Title 44 › Chapter CHAPTER 19— - DEPOSITORY LIBRARY PROGRAM › § 1909
Only libraries that can safely keep and serve government documents, that are placed where people need them, and that are not in areas already served may be named by Senators, Representatives, the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico, the Commissioner of the District of Columbia, or the Governors of Guam, American Samoa, or the Virgin Islands as government depositories. Named libraries must report to the Superintendent of Documents at least every two years about their condition. The Superintendent will check problems that are reported and put the results in his annual report. If the Superintendent finds a library has fewer than 10,000 non‑government books, is no longer kept open to the public, or is not properly caring for government publications, he will remove it if the problems are not fixed within six months. The official who named the library (or the proper local official) will be told and may pick another qualifying library in the same area, as long as the total number of depository libraries does not go over the limit allowed by law for that State, district, territory, or Puerto Rico.
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Public Printing and Documents — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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44 U.S.C. § 1909
Title 44 — Public Printing and Documents
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73