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CLF Standards and Guidelines
1. Accessibility 1.1 All GoC Web sites must comply with W3C Priority 1 and Priority 2 checkpoints to ensure sites can be easily accessed by the widest possible audience. 1.2 HTML or similar formats that are W3C Recommendations (e.g. XHTML) must be the primary format for all documents on Government of Canada Web sites. In cases where a document cannot be represented in HTML, users will be given information on how to obtain alternate versions, e.g., print, Braille, audio, etc. 1.3 To ensure universal accessibility, GoC Web pages that offer information in alternate formats must include a text indication of the file type that provides a hyperlink to a site where the necessary software can be obtained. 1.4 All GoC Web sites and their pages must incorporate text equivalents for non-textual elements, such as graphics, images, navigational aids, sound tracks, to ensure universal accessibility goals are achieved. 2. Collaborative Arrangements 2.1 GoC organizations must ensure that Web sites that represent a collaborative arrangement acknowledge their participation by prominently displaying one of the FIP identifiers thereby achieving a visual presence and balance between the government and its partners. 2.2 Because the GoC clearly disallows the creation of unfair competitive advantage in the private sector through the endorsement of private interests, GoC Web sites must not display third-party icons, symbols or logos that represent the products or services of private enterprises or individuals apart from exemptions made within the context of collaborative arrangements and the use of TB approved symbols for government-wide use. 3. Cybersquatting 3.1 To help protect the unique identity and integrity of Government of Canada Web sites, GC organizations must register and maintain the registrations for any domain names that include their title in commonly used domains such as .com, .org, .net, .ca, etc. To help promote the unique identity of the Government of Canada online presence, GC institutions must register and maintain the registrations for their primary domain names, and any domain names supporting online services or products, in the ".gc.ca" domain. The domain names registered in the ".gc.ca" domain must be used for the purposes of advertising, marketing and promotion. 4. E-mail 4.1 All GoC Web sites must provide users with a means of contacting institutions/individuals via electronic mail options. 4.2 All outgoing e-mail messages sent by GoC employees must include the sender's name, institution, telephone and fax numbers with area code and extension numbers, postal and e-mail addresses. Where an e-mail address serves a program or service rather than an individual, contact information must include the institutional name, postal and e-mail address, telephone and fax numbers. 4.3 All outgoing e-mail messages by GoC employees must demonstrate a consistent application of the "Canada" wordmark and institutional signature. 4.4 Institutions must ensure that legitimate electronic correspondence is acknowledged in a timely manner. 5. Important Notices 5.1 All GoC Web pages must include direct access to plain language information regarding the rights, responsibilities and legal obligations of the information provider and the end-user, in the format of an Important Notices link. 5.2 The following Copyright / Permission text must be included within the Important Notices link at the bottom of all GoC Web pages. 5.3 All GoC Web sites must include the following Privacy Notices within the Important Notices link at the bottom of all GoC Web pages. 5.4 All GoC Web sites must include a Privacy Notice Statement whenever Web pages provide an opportunity for users to input personal information. 6. Navigation and Format 6.1 All GoC Web pages must include the common menu bar, placed at the top of every Web page, to facilitate navigation through and between GoC sites. The GoC menu options must appear in this order and include: Language (English / French) for bilingual sites only, Contact Us, Help, Search and Canada Site. 6.2 All GoC Web pages must incorporate an institutional menu similar in design and placement to the common menu bar. The number of buttons and choice of terminology should represent plain language descriptors of the organization's program and services. 6.3 All GoC Web sites must adopt the following five metatags as a metadata standard for description of Web resources: Title, Originator, Language of Resource, Date and Controlled Subject. 6.4 All Government of Canada Web pages must have a date indicator to inform visitors of the currency of the content and signal that the end of that page has been reached. All currency indicators must use the ISO standard format for all-numeric date display (YYYY-MM-DD) and use at least one of the following date labels: "Date published:", "Date modified:", or "Last updated:". 6.5 All GoC Web sites must use only standard 216 Web-safe colours for Web site elements, including menu bars and navigation aids, typography and background, and for simple graphic components. 6.6 Frames must only be used on GoC sites as an alternative format. 6.7 Web analyzer tools must be the standard means of collecting site usage data. Counters must not be used to perform this function. 6.8 All GoC institutions must apply HTML validators to existing Web sites to assess accessibility status and HTML validations must be applied to new GoC sites prior to posting. 7. Official languages 7.1 All GoC institutions must register their gc.ca domain names using at
