Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 110— - ENHANCING CONTROLS ON DANGEROUS BIOLOGICAL AGENTS AND TOXINS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - INTERAGENCY COORDINATION REGARDING OVERLAP AGENTS AND TOXINS › § 8411
The Agriculture Secretary and the Health and Human Services Secretary must work together on biological agents and toxins that are covered by both their programs. Overlap agent or toxin means an agent or toxin that is listed under both the HHS program (section 351A) and the Agriculture program (section 212). The section 351A program is the HHS program under section 351A. The section 212 program is the Agriculture program under section 212. They must coordinate to avoid conflicting rules, reduce paperwork for people who fall under both programs, make sure these agents stay available for legitimate research and teaching, and make sure registration information appears in both national databases. Soon after June 12, 2002, the two Secretaries must make a written agreement (an MOU) that sets up a single registration system for people who must register under both programs. The MOU must create one form, let people send that form to either agency, make the agencies share the form and agree that registration rules are met, and enter registrations into both national databases. It must also let people who give certain identity information to the Attorney General optionally submit that information once to either agency and require the agencies to share the Attorney General’s response and agree on access decisions. The MOU must be in place within 180 days after June 12, 2002, and until the single system works, people must register with both programs. Within 18 months after the single system starts, the two Secretaries must issue joint rules that meet both programs’ requirements.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 8411
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73