Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 31— - INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - CORPORATION FOR TRAVEL PROMOTION › § 2131
Creates a nonprofit called the Corporation for Travel Promotion to boost travel to the United States. The group will have an 11-member board of U.S. citizens picked by the Secretary of Commerce after talking with the Secretaries of Homeland Security and State. The board must include people with experience in areas like hotels, restaurants, small business or retail, travel distribution, attractions, city convention offices, two state tourism officials, commercial air travel, immigration law, and land or sea passenger transport. At least 5 board members must have worked for U.S. multinational companies with marketing budgets and at least 2 must be audit committee financial experts. Board members serve 3-year terms (with staggered first terms), can be removed for good cause, may not be federal employees, and get no federal pay but may be paid travel expenses and per diem under section 5703 of title 5. The Corporation hires an executive director and other U.S. citizen officers and employees, must follow ethical rules, may not issue stock or support political parties, and should avoid lobbying. The Corporation must make and run a plan to give useful travel information, correct wrong ideas about U.S. entry rules, and promote travel to all States and territories, including rural areas, using advertising and digital media. Meetings are public except for limited reasons. The board cannot approve more than $25,000,000 for any single campaign unless two-thirds vote, at least 6 members attend, and there is 5 days’ notice. The fiscal year starts October 1. The Corporation must adopt a budget, publish an annual independent audit, send an annual report to the Secretary by May 15, and follow performance metrics. A Travel Promotion Fund in the Treasury will provide up to $10,000,000 initially and up to $20,000,000 per year for fiscal years 2012–2027 from a specific immigration fee, but after fiscal year 2011 the Corporation must match those transfers with non‑Federal funds (50% match for 2012, 100% match after 2012). In‑kind contributions may count toward the match but no more than half. Procedures and performance rules had to be put in place by deadlines after December 16, 2014, and the Corporation must use competitive procurement and report compliance.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 2131
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73