Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXXV— - WOLF TRAP NATIONAL PARK FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS › § 284c
The Secretary can give the Foundation a grant of $9,000,000 to rebuild the Center. The money will be released as needed and only if the Foundation promises to raise enough non‑Federal money in time to finish the work. The Secretary can also make loans to the Foundation equal to twice the non‑Federal money the Foundation provides, but total loans cannot be more than $8,000,000. Normally loans must be repaid with interest set by the Treasury and the loan term is no more than five years. For loans already outstanding on the effective date, the repayment period is limited to 25 years starting then, with equal annual payments starting June 1, 1991. The first three payments are $215,000 each. Each yearly payment can be reduced by up to $60,000 if public‑service tickets (valued at box office prices) are donated to qualified charities. Any interest that built up before the effective date is forgiven. If the Foundation updates its agreement with the Secretary within 120 days to follow these rules and related terms, there will be no interest after the effective date; if it does not, interest continues. The Secretary must give a payment schedule within 120 days. If the Foundation misses payments for more than 60 days, the Secretary may end the cooperative agreement. In a major disaster or bad economy, the Secretary may ask Congress to suspend this rule and must show the Foundation’s finances. Grants and loans can be made only after the Foundation signs a written agreement to spend the funds under Federal grant rules, follow other terms the Secretary sets, and keep insurance on the Center during the cooperative agreement at its own cost. The Secretary will oversee the rebuilding and approve the plans, location, and design. The Foundation will run the construction and hire architects, engineers, and builders under the required rules. Grants or loans also require a written FAA assurance that any easement for the Dulles Toll Road will include enforceable noise limits (A‑weighted average of 52 to 54 dB) and other protections from the 1982 Final Environmental Impact Statement, and that Virginia will act quickly to meet those noise limits (for example, by restricting truck traffic or other fixes). The Secretary may also provide requested support services to the Foundation on a reimbursable basis.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 284c
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73