16 USC 2101-2114 (Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978)

16USC2101_2114.txt

Federal and Non-Federal Financial Assistance Instruments

16 USC 2101-2114 (Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978)

OMB: 0596-0217

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[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2101]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2101. Findings, purpose, and policy


(a) Findings

    Congress finds that--
        (1) most of the productive forest land of the United States is 
    in private, State, and local governmental ownership, and the 
    capacity of the United States to produce renewable forest resources 
    is significantly dependent on such non-Federal forest lands;
        (2) adequate supplies of timber and other forest resources are 
    essential to the United States, and adequate supplies are dependent 
    on efficient methods for establishing, managing, and harvesting 
    trees and processing, marketing, and using wood and wood products;
        (3) nearly one-half of the wood supply of the United States 
    comes from nonindustrial private timberlands and such percentage 
    could rise with expanded assistance programs;
        (4) managed forest lands provide habitats for fish and wildlife, 
    as well as aesthetics, outdoor recreation opportunities, and other 
    forest resources;
        (5) the soil, water, and air quality of the United States can be 
    maintained and improved through good stewardship of privately held 
    forest resources;
        (6) insects and diseases affecting trees occur and sometimes 
    create emergency conditions on all land, whether Federal or non-
    Federal, and efforts to prevent and control such insects and 
    diseases often require coordinated action by both Federal and non-
    Federal land managers;
        (7) fires in rural areas threaten human lives, property, forests 
    and other resources, and Federal-State cooperation in forest fire 
    protection has proven effective and valuable;
        (8) trees and forests are of great environmental and economic 
    value to urban areas;
        (9) managed forests contribute to improving the quality, 
    quantity, and timing of water yields that are of broad benefit to 
    society;
        (10) over half the forest lands of the United States are in need 
    of some type of conservation treatment;
        (11) forest landowners are being faced with increased pressure 
    to convert their forest land to development and other purposes;
        (12) increased population pressures and user demands are being 
    placed on private, as well as public, landholders to provide a wide 
    variety of products and services, including fish and wildlife 
    habitat, aesthetic quality, and recreational opportunities;
        (13) stewardship of privately held forest resources requires a 
    long-term commitment that can be fostered through local, State, and 
    Federal governmental actions;
        (14) the Department of Agriculture, through the coordinated 
    efforts of its agencies with forestry responsibilities, cooperating 
    with other Federal agencies, State foresters, and State political 
    subdivisions, has the expertise and experience to assist private 
    landowners in achieving individual goals and public benefits 
    regarding forestry;
        (15) the products and services resulting from nonindustrial 
    private forest land stewardship provide income and employment that 
    contribute to the economic health and diversity of rural 
    communities; \1\
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    \1\ See 1990 Amendment note below.
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        (16) sustainable agroforestry systems and tree planting in 
    semiarid lands can improve environmental quality and maintain farm 
    yields and income; and \1\
        (18) \2\ the same forest resource supply, protection, and 
    management issues that exist in the United States are also present 
    on an international scale, and the forest and rangeland renewable 
    resources of the world are threatened by deforestation due to 
    conversion to agriculture of lands better suited to other purposes, 
    over-grazing, over-harvesting, and other causes which pose a direct 
    adverse threat to people, the global environment, and the world 
    economy.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \2\ So in original. Probably should be ``(17)''.
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(b) Purpose

    It is the purpose of this chapter to authorize the Secretary of 
Agriculture (hereafter in this chapter referred to as the 
``Secretary''), with respect to non-Federal forest lands in the United 
States, and forest lands in foreign countries, of the United States, to 
assist in--
        (1) the establishment of a coordinated and cooperative Federal, 
    State, and local forest stewardship program for management of the 
    non-Federal forest lands;
        (2) the encouragement of the production of timber;
        (3) the prevention and control of insects and diseases affecting 
    trees and forests;
        (4) the prevention and control of rural fires;
        (5) the efficient utilization of wood and wood residues, 
    including the recycling of wood fiber;
        (6) the improvement and maintenance of fish and wildlife 
    habitat;
        (7) the planning and conduct of urban forestry programs;
        (8) broadening existing forest management, fire protection, and 
    insect and disease protection programs on non-Federal forest lands 
    to meet the multiple use objectives of landowners in an 
    environmentally sensitive manner;
        (9) providing opportunities to private landowners to protect 
    ecologically valuable and threatened non-Federal forest lands; and
        (10) strengthening educational, technical, and financial 
    assistance programs that provide assistance to owners of non-Federal 
    forest lands in the United States, and forest lands in foreign 
    countries,.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \3\ So in original.
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(c) Policy

    It is the policy of Congress that it is in the national interest for 
the Secretary to work through and in cooperation with State foresters, 
or equivalent State officials, nongovernmental organizations, and the 
private sector in implementing Federal programs affecting non-Federal 
forest lands.

(d) Construction

    This chapter shall be construed to complement the policies and 
direction under the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning 
Act of 1974 (16 U.S.C. 1600 et seq.).

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 2, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 365; Pub. L. 101-513, 
title VI, Sec. 611(b)(1), (2), formerly Sec. 607(b)(1), (2), Nov. 5, 
1990, 104 Stat. 2072, renumbered Sec. 611(b)(1), (2), Pub. L. 102-574, 
Sec. 2(a)(1), Oct. 29, 1992, 106 Stat. 4593; Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Sec. 1212, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3521.)

                       References in Text

    This chapter, referred to in subsecs. (b) and (d), was in the 
original ``this Act'', meaning Pub. L. 95-313, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 
365, known as the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978. For 
complete classification of this Act to the Code, see Short Title note 
set out below and Tables.
    The Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974, 
referred to in subsec. (d), is Pub. L. 93-378, Aug. 17, 1974, 88 Stat. 
476, as amended, which is classified generally to subchapter I 
(Sec. 1600 et seq.) of chapter 36 of this title. For complete 
classification of this Act to the Code, see Short Title note set out 
under section 1600 of this title and Tables.

                          Codification

    Pub. L. 101-513 and Pub. L. 101-624 were approved by the President 
after Congress adjourned and in reverse order of passage by Congress. 
Accordingly, the amendments made by Pub. L. 101-624 were executed to 
text prior to the amendments made by Pub. L. 101-513 to reflect the 
probable intent of Congress.


                               Amendments

    1990--Pub. L. 101-624 amended section generally, substituting 
present provisions for provisions which set forth Congressional findings 
and declarations, and statements of purpose and national interest, and 
which related to application with forest and rangeland renewable 
resources provisions. See Codification note above.
    Pub. L. 101-513, Sec. 607(b)(1), directed the amendment of subsec. 
(a) by striking out ``and'' at end of par. (16), substituting ``; and'' 
for period at end of par. (17), and adding par. (18) at end. The 
amendment of pars. (16) and (17) was executed to pars. (15) and (16) to 
reflect the probable intent of Congress. See Codification note above.
    Pub. L. 101-513, Sec. 607(b)(2), which directed the amendment of 
subsec. (b) by inserting ``in the United States, and forest lands in 
foreign countries,'' after ``non-Federal forest lands,'' the first place 
it appears and in paragraph (10), was executed by making the insertion 
after ``non-Federal forest lands'' to reflect the probable intent of 
Congress. See Codification note above.


                             Effective Date

    Section 17, formerly section 14, of Pub. L. 95-313, as renumbered 
Sec. 17 by Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Sec. 1215(1), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 
Stat. 3525, provided that: ``The provisions of this Act [see Short Title 
note below] shall become effective October 1, 1978.''


                      Short Title of 1990 Amendment

    Section 1201 of title XII of Pub. L. 101-624 provided that: ``This 
title [enacting sections 582a-8, 1648, 1649, 1674a, 2103a to 2103c, 
2106a, 2113, and 2114 of this title, amending this section and sections 
1642, 1672, 1674, 2102 to 2106, and 2108 to 2110 of this title, and 
enacting provisions set out as notes under this section and sections 
582a, 1601, 1642, and 2112 of this title] may be cited as the `Forest 
Stewardship Act of 1990'.''


