Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 116— - CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - ECONOMIC STABILIZATION AND ASSISTANCE TO SEVERELY DISTRESSED SECTORS OF THE UNITED STATES ECONOMY › Part Part A— - Coronavirus Economic Stabilization › § 9053
Creates an Office of the Special Inspector General for Pandemic Recovery inside the Department of the Treasury. The President, with the Senate’s approval, must appoint a Special Inspector General who has integrity and proven skill in things like accounting, auditing, finance, law, management, public administration, or investigations. The Special Inspector General can be removed under the rules of the Inspector General Act and is paid the same as other Inspectors General. The office must audit and investigate loans, loan guarantees, and other investments the Secretary makes under section 9042, and how those programs are run. The Special Inspector General must collect and summarize key information about those investments, including the types of investments, who received them, why each was made and its financial terms, who manages them, and current financial status (outstanding amounts, interest and fees, matured loans, collateral, and any gains or losses). The Special Inspector General can hire staff, use contractors, and has the authorities given by the Inspector General Act. Federal agencies must give information or help when asked, and the Special Inspector General must report to Congress if help is unreasonably refused. Within 60 days after confirmation and then once every calendar quarter, the Special Inspector General must send reports to the appropriate congressional committees. Each report covers the past 3-month period and must list all loans, guarantees, transactions, obligations, expenditures, and revenues tied to programs under section 9042 and the information described above. The reports must still protect legally or security-protected information and ongoing criminal investigations. The office gets $25,000,000 from amounts made available under section 9061, and those funds stay available until spent. The office ends 5 years after March 27, 2020. The Special Inspector General joins the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency until the office ends. The Secretary must fix problems the Special Inspector General finds or certify to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs; the Senate Committee on Finance; the House Committee on Financial Services; and the House Committee on Ways and Means that no action is needed.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9053
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73