Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 63— - TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION › § 3704b
The Secretary of Commerce, through the Director of the National Technical Information Service, may make contracts and other agreements, form joint ventures, hire staff, and run the Service’s business. The Service can keep and use net revenues (money left after paying operating costs, not including royalties and certain other income under 15 U.S.C. 3710c(a)(4)) as allowed by appropriations to carry out its plans. The Service may contract out work done by its Promotion Division (but must give the appropriate congressional committees details and a 30-day notice before signing such a contract). For the period October 1, 1991 through September 30, 1992, it may retain and use all money it receives to pay obligations and expenses. Certain Service duties are permanent federal duties and cannot be moved to the private sector without Congress agreeing, except for buying supplies, the Promotion Division contracts above, or joint projects that do not cut federal staff. A Director manages the Service and reports to the Director of NIST and the Secretary of Commerce. An Advisory Board of five people (a chair and four members chosen by the Secretary) will advise on policies and fees and meet at least every six months. The Secretary must have annual independent audits starting with fiscal year 1988. The Service must keep a permanent collection of unclassified scientific, technical, and engineering information; work with other government programs; give certain bibliographic products to depository libraries; collect and translate unclassified foreign technical information (with private partners as needed); use new ways to share information including electronic formats; and carry out duties under the 1950 dissemination law and the Stevenson‑Wydler Act as of October 24, 1988. The Secretary and Director must keep Congress informed, send a fee report within 90 days after October 24, 1988, submit an annual report covering operations, finances, staffing, plans, modernization progress and audits, and give at least 30 days’ advance notice to Congress of any proposed reductions in force, any joint venture with financial incentives, or any operating-plan change that would change expenses by more than 10 percent.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
15 U.S.C. § 3704b
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73