Title 14 › Subtitle SUBTITLE III— - COAST GUARD RESERVE AND AUXILIARY › Chapter CHAPTER 39— - COAST GUARD AUXILIARY › § 3901
The Coast Guard runs the Auxiliary as a civilian organization and decides how it is set up. The Commandant (the Coast Guard leader) creates and approves units like a national board (Auxiliary headquarters), districts, regions, divisions, and flotillas. The Commandant gives the Auxiliary officers the powers and duties they need and can let those officers act with the Commandant’s authority when needed. Auxiliary units, except any corporation they create under subsection (c), are treated as part of the United States for certain federal claims and maritime laws (six specific statutes are listed), unless they are acting outside the scope of section 3902. The national board and some local units may form state corporations under Commandant policies. Auxiliary personal property is normally not federal property, but the Secretary can treat it as federal property for the listed laws, for section 901, and as allowed elsewhere in this chapter. The Secretary may also reimburse necessary costs to operate, maintain, repair, or replace that property. "Personal property of the Auxiliary" means boats, aircraft, radio stations, motor vehicles, trailers, or similar equipment used only for Auxiliary purposes and managed by the Auxiliary.
Full Legal Text
Coast Guard — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
14 U.S.C. § 3901
Title 14 — Coast Guard
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73