                               Short Title

    Section 1 of Pub. L. 95-313 provided: ``That this Act [enacting this 
chapter, amending sections 1510 and 1606 of this title, repealing 
sections 565, 566, 567, 568c to 568e, 594-1 to 594-5, 594a, and 1509 of 
this title, and sections 2651 to 2654 of Title 7, Agriculture, enacting 
provisions set out as notes under this section and section 1606 of this 
title, and repealing provisions set out as notes under sections 568c and 
594-1 of this title] may be cited as the `Cooperative Forestry 
Assistance Act of 1978'.''


                    America the Beautiful Act of 1990

    Subtitle C (Secs. 1261-1266) of title XII of Pub. L. 101-624, as 
amended by Pub. L. 102-237, title X, Sec. 1018(e), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 
Stat. 1905, provided that:
``SEC. 1261. SHORT TITLE.
    ``This subtitle may be cited as the `America the Beautiful Act of 
1990'.
``SEC. 1262. FINDINGS.
    ``Congress finds that--
        ``(1) trees and forests provide beauty and diversity to both 
    rural and urban landscapes;
        ``(2) trees and forests protect the United States's soil, water, 
    and wetland resources by filtering runoff and preventing erosion;
        ``(3) trees and forests provide food and cover for many species 
    of wildlife;
        ``(4) trees and forests provide shade, block winds, and add 
    moisture to the air, thereby mitigating the urban `heat island' 
    effect and significantly reducing energy use;
        ``(5) trees and forests make important contributions to the 
    environmental, social, and economic well-being of both rural and 
    urban areas across the United States; and
        ``(6) stewardship of trees and forests could be significantly 
    enhanced by encouraging, promoting, and supporting partnerships and 
    community service projects involving individuals, youth groups, 
    organizations, businesses and governments at all levels.
``SEC. 1263. PURPOSES.
    ``The purposes of this subtitle are to--
        ``(1) authorize the President to designate a private nonprofit 
    foundation as eligible for a one-time grant from the Secretary of 
    Agriculture, to be used for promoting public awareness and a spirit 
    of volunteerism, soliciting private sector contributions, and 
    overseeing the use of these contributions to encourage tree planting 
    projects in communities and urban areas;
        ``(2) promote the principles of basic forest stewardship through 
    the nationwide planting, improvement, and maintenance of trees in 
    order to increase reforestation, enhance the environmental and 
    aesthetic qualities of the United States's rural and urban areas, 
    and reduce global carbon dioxide levels;
        ``(3) authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to provide 
    increased financial and technical assistance to State forestry 
    agencies and others, and enter into cost-sharing agreements with 
    individuals, for the purpose of encouraging owners of nonindustrial 
    private lands to plant and maintain trees and improve forests in 
    rural areas; and
        ``(4) authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to provide 
    increased financial and technical assistance to State forestry 
    agencies and others for the purpose of encouraging units of local 
    government, civic groups, and individuals to plant and maintain 
    trees and improve forests in communities and urban areas.
``SEC. 1264. TREE PLANTING FOUNDATION.
    ``(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this section is to authorize the 
President to designate a private nonprofit Foundation as eligible to 
receive a grant from the Department of Agriculture to be used--
        ``(1) to provide grants, including matching grants, to 
    qualifying nonprofit organizations (including youth groups), 
    municipalities, counties, towns and townships for the implementation 
    of programs to promote public awareness and a spirit of volunteerism 
    in support of tree planting, maintenance, management, protection, 
    and cultivation projects in rural areas, communities and urban areas 
    throughout the United States;
        ``(2) to solicit public and private sector contributions through 
    the mobilization of individuals, businesses, governments, and 
    community organizations with the goal of increasing the number of 
    trees planted, maintained, managed, and protected in rural areas, 
    communities and urban environments;
        ``(3) to accept and administer public and private gifts and make 
    grants, including matching grants, to encourage local participation, 
    for the planting, maintenance, management, protection, and 
    cultivation of trees; and
        ``(4) to ensure that our descendants will be able to share their 
    ancestors' pride when referring to their land as `America the 
    Beautiful'.
    ``(b) Authority.--The President is authorized to designate a private 
nonprofit organization (hereafter in this section referred to as the 
`Foundation') as eligible to receive funds pursuant to subsections (d) 
and (e) upon determining that such organization can, consistent with its 
charter, carry out the purposes stated in subsection (a), and that the 
officers of such organization have the experience and expertise 
necessary to direct the activities of the organization. Nothing in this 
section shall be construed to make officers, employees, or members of 
the board of directors of the Foundation officers or employees of the 
United States. The Foundation shall be a private and nonprofit 
organization and not an agency or establishment of the United States.
    ``(c) Implementation.--The Foundation shall carry out this section 
in accordance with the purposes stated in subsection (a).
    ``(d) Funding.--For fiscal year 1991, the Secretary is authorized to 
make a grant of not to exceed $25,000,000 to the Foundation.
    ``(e) Use of Funds.--Funds made available pursuant to subsection (d) 
shall be granted to the Foundation by the Secretary to enable the 
Foundation to carry out the purposes specified in subsection (a).
    ``(f) Interest.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
Foundation may hold funds made available pursuant to subsection (e) in 
interest-bearing accounts prior to the disbursement of the funds for 
purposes specified in subsection (a) and may retain to carry out such 
purposes any interest earned on the deposits.
    ``(g) Limitations on Uses of Funds.--
        ``(1) In general.--The Foundation may use funds provided by this 
    section only for making grants to qualified organizations, 
    municipalities, counties, towns and townships for the implementation 
    of projects and activities that are consistent with the purposes 
    specified in subsection (a).
        ``(2) Qualified organizations.--For the purposes of this 
    section, qualified organizations shall consist of those 
    organizations that meet the requirements of section 501(c)(3) of the 
    Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3)) and have 
    demonstrated a capability to implement the project or activity for 
    which the Foundation funds will be used.
    ``(h) Compensation from Outside Sources.--An officer or employee of 
the Foundation may not receive any salary or other compensation for 
services rendered to the Foundation from any source other than the 
Foundation.
    ``(i) Stock and Dividends.--The Foundation shall not issue any 
shares of stock or declare or pay any dividends.
    ``(j) Lobbying.--The Foundation shall not engage in lobbying or 
propaganda for the purpose of influencing legislation and shall not 
participate or intervene in any political campaign on behalf of any 
candidate for public office.
    ``(k) Salary; Travel and Expenses; Conflicts of Interest.--
        ``(1) Personal benefit from funds.--No part of the funds of the 
    Foundation shall inure to the benefit of any board member, officer, 
    or employee of the Foundation, except as salary or reasonable 
    compensation for services or expenses.
        ``(2) Travel and expense reimbursement.--Compensation for board 
    members shall be limited to reimbursement for reasonable costs of 
    travel and expenses.
        ``(3) Conflicts of interest.--No director, officer, or employee 
    of the Foundation shall participate, directly or indirectly, in the 
    consideration or determination of any question before the Foundation 
    affecting--
            ``(A) the financial interests of the director, officer, or 
        employee; or
            ``(B) the interests of any corporation, partnership, entity, 
        or organization in which such director, officer, or employee--
                ``(i) is an officer, director, or trustee; or
                ``(ii) has any direct or indirect financial interest.
    ``(l) Records; Audits.--The Foundation shall ensure that--
        ``(1) each recipient of assistance provided through the 
    Foundation under this section maintains, for at least 5 years after 
    the receipt of the assistance, separate accounts with respect to the 
    assistance and such records as may be reasonably necessary to 
    disclose fully--
            ``(A) the amount and the disposition by the recipient of the 
        proceeds of the assistance;
            ``(B) the total cost of the project or undertaking in 
        connection with which the assistance is given or used;
            ``(C) the amount and nature of that portion of the cost of 
        the project or undertaking supplied by other sources; and
            ``(D) such other records as will facilitate an effective 
        audit; and
        ``(2) the Foundation and any duly authorized representative of 
    the Foundation shall have access, for the purpose of audit and 
    examination, to any books, documents, papers, and records of the 
    recipient that are pertinent to assistance provided through the 
    Foundation under this section.
    ``(m) Audits.--
        ``(1) Independent audits.--For the fiscal year in which the 
    Foundation receives the grant awarded under subsection (e), and for 
    the succeeding 5 fiscal years, the accounts of the Foundation shall 
    be audited annually in accordance with generally accepted auditing 
    standards by an independent certified public accountant or an 
    independent licensed public accountant certified or licensed by a 
    regulatory authority of a State or other political subdivision of 
    the United States. The report of each such independent audit shall 
    be included in the annual report required by subsection (n).
        ``(2) Agency audits.--For the fiscal year in which the 
    Foundation receives the grant awarded under subsection (d), and for 
    the succeeding 5 fiscal years, the financial transactions undertaken 
    pursuant to this section by the Foundation may be audited by any 
    agency designated by the President.
    ``(n) Annual Reports.--
        ``(1) In general.--Not later than 3 months after the conclusion 
    of each fiscal year, the Foundation shall publish an annual report 
    that includes a comprehensive and detailed report of the operations, 
    activities, financial condition, and accomplishments of the 
    Foundation under this subtitle during the fiscal year.
        ``(2) Termination.--The obligation of the Foundation to publish 
    annual reports pursuant to this subsection shall terminate after 
    publication of the report incorporating the findings of the final 
    audit in accordance with procedures required by subsection (l).
    ``(o) Prohibition on Commercial Harvest.--Trees planted pursuant to 
a program receiving funds under this section may not be commercially 
harvested and sold for Christmas trees.
    ``(p) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated $25,000,000 to be granted by the Secretary of Agriculture 
to the Foundation. All funds appropriated under this section may remain 
available until expended.
``SEC. 1265. RURAL TREE PLANTING AND FOREST MANAGEMENT PROGRAM.
    ``The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to establish a rural 
tree planting and forest management program as a special component of 
the forest stewardship program and the stewardship incentive program 
established under sections 5 and 6 of the Cooperative Forestry 
Assistance Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 2102) [16 U.S.C. 2103a, 2103b] (as 
amended by subtitle A). Such program shall terminate on December 31, 
2001.
``SEC. 1266. COMMUNITY TREE PLANTING AND IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
    ``The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to establish a 
community tree planting and improvement program as a special component 
of the urban and community forestry assistance program established under 
section 9 of the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 
2105) (as amended by section 1219). Such program shall terminate on 
December 31, 2001.''


