Title 16 › Chapter 12— FEDERAL REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF POWER › Subchapter I— REGULATION OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF WATER POWER AND RESOURCES › § 823d
When the federal official who runs a public land area (the Secretary that oversees the reservation) sets a license condition for a project, or when the Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary of Commerce requires a fishway, the person applying for the license or any other party can offer a different plan. The Secretary must accept the alternative if the evidence shows it still protects and uses the reservation or protects fish as well as the original rule, and if it either costs significantly less to do or makes the project work better for making electricity. The Secretary must rely on solid evidence from the record, the applicant, other parties, or other available sources when deciding. The Secretary must put a written explanation and all studies and data used into the public record. That explanation must show equal attention to effects on energy (supply, cost, and use), flood control, navigation, water supply, air quality, and other environmental values. If the Commission thinks the Secretary’s final choice breaks the law, it can send the matter to the Commission’s Dispute Resolution Service. That service must give a non-binding advice within 90 days. The Secretary may follow that advice unless it would not adequately protect the reservation or fish; the advice and the Secretary’s final decision must go into the record.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 823d
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60