Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 30— - OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF CAPITOL COMPLEX › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - HISTORICAL PRESERVATION AND FINE ARTS › Part Part B— - Senate Commission on Art › § 2108
Gives the Senate Commission on Art the power to accept money gifts and to acquire art, historical objects, documents, or exhibits for placement or display in the Senate wing of the Capitol and in Senate office buildings. Items the Commission gets can be kept for the United States Senate Collection or sold or otherwise disposed of, after the Commission consults the Curatorial Advisory Board. Creates a Curatorial Advisory Board, led by the Senate Curator, to advise the Commission about buying, caring for, and disposing of items. The Commission can set up other short-term advisory boards (terms up to 4 years and renewable). Members are chosen from public or private life, Curatorial Board members must be experts in arts or historic preservation, and members can be reimbursed for needed expenses but are not Senate employees and cannot bind the Senate. The Commission, working with the Senate Rules Committee, can make rules for these boards and the Executive Secretary will help them. Sets up the "Senate Preservation Fund" in the Treasury to hold appropriations, gifts, and sale proceeds. The fund pays for acquisition and transaction costs, advisory board activities, other uses allowed for the Senate contingent fund, and up to $10,000 per fiscal year for meals or refreshments tied to official Commission activities. The Treasury may invest spare funds in U.S. obligations as the Commission approves, and interest and investment proceeds go back into the fund. The Commission approves payments and the Executive Secretary signs vouchers. For conservation or restoration projects costing more than $100,000, the Commission can transfer fund money to the Architect of the Capitol under approved project rules; transfers can be returned if unused and the transfer authority expires 10 years after it began. The Library of Congress can provide financial services by agreement, and the Government Accountability Office must audit the fund at least once every 3 years and report to the Commission.
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The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
2 U.S.C. § 2108
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73