Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 55— - DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE › § 2204b
The Secretary of Agriculture must lead and coordinate a nationwide rural development program using federal agencies and work with state and local programs. The Secretary must review federal programs to see if rural places get a fair share compared to cities and to find what keeps rural people from using those programs. Under the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a), the Secretary can get needed information from other federal agencies. The Secretary must set up a way to collect and review needs and ideas from multistate, state, local, and substate areas, and can use experts or temporary advisory committees. The Secretary may make cooperative agreements with federal, state, and local governments and other groups, and partners may contribute money or other resources. The Secretary can hold public hearings and take comments on matters that affect rural development. The Secretary must write a comprehensive rural development strategy based on local and regional needs to make federal programs more effective, better coordinated, and to blend federal, state, and local resources. The strategy must consider improving the economic well-being of all rural residents (including low-income, elderly, minority, and disadvantaged people) and cover areas like jobs, training, health care, education, energy, housing, transportation, community services and facilities, water and waste systems, credit and access to financing, government management and training, support for family farms, and protection of the environment and natural resources. The first strategy is for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1982, and must be updated every year. The Secretary must hold hearings while making the strategy and updates, and send them to the House Committee on Agriculture and the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry by January 31 before the fiscal year. Each strategy and update must analyze the President’s budget recommendations and projections, report how the prior year’s strategy was carried out, suggest any needed legislation, and evaluate the rural development information system required under section 1926(a)(12). The Secretary must also work to improve agency coordination, remove duplication and gaps, co-locate or combine field offices when helpful, speed up joint funding, fix administrative delays, and simplify applications and reports.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2204b
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73