Title 16 › Chapter 94— NATIONAL OCEANS AND COASTAL SECURITY › § 7505
Within 90 days after the Foundation gets money for running the program, it must create rules for giving grants. The rules must cover how to apply and review requests, how to pick winners (including talking with the Administrator and the Secretary of the Interior and giving priority to projects where non-Federal partners share costs), who can get grants (for coastal States under section 7503 and for States, local governments, Indian tribes, NGOs, public‑private partnerships, and academic institutions under section 7504), how to track performance and keep records, how to do audits of the Fund and of grant recipients (at least once a year if grants were made that year), and a public web list of all projects showing recipient, amount, a short description, and status. The Foundation must send each rule and procedure to the Administrator for approval. The Administrator and the Foundation may then award grants under those rules. For coastal States and U.S. territories, the Foundation can use factors like percent of U.S. shoreline miles, coastal population density, and other things to divide money, set a plan requirement for States, and set minimums or maximums for each State or territory. Any State that gets a grant must make sure Indian tribes in the State can compete for grants. The Foundation can also set up an advisory panel to review applications; the panel can include people from ocean and coastal industries, representatives of different regions, and people from universities.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 7505
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60