Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT › § 1461
Creates the National Estuarine Research Reserve System. The System includes estuarine sanctuaries named before April 7, 1986 and any areas the Secretary adds later. After April 7, 1986, the Secretary can add a site if the coastal state's governor nominates it and the Secretary finds that the site is a good example of its estuary type for long-term research and helps balance the System, that the state law protects the site long-term, that the site will help public education and awareness, and that the state follows the Secretary's rules. The Secretary must make research rules that set priorities, common goals, standard methods, and performance measures, and must help find extra funding. The Secretary will encourage NOAA and other agencies to use the reserves for research. The Secretary may give grants for buying land, running reserves, building facilities, education, and research. Land grants may pay up to 50% of costs or $5,000,000, whichever is less. Other grants may pay up to 70% of costs, except education that helps the whole System can be 100% funded. Money from coastal natural resource damage recoveries can pay 100% of costs. The Secretary will check reserves regularly, can stop funding until problems are fixed, and can remove a reserve if the original reasons for designation no longer apply or research repeatedly fails to follow the rules. The Secretary must report on new reserves, expansions, research status, and evaluations.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1461
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73