Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 36— - INDIAN EMPLOYMENT, TRAINING AND RELATED SERVICES › § 3407
The Secretary is the only official who can approve or reject an Indian tribe’s plan under section 3405. After the Secretary gets a plan, they must work with each federal agency that will fund the plan and then approve or deny it within 90 days. If approved, the Secretary must allow the program funds to be moved as section 3412 says. If denied, the Secretary must send a written notice that explains exactly why the plan fails and give legal support for that decision. If the denial is only because a requested waiver (under section 3406) isn't decided yet, the tribe can ask for partial approval of the rest of the plan, and the Secretary must grant that. Once the waiver is resolved, the Secretary must approve the plan or an amended plan within 90 days of getting the tribe’s request. If no decision is made within 90 days, the plan is treated as approved. The Secretary may extend the 90 days for up to 90 more days, but only with the tribe’s express written consent before the first period ends. If a plan is denied, the Secretary must list objections in writing and help the tribe try to fix them. Unless the tribe sues right away, the tribe gets a formal hearing with full discovery and a chance to appeal under rules the Secretary creates. Tribes may also go to U.S. district court without waiting for a hearing or appeal. The court can order relief, including reversing a denial or forcing officials to do their duties under the law. Any final agency decision on an internal appeal must be made by a higher-level Department official than the one who made the original decision, or by an administrative law judge.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 3407
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73