Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - GRAIN STANDARDS › § 87e
The Secretary can investigate and hold hearings, ask for reports, and make rules needed to carry out the grain inspection and weighing program. The rules can require certain equipment in grain storage and handling places, approval of ships and other carriers, and let people who have money tied up in the grain watch the weighing, loading, and inspection. The Secretary can use tests to decide if any certificate or description of grain is false or misleading. License refusals, suspensions, or revocations do not use the usual federal administrative hearing rules unless the person asks for them. The Secretary must also set up fast procedures to investigate complaints, including complaints by foreign buyers, canceled export contracts, or other problems, and must act on the findings. The Secretary can send inspectors to big foreign buyers to check U.S. grain on arrival and compare its kind, quality, condition, and quantity to what was certified in the United States. The Department’s Office of Investigation (or a delegated unit) will handle investigations needed to protect inspection and weighing integrity. The Department will work with other agencies on research to improve grain grading accuracy. The Secretary must provide enough staff to keep grain moving on time. The Secretary may test weighing and inspection equipment for a reasonable fee that covers costs, may offer other services for fees to cover costs, and must deposit those fees into the fund under section 79(j). Gifts to foreign officials may be given but cannot be more than $20 in value.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 87e
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73