Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 31— - DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR › § 1474d
Half of the money the Supreme Court awarded to the United States in United States of America v. State of Alaska (117 S.Ct. 1888) must be put into a new Treasury account called the Environmental Improvement and Restoration Fund. The Treasury must invest the Fund in interest‑bearing U.S. obligations, which it may buy on original issue or on the market and may sell at market price. All interest earned goes back into the Fund. Each year, interest earned in the prior fiscal year is available for use: 80 percent (as provided in later appropriations) is split equally for the Directors of the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management, and the Chief of the Forest Service for high‑priority maintenance and upgrades that improve visitor experience and protect resources, and for payments to Louisiana and its lessees for oil and gas drainage in the West Delta field. The Secretary must include a list of priority projects with the annual budget. The remaining 20 percent goes, without more approval, to the Secretary of Commerce for North Pacific marine research. The Commerce funds must pay grants to federal, state, private, or foreign groups or individuals to study fisheries and marine ecosystems in the North Pacific, Bering Sea, Arctic Ocean, and related waters. A North Pacific Research Board reviews priorities and grant requests, avoids duplicate work, and favors cooperative projects that meet management or ecosystem needs. The Board includes federal agency leaders, Alaska and regional representatives, and nominated public members with set roles (fishing, Alaska Natives, environment, academia, oil and gas, plus other state nominees). The Secretary of Commerce reviews Board recommendations and must explain in writing any disapproval. The Board sets competitive grant rules, gets administrative support, and may use up to 15 percent of Commerce’s research funds for Board support; NOAA may raise that cap in a lower funding year to keep the Board running and preserve research quality. Board decisions are made by a majority of five specified members, who may act for the Board starting October 1, 2000.
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43 U.S.C. § 1474d
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73