Overview
![Collaboration between the Service and California Department of Transportation on a project to correct erosion damage along State Route 330 helped minimize impacts to the City Creek watershed and endangered mountain yellow-legged frog habitat. Photo credit: Sally Brown/USFWS](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20201218074929im_/https://www.fws.gov/ecological-services/images/SR-330%20City%20Creek%20mountain%20yellow-legged%20frog%20habitat_Sally%20Brown%20USFWS.jpg)
Collaboration between the Service and California Department of Transportation on a project to correct erosion damage along State Route 330 helped minimize impacts to the City Creek watershed and endangered mountain yellow-legged frog habitat.
Sally Brown/USFWS
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) recognizes the critical role of transportation in the economic and ecological well-being of human communities. Transportation projects influence the character of a region by the number of people and amount of goods and services it transports. Transportation designs also influence plant and animal species and their habitats, and the ecological health of the nation. The Service encourages the design of transportation projects that provide the greatest value to the greatest number of people, while avoiding or minimizing impacts to plant and animals speices and their habitat, as well as the ecological processes that naturally sustain these areas.
In collaboration with the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the Service develops policy and guidance products to help facilitate the agency's role in transportation planning. The Service does this in a variety of ways. By gaining a better understanding of local transportation needs, the Service provides technical information that enables the FHWA, State Departments of Transportation, and local transportation planning organizations to develop alternatives with minimal environmental impacts. Through a streamlined environmental review process, Service participation in transportation planning includes:
- Involvement in statewide/metropolitan planning processes or Statewide Transportation Plans;
- Sharing of data and other information relevant to the integration of conservation and transportation planning;
- Identifying and promoting innovative practices that protect threatened and endangered species, migratory birds, valuable habitat and natural areas such as refuges and parks;
- Identifying and promoting innovative practices that streamline the environmental review process; and
- Promoting partnerships with other federal, state, and local governments and non-governmental organizations to address the efforts above.
Get information on the management and improvement of public use roads within the National Wildlife Refuge System.
Access the document library for policies, regulations, and guidelines related to transportation planning and project development.
Additional Resources
Executive Order 13807: Transportation 'One Federal Decision' Projects
FAST Act - Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act
FHWA's Eco-Logical Program - An Ecosystem Approach for Developing Infrastructure Projects