Environmental justice & Title VI

Find guidance on how to comply with federal and state environmental justice requirements.

For Categorically Excluded projects

Use our list of Projects Exempt from Detailed Analysis (PDF 115KB) to determine if your project is unlikely to have an adverse effect that disproportionately impacts a minority or low-income population. Contact the NEPA/SEPA Program, NEPA-SEPA@wsdot.wa.gov, if your project requires a detour. A memo may not be required.

For Environmental Assessment & Environmental Impact Statement (EA/EIS) level projects

Follow the Study area process (PDF 105KB) to define the project’s study area for Environmental Justice.

Determine language service needs

Follow the Determining LEP presence in project area (PDF 121KB) procedure to determine if your project should provide language services as part of your outreach strategy. Request the ‘Census Add-in’ Excel macro from the NEPA/SEPA Program, NEPA-SEPA@wsdot.wa.gov, and follow these Installation instructions (PDF 256KB) upon first use.

Visit Title VI/Limited English Proficiency for information on accommodating non-English speakers.

Determine community demographics

Use EJScreen and Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) to collect demographic data for your project site. See our EJScreen step by step instructions (PDF 754KB) and guide to Collect Demographic Data (PDF 680KB) for detailed instructions.

Follow the Determining health disparities (PDF 163KB) procedure to get a Health Disparity Rank for the project area.

Develop a public involvement strategy

Read the Community Engagement Plan (PDF 2.1MB) to learn how to engage with partners, stakeholders, tribes and communities throughout project delivery.

Coordinate with Office of Equal Opportunity (OEO) and region/modal communications staff to develop an inclusive public involvement strategy tailored to the communities who may be touched by the project.

166,800 electric vehicle

registrations in Washington in 2023, up from 114,600 in 2022.

87 wetland compensation sites

actively monitored on 918 acres in 2023.

25,000 safe animal crossings

in the Snoqualmie Pass East Project area since 2014.