Title 33 › Chapter CHAPTER 26— - WATER POLLUTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - STANDARDS AND ENFORCEMENT › § 1321b
The Secretary of the department that runs the Coast Guard must finish a tribal consultation policy within 6 months after October 15, 2010. The policy must protect tribal treaty rights and trust assets and improve how the Coast Guard works with federally recognized tribes on oil spill prevention, planning, response, and damage assessment. If the Coast Guard finds a spill likely to harm natural or cultural resources owned or used by a tribe, it must, as soon as possible, include tribal representatives in the spill command team, share spill information with the tribe, and involve the tribe in response decisions when practicable. The Coast Guard can make written agreements and plans with tribes to set up cooperative oil pollution work and to give grants or contracts, even before the consultation policy is finished. Those agreements can cover help with national and local spill plans, building tribal response ability, coordination on regional response teams co‑chaired by the Coast Guard and EPA, training for tribal incident commanders and responders, demonstration projects to protect treaty rights and trust assets, and other needed actions. If money is available, the Coast Guard Commandant must help tribes carry out these agreements. Up to $500,000 is authorized for each of fiscal years 2010 through 2014 for this work.
Full Legal Text
Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
33 U.S.C. § 1321b
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73