Title 6 › Chapter 1— HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter VII— MANAGEMENT › § 343
The Chief Information Officer must report to the Secretary or to another Department official the Secretary chooses. The law also creates an Office of Geospatial Management inside the CIO’s office. A Geospatial Information Officer, picked by the Secretary and working under the CIO, will run that office and help the CIO coordinate geospatial needs. Geospatial information means maps, surveys, images, remote sensing data, and related location data. Geospatial technology means tools like GPS, satellite systems, mapping software, remote sensors, and other devices used to collect and share that data. The CIO must run a program to use geospatial information efficiently. That program must provide data for protecting critical infrastructure, lead and coordinate geospatial support for planning, prevention, response, and other Department work, and avoid duplicate systems by making data interoperable. The CIO must put into place standards adopted by OMB so data can be shared across the Department, State and local government, and the private sector. The CIO must work with the Federal Geographic Data Committee and follow OMB Circular A–16 and Executive Order 12906. The CIO should also recommend grants to fund geospatial data and information-sharing agreements with State, local, and tribal governments. Money may be appropriated as needed each fiscal year to run this program.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 343
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60