Social Security’s website offers ‘easy read’ option

Dear Editor:

During my last few visits to the local library, I have noticed that one of the fastest growing sections is the shelf space devoted to “large print” books.

It really is not surprising when you consider that about 15 million Americans have some form of vision impairment, and millions of other Americans with aging eyes may have trouble reading small print.

That is why Social Security has taken steps to make reading “small print” easier for visitors to our website.

Here’s how. The letter size in reading material is measured in “points”. Most text in American newspapers is 9-point type and most books are set in 10- to 12-point type. But the minimum size for large print materials is 14-point type, and most large-print materials are available in 16- to 18-point type.

Folks who visit our website at www.socialsecurity.gov can easily change the text size on their computer to make the information easier to read. This is done through the “Web Eyes” plug-in, which is available free in the socialsecurity.gov homepage. Web Eyes can increase text size from 10 to 144 points, in two-point increments.

Social Security provides Web Eyes as a courtesy to our website visitors. It is available for download at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/textsizeinst.htm. Anyone who downloads Web Eyes will have unlimited use of it while visiting the Social Security website. When they leave our website, the text enlargement will continue for five minutes and then automatically return to the settings on the user’s browser.

Our technical people tell me, however, that to successfully download Web Eyes, users must have an Internet connection, at least four megabytes of free space available on the hard drive and Microsoft Internet Explorer web browser version 5.5 or higher. The Web Eyes plug-in also includes a help manual and a help menu, which includes Frequently Asked Questions.

I know that the millions of Americans with vision impairments will appreciate this feature, as will the tens of millions of baby boomers now in middle age. While some people can hold a newspaper at arm’s length to read small print, that trick does not work too well with a computer terminal. Richard Thayer
Social Security Manage, Jersey City

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