                        Tree Planting Initiative

    Pub. L. 99-198, title XII, Sec. 1256, as added by Pub. L. 101-624, 
title XIV, Sec. 1441(a), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3601, set forth policy 
relating to maintenance, afforestation, and reforestation of forest 
lands and provisions relating to implementation of policy and agreements 
with State forestry agencies, prior to repeal by Pub. L. 104-127, title 
III, Sec. 336(e), Apr. 4, 1996, 110 Stat. 1007.


          Transfer of Forest Tree Nursery Facilities to States

    Pub. L. 87-492, June 25, 1962, 76 Stat. 107, provided: ``That the 
Congress recognizes that for many years the United States and certain 
States have cooperated in the production of tree planting stock for use 
in the reforestation of the public and private lands of the Nation; that 
the program of production of tree planting stock which was initiated and 
pursued under the Soil Bank Act (7 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.) [repealed] was 
carried on under written agreements which provided for (a) cooperation 
between the Forest Service, on behalf of the United States, and the 
States which participated in the program, (b) payments to said States 
for costs and expenses incurred in the development of nursery 
facilities, (c) the holding of such funds by the States in trust for the 
purpose of carrying out the provisions of said agreements, and (d) 
restoration to the trust fund of an amount equal to the residual value 
of any supplies, materials, equipment, or improvements acquired or 
constructed with trust funds and transferred to State forestry work 
other than the soil bank program; that such program under said Soil Bank 
Act has been discontinued, but the need for the trees continues to be 
great; that the States and Federal Government are cooperating in the 
procurement, production, and distribution of forest-tree seeds and 
plants under section 4 of the Clarke-McNary Act of June 7, 1924 (16 
U.S.C. 567), and in the reforestation of lands under title IV of the 
Agricultural Act of 1956 (16 U.S.C. 568e and 568g); and that said 
participating States need the said supplies, materials, equipment, or 
improvements for use in connection with their respective forestry 
programs, and it is in the public interest to permit these States to use 
said property without the requirement that payment be made for the 
residual value thereof.
    ``Sec. 2. For the purpose of assisting those States which 
participated in the program carried on under the Soil Bank Act [section 
1801 et seq. of Title 7, Agriculture] [repealed] in continuing the 
production of needed tree planting stock and in other forestry programs, 
the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to permit any supplies, 
materials, equipment, or improvements acquired or constructed with trust 
funds under the agreements referred to in section 1 to be used in such 
State forestry work as may further the objectives of related Federal 
programs, as he may approve, without the requirement that any payment be 
made by the State into the trust funds.''

From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2102]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2102. Rural forestry assistance


(a) Assistance to forest landowners and others

    The Secretary may provide financial, technical, educational, and 
related assistance to State foresters or equivalent State officials, and 
State extension directors, to enable such officials to provide technical 
information, advice, and related assistance to private forest land 
owners and managers, vendors, forest resource operators, forest resource 
professionals, public agencies, and individuals to enable such persons 
to carry out activities that are consistent with the purposes of this 
chapter, including--
        (1) protecting, maintaining, enhancing, restoring, and 
    preserving forest lands and the multiple values and uses that depend 
    on such lands;
        (2) identifying, protecting, maintaining, enhancing, and 
    preserving wildlife and fish species, including threatened and 
    endangered species, and their habitats;
        (3) implementing forest management technologies;
        (4) selecting, producing, and marketing alternative forest 
    crops, products and services from forest lands;
        (5) protecting forest land from damage caused by fire, insects, 
    disease, and damaging weather;
        (6) managing the rural-land and urban-land interface to balance 
    the use of forest resources in and adjacent to urban and community 
    areas;
        (7) identifying and managing recreational forest land resources;
        (8) identifying and protecting the aesthetic character of forest 
    lands;
        (9) protecting forest land from conversion to alternative uses; 
    and
        (10) the management of resources of forest lands, including--
            (A) the harvesting, processing, and marketing of timber and 
        other forest resources and the marketing and utilization of wood 
        and wood products;
            (B) the conversion of wood to energy for domestic, 
        industrial, municipal, and other uses;
            (C) the planning, management, and treatment of forest land, 
        including site preparation, reforestation, thinning, prescribed 
        burning, and other silvicultural activities designed to increase 
        the quantity and improve the quality of timber and other forest 
        resources;
            (D) ensuring that forest regeneration or reforestation 
        occurs if needed to sustain long-term resource productivity;
            (E) protecting and improving forest soil fertility and the 
        quality, quantity, and timing of water yields; and
            (F) encouraging the investment of a portion of the proceeds 
        from the sale of timber or other forest resources in stewardship 
        activities that preserve, protect, maintain, and enhance their 
        forest land.

(b) State forestry assistance

    The Secretary is authorized to provide financial, technical, and 
related assistance to State foresters, or equivalent State officials, 
to--
        (1) develop genetically improved tree seeds;
        (2) develop and contract for the development of field 
    arboretums, greenhouses, and tree nurseries, in cooperation with a 
    State, to facilitate production and distribution of tree seeds and 
    seedlings in States where the Secretary determines that there is an 
    inadequate capacity to carry out present and future reforestation 
    needs;
        (3) procure, produce, and distribute tree seeds and trees for 
    the purpose of establishing forests, windbreaks, shelterbelts, 
    woodlots, and other plantings;
        (4) plant tree seeds and seedlings on non-Federal forest lands 
    that are suitable for the production of timber, recreation, and for 
    other benefits associated with the growing of trees;
        (5) plan, organize, and implement measures on non-Federal forest 
    lands, including thinning, prescribed burning, and other 
    silvicultural activities designed to increase the quantity and 
    improve the quality of trees and other vegetation, fish and wildlife 
    habitat, and water yielded therefrom; and
        (6) protect or improve soil fertility on non-Federal forest 
    lands and the quality, quantity, and timing of water yields 
    therefrom.

