Accessibility Statement
R2 Law is committed to ensuring digital accessibility for people with disabilities.
Last Updated: 2026-06-09
Our Commitment
R2 Law is committed to making its website accessible to the widest possible audience, regardless of technology or ability. We actively work to increase the accessibility and usability of our website and align with many of the available standards and guidelines to ensure we provide an equal experience for all users.
Conformance Status
We target WCAG 2.1 Level AA (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) as our primary technical standard, which is the accepted measure of accessible web content under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title III. This standard is also consistent with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Our conformance status is: Substantially Conformant. This means that the content largely conforms to WCAG 2.1 Level AA with only minor exceptions.
Automated Test Results
We use axe-core 4.x — the industry-standard open-source accessibility testing engine — to continuously audit every page of this website against WCAG 2.1 Level AA criteria. Our most recent audit, conducted on 2026-06-09, covered 12 pages.
- Violations: 0
- Tests passed: 4048
- Pass rate: 100%
- Standard: WCAG 2.1 Level AA (WCAG2A, WCAG2AA, WCAG21AA rules)
- Last audited: 2026-06-09
The following accessibility rules were verified as passing across all tested pages:
aria-allowed-attraria-hidden-bodyaria-required-childrenaria-required-parentaria-rolesaria-valid-attraria-valid-attr-valuebutton-namebypasscolor-contrastdocument-titleduplicate-id-activeduplicate-id-ariaform-field-multiple-labelshtml-has-langhtml-lang-validimage-altlabellandmark-one-mainlink-namelistlistitemmeta-viewportregionscrollable-region-focusableskip-linktabindexvalid-lang
Why We Do Not Use Accessibility Overlay Widgets
Some services sell JavaScript widgets that claim to make any website accessible by layering a toolbar over the existing HTML. We do not use these products. Here is why:
- Overlay widgets add a layer over broken HTML but do not fix the underlying code. Screen readers still encounter the same structural problems because the assistive technology reads the DOM directly, not the overlay.
- Multiple class-action lawsuits have been filed against companies specifically because they relied on overlay widgets instead of genuine remediation.
- We fix accessibility at the source code level — semantic HTML, proper ARIA, visible focus indicators, and adequate color contrast — so that every assistive technology experiences the same content without an intermediary layer.
Accessible Features
- Skip navigation link:A visible "Skip to main content" link is the first focusable element on every page, allowing keyboard users to bypass repeated navigation.
- Full keyboard navigation: Every interactive element — links, buttons, form fields, menus, accordions, and the language switcher — is reachable and operable by keyboard alone. Tab order follows a logical reading sequence.
- Visible focus indicators: All focusable elements display a visible gold focus ring meeting a minimum 3:1 contrast ratio against their background when navigated by keyboard.
- Color contrast: All text meets the WCAG 2.1 AA minimum contrast ratios: 4.5:1 for normal text and 3:1 for large text and UI components.
- Semantic structure: Pages use proper HTML landmarks (
header,nav,main,footer), a singleh1per page, and a logical heading hierarchy. - Screen reader support: Images carry meaningful alternative text. Decorative images and icon-only controls are labeled appropriately with
alt=""oraria-label. Dynamic content changes are announced via live regions where relevant. - Form accessibility: Every form field has a programmatically associated label, required fields are identified, and validation errors are announced to assistive technologies via
aria-invalidandaria-describedby. - Reduced-motion support:All animations and transitions are suppressed for users who have enabled the "Reduce Motion" preference in their operating system or browser (
prefers-reduced-motion: reduce). - Responsive and zoom-friendly: The site is fully functional at 200% browser zoom and does not require horizontal scrolling at a viewport width of 320 CSS pixels or wider.
- Language declaration: The
langattribute on the roothtmlelement reflects the active language (English or Spanish) so screen readers apply the correct pronunciation rules.
Known Limitations
While we strive for full conformance, the following limitations apply to certain third-party content embedded on the site:
- Google Maps embed (Contact page): The interactive Google Maps iframe has limited keyboard accessibility in certain configurations. A text address and directions link are provided adjacent to the map as an accessible alternative.
- Cookie consent banner: The cookie consent overlay is a first-party component built with full keyboard support and ARIA labeling. If you encounter a problem, you can dismiss it using the Escape key or navigate it with Tab.
Feedback and Contact
We welcome your feedback on the accessibility of this website. If you encounter an accessibility barrier, please contact us and we will make every effort to respond within two business days and to provide the information in an accessible format.
R2 Law
4201 N 24th St Ste 150, Phoenix, AZ 85016
Info@r2law.co
480-534-4777
When contacting us about an accessibility issue, please include the URL of the page where you encountered the barrier, a description of the problem, and the assistive technology or browser you were using.
Standards and Guidelines
This website is designed to conform to the following standards:
- WCAG 2.1 Level AA — Web Content Accessibility Guidelines published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the primary technical benchmark referenced by the U.S. Department of Justice for ADA website compliance.
- ADA Title III — The Americans with Disabilities Act, which requires places of public accommodation to ensure equal access for people with disabilities, including access to websites and digital services.
- Section 508 — The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended, which establishes accessibility requirements for federal agencies and contractors.
Formal Complaints
We aim to respond to accessibility feedback promptly. If you are not satisfied with our response, you may contact the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division or your local ADA National Network center for further guidance.
