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Translation

How Government Agencies Meet Title VI Translation Requirements in 2026

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 has required government agencies to provide language access to limited English proficient (LEP) individuals for over sixty years. Yet most agencies still struggle with the same questions: which documents need to be translated, into which languages, and how do you prove you've done enough?

The Legal Foundation: Title VI and EO 13166

Any organization receiving federal financial assistance must take "reasonable steps" to provide LEP individuals with meaningful access to their programs and services. Executive Order 13166 (2000) extended this to require written Language Access Plans. The key phrase is "meaningful access" — token compliance is not sufficient.

The Four-Factor Analysis

DOJ guidance provides a four-factor test to determine what reasonable steps look like for your agency: (1) number of LEP persons served, (2) frequency of contact, (3) nature and importance of the service, and (4) resources available. A small rural agency has different obligations than an urban benefits office with hundreds of LEP contacts per week.

The 5% Threshold: Which Languages Must You Support?

The DOJ recommends translating vital documents into any language spoken by 5% of the eligible population or 1,000 eligible individuals — whichever is less. In practice, most large agencies must support Spanish. Depending on your service population, you may also need Mandarin, Vietnamese, Arabic, Somali, Tagalog, Haitian Creole, or Portuguese. Census Bureau data is the right starting point for a language needs assessment.

Critical caveat: even if a language doesn't meet the 5% threshold, you may still need to provide oral interpretation on request. The threshold determines when you translate documents — it doesn't eliminate the obligation to serve individuals in less common languages.

What Are "Vital Documents"?

Not every document needs to be translated. Vital documents are those critical for accessing services or understanding rights:

Certified Translation vs. Machine Translation

Machine translation tools — including Google Translate, DeepL, and AI-based systems — are not appropriate for vital government documents. They produce errors that range from minor to serious, and those errors can deny rights, create liability, or cause harm. DOJ guidance explicitly warns against relying on machine translation for vital documents.

Certified translation — a human translation accompanied by a signed declaration of the translator's competency and accuracy — is the appropriate standard for vital documents. It creates documentation of who translated the material and their attestation of accuracy, which is what holds up in an OCR investigation.

Building a Language Access Plan

A Language Access Plan is a written policy document describing your agency's approach to language access. A compliant LAP includes: a four-factor analysis, a language needs assessment, covered languages and thresholds, vital documents and translation status, interpreter services protocols, staff training procedures, a complaint procedure, and a designated Language Access Coordinator. We help agencies develop Language Access Plans as part of our compliance services.

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