(c) Implementation

    In implementing this section, the Secretary shall cooperate with 
other Federal, State, and local natural resource management agencies, 
universities and the private sector.

(d) Authorization of appropriations

    There are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be 
necessary to carry out this section.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 3, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 366; Pub. L. 101-624, 
title XII, Sec. 1213, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3523.)


                               Amendments

    1990--Pub. L. 101-624 amended section generally, substituting 
present provisions for provisions which set forth Congressional findings 
relating to rural forestry assistance, related to financial, technical, 
and related assistance to State foresters or equivalent State officials, 
and authorized appropriations.

From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2103]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2103. Forest land enhancement program


(a) Establishment

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary of Agriculture shall establish a forest land 
    enhancement program--
            (A) to provide financial assistance to State foresters; and
            (B) to encourage the long-term sustainability of 
        nonindustrial private forest lands in the United States by 
        assisting the owners of nonindustrial private forest lands, 
        through State foresters, in more actively managing the 
        nonindustrial private forest lands and related resources of 
        those owners through the use of State, Federal, and private 
        sector resource management expertise, financial assistance, and 
        educational programs.

                  (2) Coordination and consultation

        The Secretary, acting through State foresters, shall implement 
    the program--
            (A) in coordination with the State Forest Stewardship 
        Coordinating Committees; and
            (B) in consultation with other Federal, State, and local 
        natural resource management agencies, institutions of higher 
        education, and a broad range of private sector interests.

(b) Program objectives

    In implementing the program, the Secretary shall target resources to 
achieve the following objectives:
        (1) Investing in practices to establish, restore, protect, 
    manage, maintain, and enhance the health and productivity of the 
    nonindustrial private forest lands in the United States for timber, 
    habitat for flora and fauna, soil, water, and air quality, wetlands, 
    and riparian buffers.
        (2) Ensuring that afforestation, reforestation, improvement of 
    poorly stocked stands, timber stand improvement, practices necessary 
    to improve seedling growth and survival, and growth enhancement 
    practices occur where needed to enhance and sustain the long-term 
    productivity of timber and nontimber forest resources to help meet 
    future public demand for all forest resources and provide 
    environmental benefits.
        (3) Reducing the risks and helping restore, recover, and 
    mitigate the damage to forests caused by fire, insects, invasive 
    species, disease, and damaging weather.
        (4) Increasing and enhancing carbon sequestration opportunities.
        (5) Enhancing implementation of agroforestry practices.
        (6) Maintaining and enhancing the forest landbase and leverage 
    State and local financial and technical assistance to owners that 
    promote the same conservation and environmental values.
        (7) Preserving the aesthetic quality of nonindustrial private 
    forest lands and providing opportunities for outdoor recreation.

(c) State priority plan

                           (1) Development

        The State Forester and State Forest Stewardship Coordinating 
    Committee of a State shall jointly develop and submit to the 
    Secretary a State priority plan that is intended to promote forest 
    management objectives in that State.

                             (2) Report

        Not later than September 30, 2006, each State that implemented a 
    State priority plan shall submit to the Secretary a report 
    describing the status of all activities and practices funded under 
    the program as of that date.

(d) Owner eligibility for assistance

                      (1) Eligibility criteria

        To be eligible for cost-share assistance under the program, an 
    owner of nonindustrial private forest lands shall agree--
            (A) to develop and implement, in cooperation with a State 
        forester, another State official, or a professional resources 
        manager, a management plan that--
                (i) except as provided in paragraph (2) or (3), provides 
            for the treatment of not more than 1,000 acres of 
            nonindustrial private forest lands;
                (ii) is approved by the State forester; and
                (iii) addresses site specific activities and practices; 
            and

            (B) to implement approved activities and practices in a 
        manner consistent with the management plan for a period of not 
        less than 10 years, unless the State forester approves a 
        modification to the plan.

                    (2) Public benefit exception

        The Secretary may increase the acreage limitation specified in 
    paragraph (1)(A)(i) to not more than 5,000 acres for an owner of 
    nonindustrial private forest lands if the Secretary, in consultation 
    with the State forester, determines that significant public benefits 
    will accrue as a result of the provision of cost-share assistance 
    under the program for the treatment of the additional acreage.

                   (3) Plan development exception

        An owner may receive cost-share assistance under the program for 
    the purpose of developing a management plan under subsection (e) of 
    this section that provides for the treatment of acreage in excess of 
    the acreage limitations specified in paragraphs (1)(A)(i) and (2), 
    except that the owner's eligibility for cost-share assistance to 
    implement approved activities and practices under the management 
    plan remains subject to the acreage limitation specified in 
    paragraph (1)(A)(i) or, if the Secretary makes the determination 
    described in paragraph (2), the acreage limitation specified in that 
    paragraph.

(e) Management plan

                     (1) Submission and content

        An owner of nonindustrial private forest lands that seeks to 
    participate in the program shall submit to the State forester of the 
    State in which the lands are located a management plan that--
            (A) identifies and describes projects and activities to be 
        carried out by the owner to protect or enhance soil, water, air, 
        range and aesthetic quality, recreation, timber, water, wetland, 
        or fish and wildlife resources on the lands in a manner that is 
        compatible with the objectives of the owner;
            (B) addresses any criteria established by the State and the 
        applicable Committee; and
            (C) meets the other requirements of this section.

                          (2) Lands covered

        At a minimum, the management plan shall apply to those portions 
    of the nonindustrial private forest lands of the owner on which any 
    project or activity funded under the program will be carried out. In 
    a case in which a project or activity may affect acreage outside the 
    portion of the land on which the project or activity is carried out, 
    the management plan shall apply to all lands of the owner that are 
    in forest cover and may be affected by the project or activity.

(f) Approved activities

                           (1) State list

        The Secretary shall develop for each State a list of approved 
    forest activities and practices eligible for cost-share assistance 
    that meets the purposes of the program. The Secretary shall develop 
    the list for a State in consultation with the State forester and the 
    Committee for that State.

                       (2) Types of activities

        Approved activities and practices under paragraph (1) may 
    consist of activities and practices for the following purposes:
            (A) The establishment, management, maintenance, and 
        restoration of forests for shelterbelts, windbreaks, aesthetic 
        quality, and other conservation purposes.
            (B) The sustainable growth and management of forests for 
        timber production.
            (C) The restoration, use, and enhancement of forest wetland 
        and riparian areas.
            (D) The protection of water quality and watersheds through--
                (i) the planting of trees in riparian areas; and
                (ii) the enhanced management and maintenance of native 
            vegetation on land vital to water quality.

            (E) The management, maintenance, restoration, or development 
        of habitat for plants, fish, and wildlife.
            (F) The control, detection, monitoring, and prevention of 
        the spread of invasive species and pests on nonindustrial 
        private forest lands.
            (G) The restoration of nonindustrial private forest land 
        affected by invasive species and pests.
            (H) The conduct of other management activities, such as the 
        reduction of hazardous fuels, that reduce the risks to forests 
        posed by, and that restore, recover, and mitigate the damage to 
        forests caused by, fire or any other catastrophic event, as 
        determined by the Secretary.
            (I) The development of management plans;
            (J) The conduct of energy conservation and carbon 
        sequestration activities.
            (K) The conduct of other activities approved by the 
        Secretary, in consultation with the State forester and the 
        appropriate Committees.

(g) Reimbursement of eligible activities

                           (1) In general

        In the case of an eligible owner that has an approved management 
    plan, the Secretary shall share the cost of implementing the 
    approved activities and practices that the Secretary determines are 
    appropriate.

