Title 16 › Chapter 67— AQUATIC NUISANCE PREVENTION AND CONTROL › Subchapter III— PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF AQUATIC NUISANCE SPECIES DISPERSAL › § 4730
EPA must create a program inside its Great Lakes office to find, track, and help stop invasive water species in the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain. Key terms: "Administrator" means the EPA Administrator; "Director" means the head of the Great Lakes National Program Office; "aquatic nuisance species" means the invasive water plants or animals defined elsewhere; "Great Lakes and Lake Champlain Systems" means Lake Champlain and the waters in the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain drainage areas; and "Program" means this new invasive-species program. The Program must work with other federal agencies and certain NOAA labs. Its jobs include watching for new invasive species and how they spread, catching them early, helping managers respond, keeping a watch list of likely invaders, tracking ways they move (like ballast water), setting monitoring priorities with States and Tribes, developing and testing ballast water systems for commercial vessels that only operate in the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain, and helping States carry out monitoring, education, inspections, and enforcement. The Director must share program data and an annual summary online and set up ways to notify people about new detections. A report on program results was due to Congress by December 31, 2019, with descriptions, analysis, and recommendations. Up to $50,000,000 is authorized each year for fiscal years 2019 through 2023 to run the Program.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 4730
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60