Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - RECLAMATION AND IRRIGATION OF LANDS BY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XVII— - LEGISLATION APPLICABLE TO PARTICULAR PROJECTS GENERALLY › § 600c
Only construction costs tied to flood control and, if the President approves a proper plan, to protecting and increasing fish and wildlife, plus the operation and maintenance costs for those purposes, do not have to be paid back. No building can start and no contract can be signed until two things happen. First, Congress must approve the interstate compact between New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas agreed to on December 6, 1950, under Public Law 491, Eighty-first Congress. Second, repayment of the part of the actual construction cost for municipal and industrial water supply, plus interest on the unpaid balance at a rate the Secretary of the Treasury certifies (that rate equals the average U.S. long-term loan rate at the time the repayment contract is negotiated minus any net revenues from temporary water contracts or other sources before repayment ends), must be guaranteed by a single repayment contract the Secretary accepts. That contract cannot last more than fifty years after the municipal and industrial water supply parts are finished. The contract must give its holder first claim to a stated share of the project’s water during repayment and a permanent share after repayment, allow transfer of care and operation of the delivery pipes to the holder or an approved designee, and transfer title to those parts when all related U.S. obligations are paid.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
43 U.S.C. § 600c
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73