Title 6 › Chapter 1— HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter V— NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT › § 318
The Secretary must create a National Advisory Council within 60 days after October 4, 2006 to help coordinate federal planning and actions for natural disasters, terrorism, and other man-made disasters. The Council must advise the Administrator on all emergency management matters and include input from State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector when updating national preparedness goals, systems, the National Incident Management System, the National Response Plan, and related plans. The Administrator appoints members so they represent different regions and types of expertise (such as fire, law enforcement, hazardous materials, emergency medical services, public health, standards organizations, government officials, infrastructure and cyber experts, and representatives of people with disabilities). The Administrator must work with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Transportation when choosing health and EMS members. Federal officers may serve as ex officio members. Most members serve 3-year terms, but for the first group one-third serve 1 year and one-third serve 2 years. The Administrator must regularly consult the Council about Department grant programs, guidance, and risk-assessment methods. Within 30 days after December 16, 2016 the Administrator must form a Railroad Emergency Services Preparedness, Operational Needs, and Safety Evaluation Subcommittee (called the RESPONSE Subcommittee). It must include named senior officials from FEMA, PHMSA, NTSB, FRA, TSA, the Coast Guard, EPA, emergency communications, and other qualified people chosen by the co-chairs from rail industry, rail labor, shippers, communications, emergency responders, trainers, tribal groups, technical experts, and vendors. The RESPONSE Subcommittee must meet within 90 days after December 16, 2016 and look at training, funding, and data/communications access for rail hazardous materials incidents and suggest improvements. It must send a report with recommendations, implementation timeframes, and items needing Congress to the National Advisory Council not later than 1 year after December 16, 2016. The Council has 30 days to start its review and may request changes. After Council approval, the report goes to the RESPONSE co-chairs, agency heads, and specific Congressional committees named in the law. The Administrator must give annual updates to those committees about implementing the recommendations and coordinate certain actions, but those update requirements end 2 years after the Council’s report. The RESPONSE Subcommittee ends no later than 90 days after the Council sends its report. Federal advisory committee rules in chapter 10 of title 5 apply to the Council (including certain subsections of section 1009 and section 552b(c) of title 5), except section 1013(a)(2) of title 5 does not apply.
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Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 318
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60