Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle IV— Regulation of Ocean Shipping › Part D— Federal Maritime Commission › Chapter 461— FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION › § 46101
Creates the Federal Maritime Commission as an independent U.S. agency. It has five Commissioners chosen by the President and approved by the Senate. No more than three may be from the same political party. Each Commissioner serves a five-year term and may stay up to two more years until a successor is ready. Normally a person may serve at most three full terms. Someone appointed to fill a vacancy serves only the rest of that term and may later serve three full terms in addition to that remainder. Commissioners may not have money interests or official ties to companies the Commission regulates, and they may not hold other jobs. The President can remove a Commissioner for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or wrongdoing in office. The President names one Commissioner as Chairman. The Chairman runs the agency day-to-day and follows the Commission’s policies. The Chairman hires and supervises staff, appoints major unit heads (with Commission approval), organizes work, manages administrative spending, assigns staff (including Commissioners) to carry out duties the Commission delegates under section 46104, and sends budget requests to the President and Congress (with Commission approval). Most of these powers do not apply to staff who work full-time for other Commissioners. The Chairman may delegate duties to officers and employees. The Commission has an official seal recognized by courts.
Full Legal Text
Shipping — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 46101
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60