Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle IV— - Regulation of Ocean Shipping › Part Part D— - Federal Maritime Commission › Chapter CHAPTER 461— - FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION › § 46101
Creates the Federal Maritime Commission as an independent U.S. agency. It has five Commissioners chosen by the President and confirmed by the Senate. No more than three can be from the same political party. Commissioners serve five-year terms and may stay on up to two extra years until a successor is ready. Normally a person may not serve more than three terms. A vacancy is filled the same way and the appointee serves only the rest of that term; that partial term does not stop the person from later serving three full terms. Commissioners cannot have money interests, official ties, or own stock in businesses the Commission regulates under chapter 401, and they cannot hold other jobs. The President may remove a Commissioner for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance. The President picks one Commissioner to be Chairman. The Chairman is the chief executive and must follow the Commission’s policies and decisions except when carrying out the Chairman’s specific duties. The Chairman hires and supervises staff, appoints major unit heads with Commission approval, assigns work, controls administrative spending, assigns personnel (including Commissioners) to duties under section 46104, prepares appropriation requests with Commission approval, and may delegate tasks. The Commission has an official seal courts will recognize.
Full Legal Text
Shipping — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 46101
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73