Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 27— - TRIBALLY CONTROLLED SCHOOL GRANTS › § 2505
If the Secretary finds a tribally controlled school eligible for help under this law, that decision stays in effect until the Secretary takes it away. Schools that get grants must file yearly reports that include a financial statement, an annual audit under the Single Audit Act of 1984, a procurement audit every two years, a count of students and a short program description, and a program evaluation by an impartial review team. Other tribal schools or tribally controlled community college reps can join those review teams when appropriate. Accredited schools follow their accreditation schedule. After the report is done, the school sends a copy to its tribal governing body by first-class mail with return receipt, and then sends a copy to the Secretary within 30 days after the tribal governing body confirms it got the report. The Secretary cannot remove a school’s eligibility if the reports are filed and one of these is true: the school is accredited or a candidate for accreditation; the Secretary expects accreditation within 3 years (the school stays under the Bureau standards that were in effect on January 8, 2002, unless an accreditor’s standards conflict); the school has tribal accreditation accepted by a regional or State agency; or, for schools without accreditation, a positive impartial evaluation every 3 years using standards adopted under a contract made before January 8, 2002. If the Secretary plans to revoke eligibility, they must tell the school and tribal governing body the exact problems and needed fixes, give time and technical help to correct them, and offer a hearing and an appeal. Schools that chose the option under section 2507(b) must follow these same reporting and protection rules.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 2505
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73