Title 48 › Chapter 18— MICRONESIA, MARSHALL ISLANDS, AND PALAU › Subchapter I— MICRONESIA AND MARSHALL ISLANDS › Part B— Approval and Implementation of Compacts, As Amended › § 1921c
Approves the Compacts and says the United States supports the FSM’s and RMI’s democratic constitutions and human rights. The Secretary of State must put a full report about human rights in the Federated States of Micronesia and the Republic of the Marshall Islands into the yearly human rights reports sent to Congress. The United States can refuse the special nonimmigrant entry, work, and residence rights in section 141 to any naturalized FSM or RMI citizen if U.S. officials reasonably believe the person became a citizen mainly to get those rights. Up to $250,000 for each of FSM and RMI may be used to make passports machine-readable and more secure, and those passport changes must be in place by September 30, 2004 if the money is used. FSM and RMI must, by October 1, 2004, be able to give reliable criminal and security information to the U.S. The law supports their rules that limit permanent land ownership to their own citizens and says they will not let other governments or outside groups do certain activities listed in their compacts. Protects and helps U.S. island jurisdictions that get more residents from FSM, RMI, or Palau. “Affected jurisdictions” are American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Hawaii. From fiscal year 2004 through 2023, $30,000,000 each year is authorized for grants to those places to cover extra costs for health, education, social, or public safety services caused by qualified nonimmigrants. The Interior Department will run the grants. The Interior Secretary must do population counts of qualified nonimmigrants at least every five years (FY2003–FY2023), paid by up to $300,000 per count (adjusted for inflation, FY2003 base year) taken from the grant money. The law also allows funds to reimburse health care providers for migration costs, lets the Defense Department offer medical care on a space-available reimbursable basis for referred FSM/RMI citizens, and keeps National Health Service Corps help available to FSM/RMI residents. Governors of the affected jurisdictions may send comments each year by February 1; Interior must report to Congress by May 1 about impacts, immigration numbers, and a tuna trade study for American Samoa. The President may, at a governor’s request, reduce or forgive past unreimbursed impact debts for Guam or the Northern Mariana Islands if those governors submit a report within 120 days after December 17, 2003 showing claimed expenses from January 14, 1986 through September 30, 2003; the President must tell Congress and any waiver does not take effect until 60 days after that notice and the waiver power ends February 28, 2005. The U.S. is not responsible for FSM or RMI foreign debts. Congress says at least 30% of annual section 211 U.S. grant funds for FSM and for RMI (and 30% for each FSM State’s share) should go to infrastructure and upkeep. The President must send yearly reports (starting the first full calendar year after enactment and each December 31) about social, political, and economic conditions, U.S. assistance, reform progress, investment, and suggestions. Reviews of the Compacts must occur on the 5th, 10th, and 15th anniversaries of December 17, 2003 with results and comments included in following reports. Major regulation changes that would affect admission, stay, or work rights under section 141 cannot take effect until 90 days after they are sent to specified Congressional committees. For fiscal year 2015, if U.S. inflation measures (GDP deflator) averaged higher in FY2009–2013 than FY2004–2008, certain Compact inflation provisions are read as applying the full amount instead of two‑thirds, using FY2014 as the base year. The Department of Defense may offer ASVAB student and career programs to selected secondary schools in FSM and RMI like those available to other DoD schools abroad.
Full Legal Text
Territories and Insular Possessions — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
48 U.S.C. § 1921c
Title 48 — Territories and Insular Possessions
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60