Title 23 › Chapter 1— FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS › § 176
Creates the PROTECT program to give money for making roads, bridges, transit, ports, and related systems stronger against storms, floods, sea level rise, wildfires, earthquakes, and other natural disasters. The program gives three kinds of grants: formula money to States, competitive planning grants for communities to study risks and plan fixes, and competitive construction grants to make projects more resilient (for example, resurfacing, raising or lengthening bridges, bigger drains, tide gates, or using natural features like marshes). Eligible applicants include States, local governments, metropolitan planning organizations, tribes, port authorities, Federal land agencies working with States, and groups of these. For most projects the Federal share can be up to 80 percent of cost; planning grants can be 100 percent, and the Secretary may allow Indian tribes up to 100 percent. States must use at least 2 percent of their apportioned funds for planning. A State may use no more than 40 percent of its apportioned funds for new road capacity and no more than 10 percent for certain preconstruction work. At least 25 percent of annual competitive grant funds must go to areas outside urbanized areas over 200,000 people, and at least 2 percent must go to tribes. The Secretary may keep up to 5 percent of funds for running the program and may reallocate unused set-asides. The program encourages resilience planning. Planning grants help create resilience improvement plans, vulnerability studies, and evacuation planning. A project’s local cost share is reduced by 7 percentage points if the project is on a State or regional resilience plan that prioritized it, and by 3 percentage points if that plan is included in the long-range transportation plan; reductions cannot total more than 10 percentage points or lower the non‑Federal share below zero. The Secretary must set metrics and evaluation rules within 18 months, publish them for public comment, and pick a sample of projects to study. Project sponsors must report results within 1 year after completion. The Department of Transportation will publish an annual program report and a broader report to Congress within 5 years. Projects funded under PROTECT are treated as Federal-aid highway projects, and the Secretary will consult other Federal agencies and may get technical help from FEMA.
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Highways — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
23 U.S.C. § 176
Title 23 — Highways
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60