Title 33 › Chapter 49— INTEGRATED COASTAL AND OCEAN OBSERVATION SYSTEM › § 3603
The law requires the President, working through the Council, to create a National Integrated Coastal and Ocean Observation System. The System must be national in scope and include federal and non-federal observing assets (including regional coastal observing systems), tools for observing, modeling, managing, and sharing data, a way to turn observations into usable products, and a research and development program to improve technology, computing, and forecasting. The Council sets policy and approves budgets. It creates or names an Interagency Ocean Observation Committee to make plans, set standards, make budgets for the System, find gaps, and run competitive programs to move new technology into operation. NOAA is the lead agency and must run a Program Office to manage daily operations, certify and fund regional systems, run data management and communication, report yearly, and help produce real-time products like weather and harmful-algae forecasts. Regional systems must meet certification standards, show they can collect and share required data, plan strategically, and follow financial rules. A System advisory committee of experts will advise NOAA and the Committee; members serve 3-year terms, renewable once, meet at least once each year, and are unpaid but may get travel pay. Non-federal assets that join under agreement are treated like part of NOAA for liability while acting for the System. Existing agreements stay valid.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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33 U.S.C. § 3603
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60