                              (2) Rate

        The Secretary shall determine the appropriate reimbursement rate 
    for cost-share payments under paragraph (1) and the schedule for 
    making those payments.

                       (3) Maximum cost share

        The Secretary shall not make cost-share payments under this 
    subsection to an owner in an amount in excess of 75 percent, or a 
    lower percentage as determined by the State forester, of the total 
    cost to the owner to implement the approved activities and practices 
    under the management plan.

                     (4) Aggregate payment limit

        The Secretary shall determine the maximum aggregate amount of 
    cost-share payments that an owner may receive under the program.

                          (5) Consultation

        The Secretary shall make determinations under this subsection in 
    consultation with the State forester.

(h) Recapture

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary shall establish and implement a mechanism to 
    recapture payments made to an owner in the event that the owner 
    fails to implement an approved activity or practice specified in the 
    management plan for which the owner received cost-share payments.

                        (2) Additional remedy

        The remedy provided in paragraph (1) is in addition to any other 
    remedy available to the Secretary.

(i) Distribution of cost-share funds

    The Secretary, acting through the State foresters, shall distribute 
funds available for cost sharing under the program only after giving 
appropriate consideration to the following factors:
        (1) The public benefits that would result from the distribution.
        (2) The total acreage of nonindustrial private forest lands in 
    each State.
        (3) The potential productivity of those lands, as determined by 
    the Secretary.
        (4) The number of owners eligible for cost sharing in each 
    State.
        (5) The opportunities to enhance nontimber resources on those 
    lands, including--
            (A) the protection of riparian buffers and forest wetland;
            (B) the preservation of fish and wildlife habitat;
            (C) the enhancement of soil, air, and water quality; and
            (D) the preservation of aesthetic quality and opportunities 
        for outdoor recreation.

        (6) The anticipated demand for timber and nontimber resources in 
    each State.
        (7) The need to improve forest health to minimize the damaging 
    effects of catastrophic fire, insects, disease, or weather.
        (8) The need and demand for agroforestry practices in each 
    State.
        (9) The need to maintain and enhance the forest landbase.
        (10) The need for afforestation, reforestation, and timber stand 
    improvement.

(j) Availability of funds

    The Secretary shall use $100,000,000 of funds of the Commodity 
Credit Corporation to carry out the Program during the period beginning 
on May 13, 2002, and ending on September 30, 2007.

(k) Definitions

    In this section:

               (1) Nonindustrial private forest lands

        The term ``nonindustrial private forest lands'' means rural 
    lands, as determined by the Secretary, that--
            (A) have existing tree cover or are suitable for growing 
        trees; and
            (B) are owned by any nonindustrial private individual, 
        group, association, corporation, Indian tribe, or other private 
        legal entity so long as the individual, group, association, 
        corporation, tribe, or entity has definitive decision-making 
        authority over the lands.

                            (2) Committee

        The terms ``State Forest Steward
From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2103a]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2103a. Forest Stewardship Program


(a) Establishment

    The Secretary, in consultation with State foresters or equivalent 
State officials, shall establish a Forest Stewardship Program (hereafter 
referred to in this section as the ``Program'') to encourage the long-
term stewardship of nonindustrial private forest lands by assisting 
owners of such lands to more actively manage their forest and related 
resources by utilizing existing State, Federal, and private sector 
resource management expertise and assistance programs.

(b) Goal

    The goal of the Program shall be to enter at least 25,000,000 acres 
of nonindustrial private forest lands in the Program by December 31, 
1995.

(c) ``Nonindustrial private forest lands'' defined

    For the purposes of this section, the term ``nonindustrial private 
forest lands'' means rural, as determined by the Secretary, lands with 
existing tree cover, or suitable for growing trees, and owned by any 
private individual, group, association, corporation, Indian tribe, or 
other private legal entity.

(d) Implementation

    In carrying out the Program the Secretary, in consultation with 
State foresters or equivalent State officials, shall provide financial, 
technical, educational, and related assistance to State foresters or 
equivalent State officials, including assistance to help such State 
foresters or equivalent officials to provide financial assistance to 
other State and local natural resource entities, both public and 
private, and land-grant universities for the delivery of information and 
professional assistance to owners of nonindustrial private forest lands. 
Such information and assistance shall be directed to help such owners 
understand and evaluate alternative actions they might take, including--
        (1) managing and enhancing the productivity of timber, fish and 
    wildlife habitat, water quality, wetlands, recreational resources, 
    and the aesthetic value of forest lands;
        (2) investing in practices to protect, maintain, and enhance the 
    resources identified in paragraph (1);
        (3) ensuring that afforestation, reforestation, improvement of 
    poorly stocked stands, timber stand improvement, practices necessary 
    to improve seedling growth and survival, and growth enhancement 
    practices occur where needed to enhance and sustain the long-term 
    productivity of timber and nontimber forest resources to help meet 
    future public demand for all forest resources and provide the 
    environmental benefits that result; and
        (4) protecting their forests from damage caused by fire, 
    insects, disease, and damaging weather.

(e) Eligibility

    All nonindustrial private forest lands that are not in management 
under Federal, State, or private sector financial and technical 
assistance programs existing on November 28, 1990, are eligible for 
assistance under the Program. Nonindustrial private forest lands that 
are managed under such existing programs are eligible for assistance 
under the Program if forest management activities are expanded and 
enhanced and the landowner agrees to meet the requirements of this 
chapter.

(f) Duties of owners

    To enter forest land into the Program, landowners shall--
        (1) prepare and submit to the State forester or equivalent State 
    official a forest stewardship plan that meets the requirements of 
    this section and that--
            (A) is prepared by a professional resource manager;
            (B) identifies and describes actions to be taken by the 
        landowner to protect soil, water, range, aesthetic quality, 
        recreation, timber, water, and fish and wildlife resources on 
        such land in a manner that is compatible with the objectives of 
        the landowner; and
            (C) is approved by the State forester, or equivalent State 
        official; and

        (2) agree that all activities conducted on such land shall be 
    consistent with the stewardship plan.

(g) Stewardship recognition

    The Secretary, in consultation with State foresters or equivalent 
State officials, is encouraged to develop an appropriate recognition 
program for landowners who practice stewardship management on their 
lands, with an appropriate, special recognition symbol and title.

(h) Authorization of appropriations

    There are hereby authorized to be appropriated $25,000,000 for each 
of the fiscal years 1991 through 1995, and such sums as may be necessary 
thereafter, to carry out this section.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 5, as added Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Sec. 1215(2), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525; amended Pub. L. 102-237, 
title X, Sec. 1018(a)(1), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1905.)


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 5 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 8 and is 
classified to section 2104 of this title.


                               Amendments

    1991--Subsec. (d). Pub. L. 102-237 substituted ``State foresters'' 
for ``State Foresters'' wherever appearing in introductory provisions.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2103b]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2103b. Watershed forestry assistance program


(a) Definition of nonindustrial private forest land

    In this section, the term ``nonindustrial private forest land'' 
means rural land, as determined by the Secretary, that--
        (1) has existing tree cover or that is suitable for growing 
    trees; and
        (2) is owned by any nonindustrial private individual, group, 
    association, corporation, or other private legal entity, that has 
    definitive decisionmaking authority over the land.

(b) General authority and purpose

    The Secretary, acting through the Chief of the Forest Service and 
(where appropriate) through the Cooperative State Research, Education, 
and Extension Service, may provide technical, financial, and related 
assistance to State foresters, equivalent State officials, or 
Cooperative Extension officials at land grant colleges and universities 
and 1890 institutions for the purpose of expanding State forest 
stewardship capacities and activities through State forestry best-
management practices and other means at the State level to address 
watershed issues on non-Federal forested land and potentially forested 
land.

(c) Technical assistance to protect water quality

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary, in cooperation with State foresters or equivalent 
    State officials, shall engage interested members of the public, 
    including nonprofit organizations and local watershed councils, to 
    develop a program of technical assistance to protect water quality 
    described in paragraph (2).

