Title 33 › Chapter CHAPTER 42— - ESTUARY RESTORATION › § 2903
A program is set up to restore estuary habitats. The Secretary may run projects and give technical help through contracts or cooperative agreements. Project proposals must come from non-Federal partners and follow State or local law. The Secretary chooses projects from a list sent by the Estuary Habitat Restoration Council. Chosen projects must match needs in a restoration plan, follow the overall strategy, include a monitoring plan that meets standards, and show the non-Federal partner has the people, money, and authority to do local work and keep the project maintained. In picking projects, the Secretary looks at things like whether the project fits an approved plan, is technically and scientifically sound, helps government agencies work together, builds public-private partnerships and private contributions, is cost-effective, and whether the State has funding for habitat protection. Projects get priority if they are in a watershed with a program fixing pollution that would otherwise undo the work, or if they test or demo a new technology or approach that could lower costs. Federal money can pay up to 65% of a project’s cost (not counting operation and maintenance). Monitoring costs can be included in the project cost and must measure success and allow adaptive management. For the extra cost of testing or demonstrating an innovative approach, the Federal share of that added cost can be 85%. Before the full restoration strategy is finished, Federal support for interim actions is limited to 25%. The non-Federal share can be money or in-kind items like land, easements, rights-of-way, relocations, or services, and non-Federal partners must pay for long-term operation, maintenance, repair, and replacement. A written agreement is required before a project starts, and NGOs can act as the non-Federal partner. The Secretary may delegate project work to other Federal agencies on a reimbursable basis if recommended by the Council. A "small project" is one with an estimated Federal cost under $1,000,000. Small projects can be delegated to Interior (through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service), Commerce (Under Secretary for Oceans and Atmosphere), EPA, or Agriculture, and those agencies may use available funds to carry them out under similar agreement and cost-share rules.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
33 U.S.C. § 2903
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73