least one of the two following domain name conventions. If option (b) is adopted, the names or acronyms will appear on the URL line on the Welcome Page of a site in accordance with the principles set out under section 3 (b) below. Institutions may also register equivalent unilingual English and French versions of a name, or the acronym thereof, if they wish or need to use those on unilingual content pages (i.e., pco.gc.ca on English content pages and bcp.gc.ca on the French content pages) or when publishing information in unilingual media, e.g., in English or French magazines or newspapers. 7.2 All GoC Web sites must incorporate Welcome Pages at the main point of
entry to the site. Each Welcome Page must incorporate three key elements: the
"Canada" wordmark, the institutional signature and the language choice buttons except
on unilingual Web sites where a content button must be provided. (See Policy on
using the official languages on electronic networks, which sets out requirements
for bilingual sites as well as for unilingual sites, with a special disclaimer and
hyperlink requirement for the latter, see 4 below). 7.3 All Web pages on all GoC Web sites must incorporate the "Canada"
wordmark and the institutional signature using high quality reproductions in terms of
accuracy, colour and resolution. 7.4 Unilingual GoC Welcome Pages must include a bilingual message indicating that under the Official Languages Act, the office provides services to its clientele in only one official language. This message must also inform users of a hyperlink to a site where users have access to general information in both official languages. The Policy on using the official languages on electronic networks contains a model Welcome Page showing the message that must be used. As well, the Policy indicates what disclaimer statements must be used in the case of bilingual sites that post unilingual content that belongs to entities not subject to the Official Languages Act. 7.5 All Web pages on all GoC Web sites must incorporate navigational
buttons that allow users to proceed through the site in the language of their choice
or to access identical information in the alternate official language, except
where the office providing the Web site is not designated bilingual. 7.6 Messages generated by Web servers and Web application servers must be presented in the official language preference indicated by the user. If this is not feasible, or if the language preference of the user is not known, the message must be presented completely in both official languages and in the prescribed order. For more information, refer to the Directive on the Use of Official Languages on Web Sites. 7.7 All text equivalents must be given in the language of the Web page in which they are embedded. 7.8 The mandatory elements that make up the metatag for any given Web page must correspond to the page's official language. 7.9 Federal institutions must ensure that their content posted on a site that represents a collaborative arrangement complies with the official language requirements that would apply if the site were strictly the site of the office in question. 7.10 All GoC electronic mail administrators must provide all public servants with e-mail addresses that demonstrate compliance with official language requirements by applying the e-mail address format that reflects the institution's chosen domain name. See section 1 above for questions regarding the order of the official languages in the domain name. Common Look and Feel GuidelinesAccessibility Guideline 1.1 If HTML is used, HTML 4.0 Strict or newer W3C adopted languages should be adopted as the standard for new and revised Web pages. Guideline 1.2 If a page/site is explicitly designed to provide information to alternate technologies such as hand-held, print, Braille, and audio devices, such delivery should be handled with the "media" element in Cascading Style Sheets. Important Notices Guideline 5.1 Where externally sourced information, i.e., third-party information, is hosted on the institutional Web site, a liability disclaimer should be directly attached to the externally sourced information and should describe the type of information to which the disclaimer applies, i.e., databases, documents. Guideline 5.2 Either of the following formats should be used only in
exceptional circumstances in which institutions believe application of the Crown
copyright symbol is necessary to protect specific elements of their Web sites: Guideline 5.3 All GoC Web sites should incorporate Exit Notices in site architecture as a means of informing users that they are about to leave a gc.ca domain. Navigation and Format Guideline 6.1 All GoC Web sites should incorporate Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) or similarly sized tables to achieve consistent presentation of content. |
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