Title 22 › Chapter 8— FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS › § 295
Authorizes money for buying, fixing, and furnishing U.S. diplomatic buildings abroad and creates the Foreign Service Building Fund. Up to $10,000,000 may be put into that fund, available until spent, but no more than $2,000,000 can be used in any one year. The Secretary of State may sign contracts to acquire buildings and grounds. After the first round of changes, repairs and furnishings can be paid from the fund as Congress allows each year. In addition, up to $90,000,000 is authorized for payments of property or credits under section 295b, and another up to $10,000,000 is authorized, both amounts available until spent. For South Vietnam, an extra $2,600,000 is authorized, available until spent as of May 21, 1965. Also authorizes specific dollar caps for buying or altering sites and buildings and for other chapter purposes in various years and regions. Key caps include: (d) Africa $7,140,000 (≤ $3,270,000 for FY1964); American Republics $5,360,000 (≤ $4,030,000 FY1964); Europe $6,839,000 (≤ $1,820,000 FY1964); Far East $2,350,000 (≤ $2,200,000 FY1964); Near East $2,710,000 (≤ $2,100,000 FY1964); USIA facilities $1,125,000 (≤ $720,000 FY1964); ag/defense housing $800,000 (≤ $400,000 FY1964); plus $11,500,000 (FY1964), $12,000,000 (FY1965), $12,200,000 (FY1966), $12,400,000 (FY1967) for other purposes. (f) Africa $5,485,000 (≤ $1,885,000 FY1967); American Republics $7,920,000 (≤ $3,585,000 FY1967); Europe $3,310,000 (≤ $785,000 FY1967); Far East $3,150,000 (≤ $560,000 FY1967); Near East $6,930,000 (≤ $1,890,000 FY1967); USIA $615,000 (≤ $430,000 FY1967); ag/defense housing $800,000 (≤ $400,000 FY1967); plus other-purpose amounts for FY1968–FY1973 ($12,600,000; $12,750,000; $13,500,000; $14,300,000; $15,000,000; $15,900,000). (g) authorizes amounts for FY1974–75 including Africa $850,000 (≤ $631,000 FY1974), American Republics $240,000 (≤ $240,000 FY1974), Europe $682,000 (≤ $204,000 FY1974), East Asia $1,243,000 (≤ $985,000 FY1974), Near East & South Asia $10,433,000 (≤ $2,287,000 FY1974), USIA $45,000 (beginning FY1975), ag/defense housing $318,000 (beginning FY1974), and $48,532,000 for other purposes (≤ $23,066,000 FY1974). (h) authorizes amounts before Nov. 29, 1975, including Europe $225,000 (FY1977), Near East & South Asia $12,885,000 (≤ $3,985,000 FY1976), USIA $3,400,000 (≤ $2,800,000 FY1976), ag/defense housing $150,000 (FY1977), USAID facilities $17,200,000 (FY1977), and $73,058,000 for other purposes (≤ $32,840,000 FY1976). All money stays available until spent. To the maximum extent feasible, spending should use foreign currencies the U.S. owns or is owed. Not more than 10% of any one subparagraphal amount in subsections (d), (f), (g), and (h) may be used for purposes listed under another subparagraph. Extra sums may be appropriated for employee pay and benefits increases. Finally, for FY2018, the Secretary may transfer and merge certain Diplomatic and Consular Programs and Embassy Security funds to follow Benghazi Accountability Review Board recommendations or meet security needs, subject to limits (not over 20% of any “Administration of Foreign Affairs” FY2018 appropriation and not increasing an appropriation by more than 10% by transfer), with merged funds following the same rules and with at least 15 days’ written notice to four congressional committees describing the security need.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 295
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60