                       (2) Purpose of program

        The program under this subsection shall be designed--
            (A) to build and strengthen watershed partnerships that 
        focus on forested landscapes at the State, regional, and local 
        levels;
            (B) to provide State forestry best-management practices and 
        water quality technical assistance directly to owners of 
        nonindustrial private forest land;
            (C) to provide technical guidance to land managers and 
        policymakers for water quality protection through forest 
        management;
            (D) to complement State and local efforts to protect water 
        quality and provide enhanced opportunities for consultation and 
        cooperation among Federal and State agencies charged with 
        responsibility for water and watershed management; and
            (E) to provide enhanced forest resource data and support for 
        improved implementation and monitoring of State forestry best-
        management practices.

                         (3) Implementation

        In the case of a participating State, the program of technical 
    assistance shall be implemented by State foresters or equivalent 
    State officials.

(d) Watershed forestry cost-share program

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary shall establish a watershed forestry cost-share 
    program--
            (A) which shall be--
                (i) administered by the Forest Service; and
                (ii) implemented by State foresters or equivalent State 
            officials in participating States; and

            (B) under which funds or other support provided to 
        participating States shall be made available for State forestry 
        best-management practices programs and watershed forestry 
        projects.

                   (2) Watershed forestry projects

        The State forester, an equivalent State official of a 
    participating State, or a Cooperative Extension official at a land 
    grant college or university or 1890 institution, in coordination 
    with the State Forest Stewardship Coordinating Committee established 
    under section 2113(b) of this title (or an equivalent committee) for 
    that State, shall make awards to communities, nonprofit groups, and 
    owners of nonindustrial private forest land under the program for 
    watershed forestry projects described in paragraph (3).

                 (3) Project elements and objectives

        A watershed forestry project shall accomplish critical forest 
    stewardship, watershed protection, and restoration needs within a 
    State by demonstrating the value of trees and forests to watershed 
    health and condition through--
            (A) the use of trees as solutions to water quality problems 
        in urban and rural areas;
            (B) community-based planning, involvement, and action 
        through State, local, and nonprofit partnerships;
            (C) application of and dissemination of monitoring 
        information on forestry best-management practices relating to 
        watershed forestry;
            (D) watershed-scale forest management activities and 
        conservation planning; and
            (E)(i) the restoration of wetland (as defined by the States) 
        and stream-side forests; and
            (ii) the establishment of riparian vegetative buffers.

                          (4) Cost-sharing

        (A) Federal share

            (i) Funds under this subsection

                Funds provided under this subsection for a watershed 
            forestry project may not exceed 75 percent of the cost of 
            the project.
            (ii) Other Federal funds

                The percentage of the cost of a project described in 
            clause (i) that is not covered by funds made available under 
            this subsection may be paid using other Federal funding 
            sources, except that the total Federal share of the costs of 
            the project may not exceed 90 percent.

        (B) Form

            The non-Federal share of the costs of a project may be 
        provided in the form of cash, services, or other in-kind 
        contributions.

                         (5) Prioritization

        The State Forest Stewardship Coordinating Committee for a State, 
    or equivalent State committee, shall prioritize watersheds in that 
    State to target watershed forestry projects funded under this 
    subsection.

                       (6) Watershed forester

        Financial and technical assistance shall be made available to 
    the State Forester or equivalent State official to create a State 
    watershed or best-management practice forester position to--
            (A) lead statewide programs; and
            (B) coordinate watershed-level projects.

(e) Distribution

                           (1) In general

        Of the funds made available for a fiscal year under subsection 
    (g) of this section, the Secretary shall use--
            (A) at least 75 percent of the funds to carry out the cost-
        share program under subsection (d) of this section; and
            (B) the remainder of the funds to deliver technical 
        assistance, education, and planning, at the local level, through 
        the State Forester or equivalent State official.

                     (2) Special considerations

        Distribution of funds by the Secretary among States under 
    paragraph (1) shall be made only after giving appropriate 
    consideration to--
            (A) the acres of agricultural land, nonindustrial private 
        forest land, and highly erodible land in each State;
            (B) the miles of riparian buffer needed;
            (C) the miles of impaired stream segments and other impaired 
        water bodies where forestry practices can be used to restore or 
        protect water resources;
            (D) the number of owners of nonindustrial private forest 
        land in each State; and
            (E) water quality cost savings that can be achieved through 
        forest watershed management.

(f) Willing owners

                           (1) In general

        Participation of an owner of nonindustrial private forest land 
    in the watershed forestry assistance program under this section is 
    voluntary.

                         (2) Written consent

        The watershed forestry assistance program shall not be carried 
    out on nonindustrial private forest land without the written consent 
    of the owner of, or entity having definitive decisionmaking over, 
    the nonindustrial private forest land.

(g) Authorization of appropriations

    There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section 
$15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2008.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 6, as added Pub. L. 108-148, title III, Sec. 302, 
Dec. 3, 2003, 117 Stat. 1903.)


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 2103b, Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 6, as added Pub. L. 101-
624, title XII, Sec. 1216, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3526, established 
the Stewardship Incentive Program, prior to repeal by Pub. L. 107-171, 
title VIII, Sec. 8001(a), May 13, 2002, 116 Stat. 468.
    A prior section 6 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 9 and is 
classified to section 2105 of this title.

From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2103c]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2103c. Forest Legacy Program


(a) Establishment and purpose

    The Secretary shall establish a program, to be known as the Forest 
Legacy Program, in cooperation with appropriate State, regional, and 
other units of government for the purposes of ascertaining and 
protecting environmentally important forest areas that are threatened by 
conversion to nonforest uses and, through the use of conservation 
easements and other mechanisms, for promoting forest land protection and 
other conservation opportunities. Such purposes shall also include the 
protection of important scenic, cultural, fish, wildlife, and 
recreational resources, riparian areas, and other ecological values.

(b) State and regional forest legacy programs

    The Secretary shall exercise the authority under subsection (a) of 
this section in conjunction with State or regional programs that the 
Secretary deems consistent with this section.

(c) Interests in land

    In addition to the authorities granted under section 515 of this 
title and section 428a(a) of title 7, the Secretary may acquire from 
willing landowners lands and interests therein, including conservation 
easements and rights of public access, for Forest Legacy Program 
purposes. The Secretary shall not acquire conservation easements with 
title held in common ownership with any other entity.

(d) Implementation

                           (1) In general

        Lands and interests therein acquired under subsection (c) of 
    this section may be held in perpetuity for program and easement 
    administration purposes as the Secretary may provide. In 
    administering lands and interests therein under the program, the 
    Secretary shall identify the environmental values to be protected by 
    entry of the lands into the program, management activities which are 
    planned and the manner in which they may affect the values 
    identified, and obtain from the landowner other information 
    determined appropriate for administration and management purposes.

                        (2) Initial programs

        Not later than November 28, 1991, the Secretary shall establish 
    a regional program in furtherance of the Northern Forest Lands Study 
    in the States of New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine under 
    Public Law 100-446. The Secretary shall establish additional 
    programs in each of the Northeast, Midwest, South, and Western 
    regions of the United States, and the Pacific Northwest (including 
    the State of Washington), on the preparation of an assessment of the 
    need for such programs.

(e) Eligibility

    Not later than November 28, 1991, and in consultation with State 
Forest Stewardship Coordinating Committees established under section 
2113(b) of this title and similar regional organizations, the Secretary 
shall establish eligibility criteria for the designation of forest areas 
from which lands may be entered into the Forest Legacy Program and 
subsequently select such appropriate areas. To be eligible, such areas 
shall have significant environmental values or shall be threatened by 
present or future conversion to nonforest uses. Of land proposed to be 
included in the Forest Legacy Program, the Secretary shall give priority 
to lands which can be effectively protected and managed, and which have 
important scenic or recreational values; riparian areas; fish and 
wildlife values, including threatened and endangered species; or other 
ecological values.

