Title 50 › Chapter 37— NATIONAL SECURITY SCHOLARSHIPS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND GRANTS › § 1906
The Secretary must send a yearly report about how the program is run to the President and to the congressional intelligence committees. The report to the President must go each year when the President sends the next fiscal year’s budget to Congress under section 1105 of title 31. The report to the congressional intelligence committees must go on the date set in section 3106. The first report was due when the budget for fiscal year 1994 was sent to Congress. Each report must describe trends in language, international, area, and counterproliferation studies and say what areas are being ignored. It must say how the program affected those trends, what help was given last fiscal year (topics and type), how recipients performed (including terminations and failures to meet obligations), and results for last year and overall. That includes the percentage who later became U.S. Government employees, why others did not and how they used the help, and how grants to schools were used. The report must also include the current list of agencies and offices required under section 1902(g) and any legislative changes the Secretary recommends. While preparing the report, the Secretary must consult the board members named in section 1903(b)(1)–(7). Each board member must send an assessment of hiring needs and projected shortages in language and area studies, and the Secretary must include those assessments in the report.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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50 U.S.C. § 1906
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60