Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 5B— - WILDLIFE RESTORATION › § 669c
The Secretary of the Interior may use part of the money put into the fund each year to pay administrative costs. For fiscal year 2001 and later, the amount available each year starts with a base and is adjusted by the yearly change in the Consumer Price Index. For the fiscal year that includes November 15, 2021, the available amount is $12,786,434 multiplied by that CPI change. Each year after that, the available amount is the previous year’s amount plus that amount times the CPI change. That available amount can be used until the end of the next fiscal year. Sixty days after a fiscal year ends, any of that available amount that was not spent must be divided among the States in the same way other funds were divided that year. After taking out those administrative amounts, certain set apportionments, and grants, the rest of the fund is split half by state land area and half by the number of paid hunting-license holders from the second fiscal year before the apportionment. No State gets less than 0.5 percent or more than 5 percent of those amounts. A fiscal year runs from October 1 through September 30 (but hunting-license counts follow each State’s license year). Half of the yearly excise tax revenues from pistols, revolvers, bows, and arrows (starting in fiscal year 1975) is divided by state population. Each State gets at least 1 percent and at most 3 percent of that money; Guam, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Puerto Rico, and the Northern Mariana Islands each get one-sixth of 1 percent. Up to 3 percent of amounts sent to the Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Account can pay Federal administrative costs. Small jurisdictions get set small shares (District of Columbia and Puerto Rico up to 0.5 percent each; Guam, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, and Northern Mariana up to 0.25 percent each). The rest is split one-third by land area and two-thirds by population, with each State getting at least 1 percent and at most 5 percent. Any State fish and wildlife department may apply to the Secretary for money from the Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Account. The State must send a comprehensive plan that names the State wildlife agency in charge, describes conservation, recreation, and education projects, ensures public participation, and within five years starts a science-based wildlife conservation strategy. That strategy must list important species and habitats, identify problems, set conservation priorities and actions, include monitoring and periodic review (at least every ten years), and coordinate with other agencies and tribes. If the Secretary approves the plan, up to 75 percent of the estimated cost to develop and run the program may be set aside. The Secretary may pay for projects as they progress, but payments cannot exceed the United States’ pro rata share. No more than 10 percent of a State’s apportioned program money may be used for wildlife‑associated recreation. "State" also includes the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
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Citation
16 U.S.C. § 669c
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73