Regional roadside maintenance

The Regional Road Maintenance Program improves roadway safety while safely maintaining our highways and following the Endangered Species Act.

Regional Road Maintenance Endangered Species Act Program

Program guidelines

These guidelines include input from local government agencies, Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and other interested parties.

Regional program elements (Part 1)

Regional Program Elements (PDF 2MB) requires ten program elements and use of best management practices to achieve environmental outcomes, including the protection of habitat and water quality.

Best management practices (Part 2)

Application (Part 3)

Addendum

RRMP Guidelines Addendum 1 is regularly updated with new technologies, best management practices developed by field crews and lessons learned over the years of regional program implementation and adaptive management. NOAA Fisheries and the Regional Forum may also add new guidelines as needed.

Regional Road Maintenance Program Biological Opinion

In the Regional Road Maintenance Program Biological Opinion (PDF 252KB), NOAA Fisheries shows how the Regional Road Maintenance Program is not likely to jeopardize ESA-listed salmon or their critical habitat.

This document also contains information on Essential Fish Habitat (EFH) based on section 305 (d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA) and its implementing regulations (50 CFR Part 600). NOAA Fisheries concludes that MSA may adversely affect designated EFH for 47 species of ground fish, five coastal aquatic species, and three species of Pacific Salmon. As required by section 305 (b)(4)(A) of the MSA, included are conservation recommendations NOAA fisheries believes will avoid, minimize, mitigate or otherwise offset adverse effects on EFH resulting from the proposed action.

NMFS clarification of ESA Section 7 compliance

Take prohibitions under section 9 of the ESA, and applicable 4(d) rules will not apply to the routine road maintenance practices carried out by WSDOT following the plan and this FHWA letter (PDF 52KB) requirements.

WSDOT guidance documents

Slow down – lives are on the line. 

In 2023, speeding continued to be a top reason for work zone crashes.

Even one life lost is too many.

Fatal work zone crashes doubled in 2023 - Washington had 10 fatal work zone crashes on state roads.

It's in EVERYONE’S best interest.

95% of people hurt in work zones are drivers, their passengers or passing pedestrians, not just our road crews.