Title 23 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS › § 176
Creates the PROTECT program to give money for making roads, bridges, ports, and transit systems stronger against storms, floods, sea level rise, wildfires, earthquakes, and other disasters. Key words: an "emergency event" means a state or Presidential disaster; an "evacuation route" means a public route used to move people or responders during an emergency; the "program" is the PROTECT program; a "resilience improvement" means material, design, or natural solutions that help transportation keep working during and after disasters. The program gives formula money to States, and competitive planning grants and competitive construction or improvement grants to protect transportation assets, communities (including evacuation routes and access to hospitals and ports), coastal infrastructure at long-term risk, and natural infrastructure that helps transportation. States must use funds for eligible resilience or planning work, and at least 2 percent of each State’s yearly apportioned amount must go to planning activities. Planning grants can be 100 percent federally paid. Most projects can get up to 80 percent federal funding, but Indian tribes may get up to 100 percent at the Secretary’s discretion. A State may use up to 40 percent of its funds for new capacity and up to 10 percent for certain planning development costs. The Secretary will run a national competition, prioritize projects where benefits exceed costs or where risks are high or projects are in a resilience plan, and set rules for eligible applicants (States, local governments, MPOs, tribes, port authorities, Federal land agencies working with States, and multijurisdiction groups). The Secretary must adopt evaluation metrics within 18 months (after public notice and comment), require project sponsors to report within 1 year after completion, publish an annual program report to Congress and the public, and send a 5-year report to Congress. At least 25 percent of competitive grant funds each year must go to areas outside urbanized places with population over 200,000, and at least 2 percent must go to Indian tribes. The Secretary may keep up to 5 percent of funds for grant review and oversight. Projects funded under the program are treated as Federal-aid highway projects.
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Highways — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
23 U.S.C. § 176
Title 23 — Highways
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73