Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle V— Merchant Marine › Part B— Merchant Marine Service › Chapter 513— UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY › § 51306
Cadets appointed to the United States Merchant Marine Academy must sign an agreement that lists what they must do. They must finish the Academy program and, before graduating, get a merchant mariner license with no horsepower or tonnage limits and all required national and international endorsements and certifications. For at least 6 years after graduation they must keep that license valid, hold a transportation worker identification credential, and have a Coast Guard medical certificate. They must apply for and accept, if offered, a commission in the Navy Reserve (including the Strategic Sealift Officer Program), the Coast Guard Reserve, or another armed force reserve, and if commissioned they must serve and stay active and in good standing for at least 8 years after commissioning. They must also serve the country’s maritime commerce and defense for at least 5 years after graduation — for example as a merchant marine officer on documented or government vessels, in a U.S. maritime job if ship service isn’t available, on active duty as a commissioned officer (or in NOAA or other federal maritime jobs that serve national security), or by combining these options — and they must report to the Secretary about meeting these requirements. If a cadet who attended at least 2 years fails to finish the program, the Secretary of Defense may order up to 2 years of active military service; the Secretary of Transportation may waive this for hardship. If the Defense Department won’t or can’t order service, or if repaying education costs is better, the Secretary of Transportation may require the cadet to repay the cost of education. For failures involving the license, commissions, or service obligations, the Secretary of Transportation may order at least 3 years (up to the remaining required service) of active duty, consult with the Secretary of Defense on which service, or require repayment (and may reduce repayment for partial service). The Secretary can ask the Attorney General to sue and use federal debt collection tools to recover money. Serving 5 years on active duty as a commissioned officer in the armed forces, NOAA, or the Public Health Service after graduation excuses the cadet from some of these requirements. The Secretary may change or waive terms by setting alternative service. Defense, Coast Guard, NOAA, and Public Health Service leaders must report graduates’ service status to the Secretary and may report failures; such reports can make a graduate officially in default and subject to remedies.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 51306
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60