animated Reordering digital artwork by Doze Studio

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animated Reordering digital artwork by Doze Studio
Dragon drop: accessible reordering library
There's a visually beautiful drag & drop solution making the rounds on the web, and it even touts itself as being "accessible". The problem is, you can't actually use it with the keyboard in its current iteration–a huge, blocking barrier to people who can't use the mouse. If you are looking to implement drag & drop on a website, I HIGHLY recommend checking out Dragon Drop by Harris Schneiderman.
Dragon Drop is available on Github and it's framework agnostic, so you could work it into a bigger project. To make it accessible, each movable object has a dragger button that can be moved with the keyboard once you enter edit mode with the space bar or enter key.
Here's an integral part of its accessibility: the button elements used for reordering are natively focusable, so keyboard and screen reader users can reach them. Disabled users can't magically start using the mouse to drag and drop, a strange expectation of many "accessible drag and drop" solutions (slapping ARIA attributes on it isn't enough!).
Harris did the work not only to make it keyboard operable, but also to pipe customizable screen reader messaging using ARIA Live Regions. He made sure it worked in major assistive technology/browser combos. Speaking from experience, it can be difficult to support Windows screen readers like JAWS when mouse interactions differ from the keyboard. This solution works around that with the edit mode and button accordances for manipulating items with the keyboard.
If you do find an issue with it, I'm sure he'd love to hear from you on Github!
Happy reordering!
#1 THE WHEEL OF REORDERING: 12 Dimensions of Change Series In this series we will discuss 12 facets of change of how we will be changed forever in the passage through the seven years, the period of 2020-2027.
#1 THE WHEEL OF REORDERING: 12 Dimensions of Change Series In this series we will discuss 12 facets of change of how we will be changed forever in the passage through the seven years, the period of 2020-2027.
Senate reintroduces Bill Reordering Elections Timetable
Senate reintroduces Bill Reordering Elections Timetable
The Nigerian Senate has reintroduced the Electoral Act Amendment Bill which seeks to reorder the timetable for elections, Punch reports.
The bill which has previously been passed in January was vetoed by President Muhammadu Buhari. (more…)
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Overdraft Practices Continue to Gut Bank Accounts and Haunt Customers
By Michael Corkery and Jessica Silver-Greenberg, NY Times, Feb. 28, 2016
Angelina Lemus was puzzled. She had no idea why every month as much as $96 was disappearing from her Citibank checking account.
Months later, Ms. Lemus finally figured out the mystery--or at least part of it. Citibank was taking out the money to pay a loan, with an interest rate of 18 percent, that was devised to cover the shortfall every time Ms. Lemus overdrew her checking account.
The problem was that Ms. Lemus, a home health care worker from Queens, said she never signed up for the line of credit and was unaware that she was borrowing from it every time her account dipped below zero.
In all, Ms. Lemus had amassed $3,400 in debt--a tangle of interest, principal and other fees that have damaged her credit.
Ms. Lemus is one of millions of Americans tripped up by overdraft practices, a murky corner of consumer banking that, despite a lot of hand-wringing in Washington, costly litigation and customer rancor, remains largely untouched by financial regulation.
In a push for transparency since the 2008 financial crisis, regulators require banks to clearly disclose and explain the terms of just about every financial product, including credit cards and mortgages. But overdraft practices still come with hidden costs and confusing terms, bank customers, lawyers and consumer advocates say.
Typically, banks charge customers $35 every time they spend more than the balance in their checking account. Those fees add up, haunting borrowers and cannibalizing already low bank balances. One mistake can push checking accounts into the red, generating multiple fees in a single day.
But other sometimes harmful practices are proliferating, too, like lines of credit that banks pitch as an alternative way to cover shortfalls in checking accounts but that can end up ensnaring customers like Ms. Lemus in a cycle of debt.
“It is such an insidious thing,” said Susan Shin, legal director of the New Economy Project, which works with community groups in New York.
