Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle E— Reserve Components › Part I— ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION › Chapter 1013— BUDGET INFORMATION AND ANNUAL REPORTS TO CONGRESS › § 10541
Each year, by March 15, the Secretary of Defense must send Congress a written report about National Guard and reserve equipment for the next three fiscal years. The report must recommend the type and number of major items the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve should have. It must list how many of each major item are on hand and their average age at the start of each year, and show how many and at what cost will be bought from companies or moved from active forces. It must say what equipment will be retired or removed and how it will be replaced. For every major item the report must show wartime needs by successive 30-day periods, current inventory, deployable items that are not the best version, projected inventory at the end of the third year, and nondeployable substitutes. The report must explain how shortages will be fixed, update past procurement promises, report Army/Reserve equipment compatibility and a plan to fix it, and assess Guard equipment for emergency or disaster duties (as defined in section 102 of the Robert T. Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5122)), including shortfalls, effects, and investment needs. A joint Army and Guard review must compare parity for high-priority items (for example AH–64, UH–60, Abrams, Bradley, Stryker). The report must follow the same format and detail as the Defense Department’s Five Year Defense Program Procurement Annex and include a review of past projection accuracy and a Chief of the National Guard Bureau certification of items funded or due but not received by the end of the prior fiscal year.
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Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 10541
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60