Title 16 › Chapter 33— COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT › § 1461
Creates the National Estuarine Research Reserve System from estuarine sanctuaries in place before April 7, 1986, plus areas added later. The Secretary can add a new reserve only after the state governor nominates it and only if the area represents its estuary type, has state laws that protect it long-term, will help public education about estuaries, and the state follows the Secretary’s rules. The Secretary must write research guidelines that set research priorities, common goals, standard methods so data can be compared, performance measures, and ways to find extra research funding. The Secretary must also push agencies, including NOAA, to use the reserves for research. The Secretary can make grants to states and to public or private groups for buying land, managing reserves, building facilities, education, and research. Land-buying grants are limited to 50% of cost or $5,000,000 per reserve, whichever is less. Other grants are generally limited to 70% of costs, but some System-wide education or certain damage-recovery funds can cover 100%. States must provide title documents to protect U.S. interests when federal money helps buy property. The Secretary must check each reserve regularly, can suspend funding for problems, and can remove a reserve if the original reasons for designation no longer apply or research repeatedly fails to follow the guidelines. The Secretary must report on new sites, expansions, research status, and evaluation results.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1461
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60