Title 33 › Chapter 26— WATER POLLUTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL › Subchapter III— STANDARDS AND ENFORCEMENT › § 1324
Each State must, every two years, prepare and send to the Administrator for approval a set of lake plans. The plans must identify and classify all publicly owned lakes by their eutrophic condition, explain how the State will control pollution sources (including land use rules), describe how it will work with federal agencies to restore lake water quality, describe ways to fix and neutralize high acidity and remove toxic metals caused by acidity, list lakes with known use impairments or water quality problems, and assess water quality trends and pollution loads, especially toxic pollution. States must put this information into the required statewide report starting with the report due April 1, 1988. The Administrator must report to specific House and Senate committees within 180 days after getting the States’ information about national lake water quality and the success of acidity-mitigation methods. After April 1, 1988, a State must have submitted the required information to get grant money. The Administrator must give money to States to carry out approved plans and to do the required lake surveys. Grants may pay up to 70% of a State’s costs in a year. There is $50,000,000 authorized for each fiscal year 2001 through 2005 for these grants, to be distributed fairly to States with approved plans. The Administrator must also run a national lake water-quality demonstration program to develop cost-effective pollution controls, fight nonpoint pollution, test regional pollution strategies, show ways to remove and dispose of contaminated sediments, improve removal of silt and aquatic obstructions, build silt traps and similar devices, and test using dredged material for land reclamation. Priority demonstration sites include lakes such as Lake Champlain, Lake Tahoe, Lake Apopka, and many others. The Administrator must report by January 1, 1997 and every odd-numbered year after that to the named Congressional committees on the demonstration work, and must give a final report and recommendations when the program ends. Up to $40,000,000 is authorized for the demonstration program for fiscal years after September 30, 1986, and up to $25,000,000 is authorized to help States with acidity mitigation for those same fiscal years; those acidity grants must be distributed fairly based on need and are in addition to other federal aid.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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33 U.S.C. § 1324
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60