Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART III— - TRAINING AND EDUCATION › Chapter CHAPTER 101— - TRAINING GENERALLY › § 2012
Lets military units or individual service members give support and supplies to certain outside groups when allowed by other law or when the work is part of military training. The help can go to federal, regional, state, or local governments; youth and charity groups named in title 32, section 508; owners or operators of critical infrastructure (as defined in law); and other groups approved case-by-case by the Secretary of Defense. The help must be asked for by a responsible official, must not be something a business can reasonably provide (or the business must agree), and must meet training rules: for units it must count as valid unit training, and for individuals it must relate to their military job. The help must not harm training quality or significantly raise training costs. An exception says manpower-only help of up to 100 man-hours for a project does not need to meet the unit-training rule. The Secretary of Defense must write rules about what help is allowed, how it is delivered, and how it is coordinated with civilian efforts so needs are met and services are not duplicated. The rules must also limit exclusive use of DoD resources and make assistance to critical infrastructure consistent with other federal agencies, including CISA (title XXII of the Homeland Security Act of 2002). Service members cannot be forced to prove participation in these activities to promotion or selection boards, though they may volunteer such information. The law encourages local advisory councils and says Chapter 10 of title 5 does not apply to them. It does not allow using the military for civilian law enforcement or general disaster response, except that Innovative Readiness Training funds may be used, with approval, for demolition, road clearing, infrastructure repairs, and military construction after a natural disaster. The Secretary of Defense must also set up oversight and cost controls: written project requests and approvals, after-action reports, cost reviews and certifications, full accounting of costs, and checks that projects follow approved plans.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 2012
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73