(f) Application

    For areas included in the Forest Legacy Program, an owner of lands 
or interests in lands who wishes to participate may prepare and submit 
an application at such time in such form and containing such information 
as the Secretary may prescribe. The Secretary shall give reasonable 
advance notice for the submission of all applications to the State 
forester, equivalent State official, or other appropriate State or 
regional natural resource management agency. If applications exceed the 
ability of the Secretary to fund them, priority shall be given to those 
forest areas having the greatest need for protection pursuant to the 
criteria described in subsection (e) of this section.

(g) State consent

    Where a State has not approved the acquisition of land under section 
515 of this title, the Secretary shall not acquire lands or interests 
therein under authority granted by this section outside an area of that 
State designated as a part of a program established under subsection (b) 
of this section.

(h) Forest management activities

                           (1) In general

        Conservation easements or deed reservations acquired or reserved 
    pursuant to this section may allow forest management activities, 
    including timber management, on areas entered in the Forest Legacy 
    Program insofar as the Secretary deems such activities consistent 
    with the purposes of this section.

                 (2) Assignment of responsibilities

        For Forest Legacy Program areas, the Secretary may delegate or 
    assign management and enforcement responsibilities over federally 
    owned lands and interests in lands only to another governmental 
    entity.

(i) Duties of owners

    Under the terms of a conservation easement or other property 
interest acquired under subsection (b) \1\ of this section, the 
landowner shall be required to manage property in a manner that is 
consistent with the purposes for which the land was entered in the 
Forest Legacy Program and shall not convert such property to other uses. 
Hunting, fishing, hiking, and similar recreational uses shall not be 
considered inconsistent with the purposes of this program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ So in original. Probably should be subsection ``(c)''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

(j) Compensation and cost sharing

                          (1) Compensation

        The Secretary shall pay the fair market value of any property 
    interest acquired under this section. Payments under this section 
    shall be in accordance with Federal appraisal and acquisition 
    standards and procedures.

                          (2) Cost sharing

        In accordance with terms and conditions that the Secretary shall 
    prescribe, costs for the acquisition of lands or interests therein 
    or project costs shall be shared among participating entities 
    including regional organizations, State and other governmental 
    units, landowners, corporations, or private organizations. Such 
    costs may include, but are not limited to, those associated with 
    planning, administration, property acquisition, and property 
    management. To the extent practicable, the Federal share of total 
    program costs shall not exceed 75 percent, including any in-kind 
    contribution.

(k) Easements

                     (1) Reserved interest deeds

        As used in this section, the term ``conservation easement'' 
    includes an easement utilizing a reserved interest deed where the 
    grantee acquires all rights, title, and interests in a property, 
    except those rights, title, and interests that may run with the land 
    that are expressly reserved by a grantor.

                   (2) Prohibitions on limitations

        Notwithstanding any provision of State law, no conservation 
    easement held by the United States or its successors or assigns 
    under this section shall be limited in duration or scope or be 
    defeasible by--
            (A) the conservation easement being in gross or appurtenant;
            (B) the management of the conservation easement having been 
        delegated or assigned to a non-Federal entity;
            (C) any requirement under State law for re-recordation or 
        renewal of the easement; or
            (D) any future disestablishment of a Forest Legacy Program 
        area or other Federal project for which the conservation 
        easement was originally acquired.

                          (3) Construction

        Notwithstanding any provision of State law, conservation 
    easements shall be construed to effect the Federal purposes for 
    which they were acquired and, in interpreting their terms, there 
    shall be no presumption favoring the conservation easement holder or 
    fee owner.

(l) Optional State grants

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary shall, at the request of a participating State, 
    provide a grant to the State to carry out the Forest Legacy Program 
    in the State.

                         (2) Administration

        If a State elects to receive a grant under this subsection--
            (A) the Secretary shall use a portion of the funds made 
        available under subsection (m) of this section, as determined by 
        the Secretary, to provide a grant to the State; and
            (B) the State shall use the grant to carry out the Forest 
        Legacy Program in the State, including the acquisition by the 
        State of lands and interests in lands.

            (3) Transfer of Forest Legacy Program land--

        (A) In general

            Subject to any terms and conditions that the Secretary may 
        require (including the requirements described in subparagraph 
        (B)), the Secretary may, at the request of the State of Vermont, 
        convey to the State, by quitclaim deed, without consideration, 
        any land or interest in land acquired in the State under the 
        Forest Legacy Program.

        (B) Requirements

            In conveying land or an interest in land under subparagraph 
        (A), the Secretary may require that--
                (i) the deed conveying the land or interest in land 
            include requirements for the management of the land in a 
            manner that--
                    (I) conserves the land or interest in land; and
                    (II) is consistent with any other Forest Legacy 
                Program purposes for which the land or interest in land 
                was acquired;

                (ii) if the land or interest in land is subsequently 
            sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of by the State of 
            Vermont, the State shall--
                    (I) reimburse the Secretary in an amount that is 
                based on the current market value of the land or 
                interest in land in proportion to the amount of 
                consideration paid by the United States for the land or 
                interest in land; or
                    (II) convey to the Secretary land or an interest in 
                land that is equal in value to the land or interest in 
                land conveyed.

        (C) Disposition of funds

            Amounts received by the Secretary under subparagraph (B)(ii) 
        shall be credited to the Wildland Fire Management account, to 
        remain available until expended.

(m) Appropriation

    There are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be 
necessary to carry out this section.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 7, as added Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Sec. 1217, 
Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3528; amended Pub. L. 102-237, title X, 
Sec. 1018(a)(2), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1905; Pub. L. 104-127, title 
III, Sec. 374, Apr. 4, 1996, 110 Stat. 1015; Pub. L. 108-108, title III, 
Sec. 336, Nov. 10, 2003, 117 Stat. 1313.)

                       References in Text

    Public Law 100-446, referred to in subsec. (d)(2), is Pub. L. 100-
446, Sept. 27, 1988, 102 Stat. 1774. Provisions of the Act relating to 
functions of the Secretary of Agriculture in connection with forest 
lands are not classified to the Code. For complete classification of 
this Act to the Code, see Tables.


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 7 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 10 and is 
classified to section 2106 of this title.


                               Amendments

    2003--Subsec. (l)(3). Pub. L. 108-108 added par. (3).
    1996--Subsecs. (l), (m). Pub. L. 104-127 added subsec. (l) and 
redesignated former subsec. (l) as (m).
    1991--Subsec. (d)(2). Pub. L. 102-237, Sec. 1018(a)(2)(A), 
substituted ``November 28, 1991'' for ``1 year after November 28, 
1990''.
    Subsec. (e). Pub. L. 102-237, Sec. 1018(a)(2)(B), substituted ``Not 
later than November 28, 1991, and in consultation with State Forest 
Stewardship Coordinating Committees established under section 2113(b)'' 
for ``Within 1 year from November 28, 1990, and in consultation with 
State Forest Stewardship Advisory Committees established under section 
15(b)''.
    Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 102-237, Sec. 1018(a)(2)(C), substituted 
``subsection (e)'' for ``subsection (d)''.

From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2104]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2104. Forest health protection


(a) In general

    The Secretary may protect trees and forests and wood products, 
stored wood, and wood in use directly on the National Forest System and, 
in cooperation with others, on other lands in the United States, from 
natural and man-made causes, to--
        (1) enhance the growth and maintenance of trees and forests;
        (2) promote the stability of forest-related industries and 
    employment associated therewith through the protection of forest 
    resources;
        (3) aid in forest fire prevention and control;
        (4) conserve forest cover on watersheds, shelterbelts, and 
    windbreaks;
        (5) protect outdoor recreation opportunities and other forest 
    resources; and
        (6) extend timber supplies by protecting wood products, stored 
    wood, and wood in use.

