Water Quality Assessment & 303(d) List

comment icon

Comment on the draft 2022 Water Quality Assessment

We are accepting public comments on the draft Water Quality Assessment from Nov. 4, 2024 - Jan. 10, 2025.

Find out more information about the draft, associated documents, and how to comment below. 

The federal Clean Water Act requires states to perform a Water Quality Assessment every two years to track how clean the rivers, lakes, and marine water bodies are. After we review the data, we place water bodies in categories that describe the quality of the water and status of any needed cleanup. The Assessment helps us use state resources more efficiently by focusing our limited resources on water bodies that need the most work.

Public review of the draft 2022 Water Quality Assessment

We are gathering public input on the Draft 2022 Water Quality Assessment. We invite comments from Nov. 4, 2024 until Jan. 10, 2025. The Draft Assessment can be reviewed through the Draft Water Quality Assessment Review Tool or the Draft Water Quality Atlas, an online map.

Tools for reviewing the Draft Water Quality Assessment

Public comment period

We are accepting public comments on the Draft Water Quality Assessment from Nov. 4, 2024, until Jan. 10, 2025.

How to provide comments

Please submit comments directly in the online Draft Water Quality Assessment Search Tool. To comment on specific listings, please use the comment box at the bottom of the Listing ID page. To submit general comments, please use the General Comment form using the “Contact Us” link in the top navigation bar of the Draft Assessment Search Tool or at the bottom of Listing ID pages.

You may also submit comments:

  • Via email to 303d@ecy.wa.gov
  • By mail:
    Washington State Department of Ecology
    Justin Donahue
    PO Box 47600
    Olympia, WA 98504-7600

Public webinar

We are holding a webinar to walk through the draft Water Quality Assessment. We will highlight the Assessment process, key changes in this Assessment, and provide a demonstration of how to use review tools and submit comments.

Nov. 13, 2024 at 2 p.m.
Register for the webinar

Next steps

Following the public comment period, we will review comments and modify the Water Quality Assessment as needed. We will complete a response to comments that will be on our webpage. Afterwards, the Water Quality Assessment, including the 303(d) list, will be submitted to EPA for approval in Spring 2025.   

2018 Water Quality Assessment approved by EPA

On Aug. 26, 2022, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 10 issued their final approval of our 2018 Water Quality Assessment. This Assessment is the current and replaces our previous Assessment for Clean Water Act regulatory purposes. Decisions relying on Assessment information should use this Assessment until the 2022 Assessment is approved by EPA. Visit EPA's Washington 2014–2018 303d List website for more information on their decision.

View the current assessment results on our online search tool or our map-based Water Quality Atlas.

Supporting documents

What is the Water Quality Assessment?

View our online database for the latest assessment results.

The Water Quality Assessment (WQA) is our process of collecting data and assessing the quality of surface water in the state. This includes all rivers, lakes, and marine water. You can view the results of the Assessment in our online search tool or our mapping tool, the Water Quality Atlas.

The federal Clean Water Act requires that all states restore their water bodies to be “fishable and swimmable.” Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act establishes a process to identify and clean up polluted water. Those waters we determine to be impaired are placed on the “303(d) list” and are prioritized for future clean up.

What is the Water Quality Atlas?

We have a mapping tool called the Water Quality Atlas. The Water Quality Atlas is an interactive search and mapping tool that includes additional layers of information in an easy-to-use mapping application.

Users can map the Water Quality Assessment category results, view water quality standards for a location, identify areas addressed by Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs), and see permitted wastewater discharge outfalls.

The process to update the Water Quality Assessment

The following timeline provides information on each step of the 2022 Assessment cycle. We previously developed a large data automation tool that allows us to speed up many pieces of the Assessment process.

The opportunity for early tribal review of the Assessment is part of a 1997 cooperative agreement between Tribes, Ecology, and EPA that recognizes the government-to-government relationship between Washington and Tribes in managing water quality.


Woman kneeling next to stream holding water sampling bottle

How are water bodies assessed?

We compile our own water quality data, and invite other groups to submit water quality data they have collected. We only assess data that meets high quality assurance and credible data requirements. Our goal is to accurately determine if water bodies are polluted based on the best available data.

The assessed water bodies are placed into one of five categories that describe the water quality. Once the Assessment is complete, we provide the public a chance to review and give comments. We submit the final Assessment to the Environmental Protection Agency for approval of the category 5 listings, also called the 303(d) list.

Assessment categories


303(d) list

Water bodies whose designated uses (such as for drinking, recreation, aquatic habitat, and industrial use) that are impaired by pollutants are identified in the Water Quality Assessment as "Category 5: Polluted water that requires a water improvement project." The 303(d) list, so called because the process is described in Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act, lists water bodies in the polluted water category.

Federal laws, state water quality standards, and Water Quality Assessment policy 1-11 guide our Assessment of which water bodies to place on the 303(d) list.

To view the list, go to the Water Quality Assessment database and select Category 5 (under Categories).

What happens to polluted water bodies?

If water bodies are polluted, we develop a water cleanup plan, also called a Total Maximum Daily Load or TMDL, to reduce pollution sources throughout the surrounding watershed. After pollutant controls are in place, we monitor in the watershed to see if the water meets state water quality standards.

Translated content