Title 16 › Chapter 33— COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT › § 1462
The Secretary must regularly consult with Congress and must write a report every two fiscal years. The report goes to the President so it reaches Congress no later than April 1 after the two-year period ends. The report must describe approved state coastal programs and list the states taking part, show how federal coastal funds were allocated and what projects were paid for, name any state programs that were reviewed and turned down and why, summarize evaluation findings under section 1458 and any sanctions under that section, list projects found inconsistent with approved state plans under section 1456, summarize regulations in effect, outline a coordinated national coastal strategy and the roles of federal, regional, state, and local governments, list the main problems in order of priority, describe economic, environmental, and social effects of energy activity on the coast and evaluate assistance under section 1456a, describe interstate and regional planning efforts, summarize research and training, and include any other appropriate information. The report must also say what new laws the Secretary thinks are needed. The Secretary must review other federal programs that affect coastal resources to find conflicts with this chapter. Not later than 1 year after October 17, 1980, the Secretary must tell each federal agency about any conflicts found. The Secretary must promptly send Congress a report with those findings and recommendations to fix conflicts.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1462
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60