When a limited English proficient (LEP) individual calls your agency or walks through your door, you have a legal obligation under Title VI and Executive Order 13166 to provide meaningful language access. For most agencies, that means remote interpretation — either over-the-phone (OPI) or video remote (VRI). Choosing the wrong format wastes money, frustrates staff, and in some cases fails to meet the "meaningful access" standard the law requires.
What Is OPI (Over-the-Phone Interpretation)?
OPI connects your staff, the LEP individual, and a professional interpreter in a three-way telephone call. The interpreter works in real time in the consecutive mode — speaker talks, interpreter renders, back and forth.
- Available on-demand, typically within seconds, 24/7/365
- Supports 200+ languages including rare and indigenous languages
- No video equipment required — any phone works
- Per-minute pricing makes it cost-effective for short interactions
OPI is the workhorse of government language access. Most agencies use it for the majority of their LEP interactions — benefit inquiries, intake interviews, routine service calls, and brief in-person appointments.
What Is VRI (Video Remote Interpretation)?
VRI delivers interpretation via live video connection — typically a tablet, laptop, or cart-mounted device. The interpreter appears on screen, allowing all parties to see each other's facial expressions, gestures, and visual cues.
- Available on-demand with short connect times (typically under 60 seconds)
- Supports both spoken languages and American Sign Language (ASL)
- Requires a device with a camera and stable internet connection
- Higher per-minute cost than OPI, but still far less than in-person
When to Use OPI
OPI is the right choice for most routine government service interactions: high call volume, short duration, rare languages, emergency notifications, and simple transactions. In remote or rural offices where VRI device infrastructure isn't available, OPI is often the only practical option.
When to Use VRI
VRI earns its higher cost in situations where the visual channel meaningfully improves communication:
- ASL interpretation — VRI is the standard for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing individuals; OPI is not appropriate for sign language
- Mental health and behavioral health encounters — Non-verbal cues are diagnostically significant
- IEP and 504 meetings — The visual channel helps parents understand complex educational content
- Medical appointments with emotional content — Diagnosis delivery, informed consent for procedures
DOJ guidance on ADA Title II notes that VRI may be required when OPI does not result in effective communication — particularly for complex or emotionally significant interactions.
Building a Decision Framework for Your Staff
The most effective agencies don't leave the OPI vs. VRI choice to individual staff judgment in the moment. They document a clear protocol: default to OPI for routine interactions in spoken languages, default to VRI for any interaction involving ASL or a formal administrative proceeding, escalate to in-person for legal proceedings where physical presence is required, and document every interpretation session in the case record.
A written Language Access Plan that memorializes this decision framework is the foundation of your compliance documentation. We provide both OPI and VRI services under GSA Schedule and NASPO ValuePoint cooperative contracts, making procurement straightforward for any government agency.