Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - FISHERY CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - NATIONAL FISHERY MANAGEMENT PROGRAM › § 1861a
The Secretary of Commerce (NOAA) can decide when a fishery has suffered a resource disaster and can give money to states, Indian Tribes, or other eligible groups to help. Governors, Tribal councils, or other elected or politically appointed representatives can ask for a disaster review. Requests must be made within 1 year after the fishing season ends (2 years if the cause spans more than one season, or 1 year after a complete fishery closure is declared). The Secretary must acknowledge a request within 20 days, finish a scientific and economic review within 120 days after a complete request or after the season ends, and tell the requester the decision within 14 days after the review. The Secretary uses 12-month revenue loss rules: losses over 80% are likely a disaster, losses between 35% and 80% are reviewed for severity, and losses under 35% are not eligible. If a disaster is found, funds (up to $377,000,000 authorized for fiscal years 2023–2027) may be allocated for habitat work, research and data, capacity reduction, infrastructure fixes, direct economic help, hatcheries, and similar recovery actions. A spend plan must be sent within 120 days after funds are offered; the Secretary must say if it is complete within 10 days and provide funds within 90 days of a complete plan. Federal funding normally covers up to 75% of project costs, but the Secretary can waive requirements or pay 100% for direct assistance or for subsistence or Tribal fisheries. NOAA administrative costs are capped at 3% and States/Tribes at 5%. Key defined terms (one line each): allowable cause — a natural, human, or unknown cause, including events up to 5 years before a request; anthropogenic cause — a human-caused event (like an oil spill) that managers could not prevent or fix; fishery resource disaster — an unexpected big drop in fish or access that causes large revenue loss or harms subsistence, excluding normal cycles or routine conservation actions; Indian Tribe — the meaning in 25 U.S.C. 5130; natural cause — weather, climate, ocean, or disease events (hurricane, flood, harmful algal bloom, tsunami, hypoxia, drought, El Niño, marine heat wave, disease) but not normal cycles; 12-month revenue loss — percent revenue drop in the 12 months of the disaster versus the average of the most recent 5 non-disaster years; undetermined cause — when the exact cause cannot be identified. Voluntary fishing capacity-reduction programs can also be run to lower excess fishing capacity. Owners can be paid if they permanently give up permits and scrap or permanently disable vessels. These programs must aim to stop overfishing, fit fishery plans, and can be paid by appropriations, fees (capped at 5% of ex-vessel value), or other sources; fee-funded plans need approval by a majority of permit holders or 50% of permitted allocation. The Secretary must write rules and may run auctions or bid systems for program participation.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1861a
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73