Title 48 › Chapter 10— TERRITORIAL PROVISIONS OF A GENERAL NATURE › § 1469a
Congress says federal departments and agencies must let the Insular Areas (the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, and the Government of the Northern Mariana Islands) combine certain grants to cut down on paperwork and reporting. Only grants that are made to an Insular Area for specific purposes (not direct payments to groups of people) can be combined. Agencies may combine any or all such grants for one or more fiscal years, and a combined grant must be at least as large as the total of the separate grants. Money from a combined grant must be spent on the programs the original grants covered or other programs the agency allows, and the Insular Area decides how to divide the funds among those programs. Each agency must publish rules in the Federal Register so an Insular Area can file one application and one report for a combined grant. Agencies can still require accounting, audits, and reviews. An agency may also choose to waive matching fund requirements and to waive the need for a written application or report.
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Territories and Insular Possessions — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
48 U.S.C. § 1469a
Title 48 — Territories and Insular Possessions
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60