies.
- Developed a compliance dashboard to monitor future updates.
- Staff Enablement
- Conducted accessibility workshops and provided written guidelines for developers and content editors.
- Created a repeatable testing checklist to ensure new content met WCAG 2.1 AA standards.
See Our Solutions in Action
Book a demoRealized Benefits
Infojini introduced a continuous accessibility governance model — not just fixing issues but creating a framework to sustain accessibility through monitoring and training.
Human-Centered Testing
By engaging real users of assistive technology, Infojini validated accessibility fixes in real-world conditions, ensuring the Judiciary’s website was not only compliant but truly inclusive.
Achieved WCAG 2.0 AA compliance with Increased accessibility score
Enhanced usability for keyboard and screen reader users.
Web pages and 200+ PDFs remediated successfully.
Department staff trained on best practices to sustain ongoing compliance.
Tools & Technologies
Project Listing
Request a Quote
Schedule a personalized demo and discover how we can transform your digital presence.
What to Expect
- Consultation with our technical experts
- Custom solution recommendations
- Live product demonstration tailored to your needs
- No commitment required
- Q&A session about our services