Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - PROTECTION OF TIMBER, AND DEPREDATIONS › § 620f
The Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior must work together to write matching rules for the lands they manage to carry out sections 620 to 620j. The Secretary of Commerce must also make any rules and guidance needed. New rules were required by June 1, 1998, and rules that were in effect before September 8, 1995 remain in place until the new ones are issued. The rules can require painting, branding, or other marking and tracking of unprocessed timber if the benefits are bigger than the costs and if marking will reduce illegal export or substitution. Marks cannot be put on a log face under 7 inches in diameter or on pieces under 8 feet long or under one‑third sound wood. The responsible Secretary can waive marking or recordkeeping in certain low‑risk areas, for private timber that will be processed at a named U.S. mill, or under log yard agreements. Waivers should be reviewed about once a year and stay in effect until ended. The Secretaries must also review the definition of unprocessed timber and, within 18 months after August 20, 1990, send Congress any recommendations, especially about keeping two size standards in section 620e.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
16 U.S.C. § 620f
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73