Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 5B— - WILDLIFE RESTORATION › § 669h
The Secretary of the Interior may spend the available money only for administration that directly supports running this program. Allowed costs include employee pay for hours spent on the program (certified by supervisors); support costs tied to those employees (but not general regional office staffing unless it is for this program); review costs to decide if State plans and projects are substantial; overhead and general admin costs based on actual cost allocations approved by the Office of Management and Budget or, if not measurable, an amount per employee that does not exceed what other Fish and Wildlife Service programs pay per full‑time equivalent; audits of State fish and game departments every 5 years and other required audits; training for Federal and State staff who run the program; travel to States, territories, and Canada for program work and to administer certain grants; travel outside the United States (not including Canada) only if approved by the Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks; relocation expenses for staff who will work on the program at least 1 year (paid in proportion to the share of their work time spent on the program); and costs to audit, evaluate, approve, deny, or advise on grants under sections 669e, 669h–1, and 669h–2. If the Secretary wants to use the funds for other kinds of administrative expenses, the Secretary must send a report to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works and the House Committee on Resources describing the expense and amount, and must wait 30 days before using the money. The Secretary may do this for no more than $25,000 in any fiscal year. The funds may not be used to add to funding for functions that already get general appropriations for the Fish and Wildlife Service or other Interior offices. The Inspector General of the Department of the Interior must hire an independent auditor every two years, using competitive bidding, to audit spending under generally accepted accounting rules. The auditor reports to the Inspector General and also gives the Secretary a copy. The Inspector General must promptly send the audit and a report on the results to the House Committee on Resources and the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 669h
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73