Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 47— - RECLAMATION TITLE TRANSFER › § 2904
Requires the Secretary to make rules for when a federal facility can be transferred to another party. Any group that wants a facility must take title, keep using it mostly for the same purposes, and pay into the reclamation fund established by section 391 an amount equal to the net present value of any repayment obligation or other income the United States gets from the facility as of the transfer date. The Secretary must be able to agree on the legal, institutional, and financial details of a transfer. The Secretary must find the transfer will not cause unmitigated significant environmental harm, meets trustee duties to federally recognized Indian Tribes, follows treaties and interstate compacts, is in the financial interest of the United States, protects public aspects like water rights used for flood control or fish and wildlife, follows Federal and State law, and will not harm existing water delivery obligations under historical operations and contracts. For dams or diversion works affecting waters with species listed under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), the facility must keep at least the same protections for those species and must not be part of the Central Valley Project in California. Land to be transferred must be land the Secretary acquired or withdrawn; withdrawn land can be transferred only if the Secretary says in writing it is tied up with facilities and the buyer pays fair market value based on historical or existing uses. Transfers must not hurt Federal power rates, repayment obligations, or other project power uses.
Full Legal Text
Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 2904
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73