Title 6 › Chapter 1— HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter V— NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT › § 321m
Create and run a voluntary program to accredit and certify private companies on disaster and emergency preparedness. The Secretary must pick one officer to run the program. That officer must be either the Administrator (who advises the President on emergency management), the Assistant Secretary for Infrastructure Protection (who works on protecting critical infrastructure and risk), or the Under Secretary for Science and Technology (who knows standards). That officer must work with the other named officers and the Special Assistant who deals with the private sector. Within 210 days after August 3, 2007, the chosen officer must start helping develop voluntary preparedness standards and, with input from standards groups, private sector advisory councils, state and local officials, and sector groups, set up a voluntary certification program. The officer will hire one or more qualified nongovernment entities to manage accreditation. Those managers cannot do certifications themselves but will accredit third parties to certify companies. The program checks whether a company meets voluntary preparedness standards, can adopt or change standards, and must have special rules for small businesses. Managers should include qualified small, minority, women-owned, or disadvantaged firms when possible, may give credit for other relevant certifications, and must monitor and remove bad certifiers. Reviews will happen every year. Certification is optional. If a company agrees, the Secretary will publish that it is certified. The program does not replace other federal standards or free anyone from complying with other laws or rules.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 321m
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60