Had you previously defined a custom skip link? Those fields should only be removed if they weren’t in use; if you had one defined, you’d still have access to it.
The fields were removed because it is not considered ideal accessibility for skip links to contain multiple links; only the simplest skip link fields have been left in place.
If you can provide a link, I can look at the CSS issue and try and see what you mean. When you say ‘customizing the Skip Link CSS from the dashboard’, do you mean the WP Accessibility settings?
Yes—I am working on a multisite network, where one site was setup with a custom skip link to the footer but then the plugin was updated before the other sites could be configured.
Ideally, all sites in the network would function the same.
As for the CSS issue, I looked into it a little more. It seems that the custom CSS styles are placed in the head, however, the default styles immediately follow them, thus overriding them.
Is it possible to get a link to this? I’m not seeing how that would happen with the custom CSS being overridden by the default styles; if you have default styles turned off, you should only see the custom CSS. Unless you’re not using the WP Accessibility custom CSS?
The settings thing is an awkward timing thing. For that, it might be best to downgrade to configure the option, then update. I don’t intend to restore the option.
I’d be happy to share a link, but not in a public forum—do you have an email I can reach you at?
As for downgrading, do you have a link to a previous version I use?
Use the support form at WP Accessibility > Help.
You can always find previous versions from the Advanced tab; https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-accessibility/advanced/ – scroll down to ‘Previous Versions’.