Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 101— - JUSTICE SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - OFFICE OF JUSTICE PROGRAMS › § 10104
The Director can use money to run Weed and Seed strategies to stop violent crime, drug crimes, and gang activity in chosen neighborhoods. Each strategy must have two parts. Weeding activities: law enforcement actions like arrests and punishments for people who commit violent or drug crimes. Seeding activities: services and neighborhood rebuilding, such as drug education, mentoring, job help, treatment, enforcing building codes, and economic development. The Director must issue rules for how to make and carry out these strategies. Each strategy must be planned and run by a local steering committee that includes law enforcement, other public and private groups, neighborhood organizations, the Drug Enforcement Administration’s special agent in charge, and the United States Attorney as voting members. The plan must show how everyone will work together and must include community policing to link the Weeding and Seeding parts. The steering committee must get the U.S. Attorney’s certification that the area has high crime or needs the program, that the plan can work, and that the committee can run it. The community must agree to try to keep the program going after federal help ends. The Director can give grants to communities, but not for major construction unless the Assistant Attorney General approves small work. Grants can’t last more than 10 fiscal years in total, or more than 5 separate years (the Assistant Attorney General may allow up to 3 extra separate years for extraordinary reasons), and the total federal money can't exceed $1,000,000 (with up to $500,000 more only for extraordinary reasons). The government will try to spread grants fairly across urban and rural areas and give priority to places that coordinate with other federal programs. Federal funds usually may cover up to 75% of project costs (in cash or in kind), unless the Assistant Attorney General waives that for fair reasons. Applicants must promise grant money will add to, not replace, other local funding.
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Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 10104
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73