It is by no means a new problem. In a series of class-action lawsuits beginning in 2009 against more than a dozen big banks, customers accused banks of hiding a practice known as reordering. The practice, the lawsuits revealed, involved deliberately processing large transactions like mortgage payments first before taking out smaller charges like a coffee--even if customers bought the coffee first. By arranging the order of transactions, the banks could maximize the number of overdrafts they charged. At the time, some banks defended the practice, arguing that it ensured large, important bills were covered.
The lawsuits resulted in the banks paying more than $1.1 billion in settlements. Among them was TD Bank, which agreed to pay $62 million.
Today, TD Bank is still reordering transactions and informs customers about the practice in the fine print of its checking account agreements.
“Their position is if we disclose it, we can get away with whatever the hell we want,” said Mark Mangan, a TD Bank customer from Bloomfield, N.J., who has been hit with as much as $140 in overdraft fees in a single day.
More than 11 percent of TD Bank’s total operating income came from overdraft fees and other consumer service fees during the first nine months of last year. That is roughly five times the industry average, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation data compiled by SNL Financial, a research firm.
The TD Bank spokeswoman said its overdraft fees accounted for a proportionally larger share of its operation than at other banks because TD is focused primarily on consumer banking, while many other financial companies have a wider range of businesses, like investment banking.
The total number of overdraft fees has declined since the financial crisis, but their persistence reflects a reality of the banking industry: Regulations have crimped profits from once-profitable activities like lending.
It turns out that overdraft fees are the banks’ version of cigarette smoking, a habit that is tough to break.
The nation’s big consumer banks collected about $11 billion in overdraft fees last year, which accounted for 8 percent of their profits, according to a report by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Regulations, passed in 2010, require banks to give customers a choice of whether to incur overdraft fees or have a transaction declined.
But many customers end up confused by how overdrafts work. In their marketing materials, for example, banks present the choice of whether to sign up for overdraft as an offer of “overdraft protection”--a feature many customers thought would automatically deny transactions and shield them from incurring the fees at all. In reality, it is a service authorizing the banks to charge the overdraft fees. Navy Federal Credit Union, for example, brands its product OOPS, or “Optional Overdraft Protection Service.”
Mr. Mangan, who works as a technology consultant, says he is the first to acknowledge that when he bounces a check, he should pay a penalty. But, one day last May, he noticed that TD Bank Group had charged him a $35 overdraft fee even though his account still had money in it.
That afternoon, Mr. Mangan withdrew $20 in cash at a TD Bank A.T.M., leaving only a few dollars in his account. That night, TD Bank processed a $125 check that he had written days earlier. As a result, the bank charged him two fees: one for the bounced check and another for the $20 A.T.M. withdrawal.
“I had that money in my account. I have the slip to prove it,” Mr. Mangan said.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is hashing out rules that could limit reordering, according to people briefed on the matter but not authorized to speak publicly about it. Outlines of the rules are expected this year.
Still, the regulation is not a panacea, consumer advocates say. It will not address the lines of credit, which are considered loans. The credit lines are supposed to be less expensive than traditional overdrafts, and if customers pay off the loans quickly, the charges amount to only a few dollars.
But the costs can add up. KeyBank’s credit line, for example, carries a 15 percent interest rate, a $10 fee for every time customers overdraw their account, a $30 annual fee and $25 late fees.
Citigroup’s line of credit is called “Checking Plus,” which to Ms. Lemus, who primarily speaks Spanish, did not appear to be anything like a loan. When she first noticed the $96 withdrawals, Ms. Lemus was alarmed.
But what she learned was even more distressing: Every time she overdrew her checking account, Citigroup was lending her money at 18.25 percent to cover the shortfalls. There were other unusual features and charges associated with the loan. Citigroup extended the loan in $100 increments, even if she was short by only $35.
And in one month, Citigroup withdrew the loan payment two days after the due date the bank itself had set. For this, Citigroup collected an additional $25 for the late payment.
If she just made the minimum payment, it would take Ms. Lemus 13 years to pay off her credit line. The bank has been trying to collect the debt.
i lied there's no mix coming tonight sorry :')