Title 16 › Chapter 90— SECURE RURAL SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY SELF-DETERMINATION › Subchapter II— SPECIAL PROJECTS ON FEDERAL LAND › § 7125
The Secretary in charge must set up and keep resource advisory committees to give advice to the land agencies and help build cooperative relationships. Each committee normally has 15 unpaid members who serve 4-year terms and can be reappointed. Members must live in the state the committee covers. The Secretary can make committees for parts of a federal land unit and can accept committees that already met the rules if their charter was filed on or before December 20, 2023. If not enough people want to serve, the Secretary can cut a committee to as few as 9 members (3 in each of the 3 interest categories), but that temporary option ends on October 1, 2026. The Secretary must make initial appointments within 180 days after October 3, 2008 and fill vacancies quickly. A majority of members picks the chair. Meetings must have a quorum, be announced at least 1 week in a local paper, be open to the public, and keep records. Committees can ask for federal staff help. Committees must review and propose projects, work closely with agency staff from the start, invite public and tribal input, monitor approved projects, report on monitoring, and recommend changes. A project can be sent to the Secretary only if a majority of members from each of the three interest categories approves it. Two temporary pilot programs change how members are picked: a regional pilot (Montana and Arizona) lets the regional forester appoint after required checks, and a national pilot lets the Chief of the Forest Service or the Director of the Bureau of Land Management nominate people whom the Secretary must accept or reject within 30 days (or the nominee is deemed appointed). The pilot authorities also end on October 1, 2026.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 7125
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60