Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - WETLAND CONSERVATION › § 3822
The Secretary of Agriculture must find, map, and officially say which areas on farm land are wetlands. The Secretary must put wetlands on maps and try to visit the land in person before mapping if someone asks. People who are affected must be told. The Secretary must say if a map can be used to decide whether someone loses program loans or payments, and people can appeal that decision before it is final. A final map stays in effect while the land is used for farming or until the owner asks for a review. If someone appeals, the Secretary must check the mapping and do an on-site inspection, usually with the person present unless the Secretary tried reasonably to include them. No one can be hurt by a new review if they acted based on an earlier official map they relied on. People do not lose program loans or payments in many specific cases. These include several kinds of converted wetlands and certain man-made or temporary wet areas (for example, conversions started before December 23, 1985; nontidal drainage or irrigation ditches in uplands; wet spots from irrigation; artificial ponds used for livestock, fish, rice, cranberry growing, flood control, or similar uses; or wetlands made temporary by nearby development). Restored or voluntarily created wetlands that were manipulated before December 23, 1985, may be treated specially if the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) documents and approves the work. The Secretary can also allow actions if the loss of wetland value is minimal, or if the person replaces the wetland functions by restoring, enhancing, or creating wetlands under rules: follow a wetland plan, do the work before or during the action, not use federal money for the work, meet 1-for-1 acreage for restoration/enhancement unless more is needed, create more than 1-for-1 only if needed, place mitigation in the same local watershed, and record an easement that keeps the replacement wetland protected. Conversions after December 23, 1985 but before November 28, 1990 may qualify if they meet these rules. The NRCS must do technical checks and plans. The Secretary can waive penalties for people who acted in good faith, give up to 1 year to start restoring, and may run or help set up mitigation banks; $5,000,000 is authorized for each fiscal year 2019 through 2023 for that work.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3822
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73