(b) Activities

    Subject to subsections (c), (d), and (e) of this section and to such 
other conditions the Secretary may prescribe, the Secretary may, 
directly on the National Forest System, in cooperation with other 
Federal departments on other Federal lands, and in cooperation with 
State foresters, or equivalent State officials, subdivisions of States, 
agencies, institutions, organizations, or individuals on non-Federal 
lands--
        (1) conduct surveys to detect and appraise insect infestations 
    and disease conditions and man-made stresses affecting trees and 
    establish a monitoring system throughout the forests of the United 
    States to determine detrimental changes or improvements that occur 
    over time, and report annually concerning such surveys and 
    monitoring;
        (2) determine the biological, chemical, and mechanical measures 
    necessary to prevent, retard, control, or suppress incipient, 
    potential, threatening, or emergency insect infestations and disease 
    conditions affecting trees;
        (3) plan, organize, direct, and perform measures the Secretary 
    determines necessary to prevent, retard, control, or suppress 
    incipient, potential, threatening, or emergency insect infestations 
    and disease epidemics affecting trees;
        (4) provide technical information, advice, and related 
    assistance on the various techniques available to maintain a healthy 
    forest and in managing and coordinating the use of pesticides and 
    other toxic substances applied to trees and other vegetation, and to 
    wood products, stored wood, and wood in use;
        (5) develop applied technology and conduct pilot tests of 
    research results prior to the full-scale application of such 
    technology in affected forests;
        (6) promote the implementation of appropriate silvicultural or 
    management techniques that may improve or protect the health of the 
    forests of the United States; and
        (7) take any other actions the Secretary determines necessary to 
    accomplish the objectives and purposes of this section.

(c) Consent of entity

    Operations under this section to prevent, retard, control, or 
suppress insects or diseases affecting forests and trees on land not 
controlled or administered by the Secretary shall not be conducted 
without the consent, cooperation, and participation of the entity having 
ownership of or jurisdiction over the affected land.

(d) Contribution by entity

    No money appropriated to implement this section shall be expended to 
prevent, retard, control, or suppress insects or diseases affecting 
trees on non-Federal land until the entity having ownership of or 
jurisdiction over the affected land contributes, or agrees to 
contribute, to the work to be done in the amount and in the manner 
determined appropriate by the Secretary.

(e) Allotments to other agencies

    The Secretary may, in the Secretary's discretion, and out of any 
money appropriated to implement this section, make allocations to 
Federal agencies having jurisdiction over lands held or owned by the 
United States in the amounts the Secretary determines necessary to 
prevent, retard, control, or suppress insect infestations and disease 
epidemics affecting trees on those lands.

(f) Limitation on use of appropriations

                       (1) Removing dead trees

        No amounts appropriated shall be used to--
            (A) pay the cost of felling and removing dead or dying trees 
        unless the Secretary determines that such actions are necessary 
        to prevent the spread of a major insect infestation or disease 
        epidemic severely affecting trees; or
            (B) compensate for the value of any property injured, 
        damaged, or destroyed by any cause.

              (2) Insects and diseases affecting trees

        The Secretary may procure materials and equipment necessary to 
    prevent, retard, control, or suppress insects and diseases affecting 
    trees without regard to section 5 of title 41, under whatever 
    procedures the Secretary may prescribe, if the Secretary determines 
    that such action is necessary and in the public interest.

(g) Partnerships

    The Secretary, by contract or cooperative agreement, may provide 
financial assistance through the Forest Service to State foresters or 
equivalent State officials, and private forestry and other 
organizations, to monitor forest health and protect the forest lands of 
the United States. The Secretary shall require contribution by the non-
Federal entity in the amount and in the manner determined appropriate. 
Such non-Federal share may be in the form of cash, services, or 
equipment, as determined appropriate by the Secretary.

(h) Authorization of appropriations

    There are authorized to be appropriated annually such sums as may be 
necessary to carry out subsections (a) through (g) of this section.

(i) Integrated pest management

                           (1) In general

        Subject to the provisions of subsections (c) and (e) of this 
    section, the Secretary shall, in cooperation with State foresters or 
    equivalent State officials, subdivisions of States, or other 
    entities on non-Federal lands (hereafter in this subsection referred 
    to as the ``cooperator'')--
            (A) provide cost-share assistance to such cooperators who 
        have established an acceptable integrated pest management 
        strategy, as determined by the Secretary, that will prevent, 
        retard, control, or suppress gypsy moth, southern pine beetle, 
        spruce budworm infestations, or other major insect infestations 
        in an amount no less than 50 percent nor greater than 75 percent 
        of the cost of implementing such strategy; and
            (B) upon request, assist the cooperator in the development 
        of such integrated pest management strategy.

                 (2) Authorization of appropriations

        There are hereby authorized to be appropriated annually 
    $10,000,000 to implement this subsection.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 8, formerly Sec. 5, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 368; 
renumbered Sec. 8 and amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Secs. 1215(1), 
1218, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3531.)


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 8 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 11 and is 
classified to section 2107 of this title.


                               Amendments

    1990--Pub. L. 101-624 amended section generally, substituting 
present provisions for provisions relating to insect and disease control 
on Federal and non-Federal forest lands, additional protective functions 
and responsibilities concerning such lands, consent, cooperation, and 
participation of, and contribution by, entity having jurisdiction over 
such lands, allocations to Federal agencies having jurisdiction over 
such lands, availability and limitations on use of appropriated amounts, 
and authorization of appropriations.


               Stewardship End Result Contracting Projects

    Pub. L. 107-63, title III, Sec. 332, Nov. 5, 2001, 115 Stat. 471, 
provided in part that: ``The authority to enter into stewardship and end 
result contracts provided to the Forest Service in accordance with 
section 347 of title III of section 101(e) of division A of Public Law 
105-277 [set out as a note below] is hereby expanded to authorize the 
Forest Service to enter into an additional 28 contracts subject to the 
same terms and conditions as provided in that section: Provided, That of 
the additional contracts authorized by this section at least 9 shall be 
allocated to Region 1 and at least 3 to Region 6.''
    Similar provisions were contained in Pub. L. 106-291, title III, 
Sec. 338, Oct. 11, 2000, 114 Stat. 998, as amended by Pub. L. 107-20, 
title II, Sec. 2604, July 24, 2001, 115 Stat. 178.
    Pub. L. 105-277, div. A, Sec. 101(e) [title III, Sec. 347], Oct. 21, 
1998, 112 Stat. 2681-231, 2681-298, as amended by Pub. L. 106-113, div. 
B, Sec. 1000(a)(3) [title III, Sec. 341], Nov. 29, 1999, 113 Stat. 1535, 
1501A-201; Pub. L. 107-63, title III, Sec. 332, Nov. 5, 2001, 115 Stat. 
471; Pub. L. 108-7, div. F, title III, Sec. 323, Feb. 20, 2003, 117 
Stat. 275, provided that:
    ``(a) In General.--Until September 30, 2013, the Forest Service and 
the Bureau of Land Management, via agreement or contract as appropriate, 
may enter into stewardship contracting projects with private persons or 
other public or private entities to perform services to achieve land 
management goals for the national forests and the public lands that meet 
local and rural community needs.
    ``(b) Land Management Goals.--The land management goals of a project 
under subsection (a) may include, among other things--
        ``(1) road and trail maintenance or obliteration to restore or 
    maintain water quality;
        ``(2) soil productivity, habitat for wildlife and fisheries, or 
    other resource values;
        ``(3) setting of prescribed fires to improve the composition, 
    structure, condition, and health of stands or to improve wildlife 
    habitat;
        ``(4) removing vegetation or other activities to promote healthy 
    forest stands, reduce fire hazards, or achieve other land management 
    objectives;
        ``(5) watershed restoration and maintenance;
        ``(6) restoration and maintenance of wildlife and fish habitat; 
    and
        ``(7) control of noxious and exotic weeds and reestablishing 
    native plant species.
    ``(c) Agreements or Contracts.--
        ``(1) Procurement procedure.--A source for performance of an 
    agreement or contract under subsection (a) shall be selected on a 
    best-value basis, including consideration of source under other 
    public and private agreements or contracts.
        ``(2) Term.--A multiyear contract may be entered into under 
    subsection (a) in accordance with section 304B of the Federal 
    Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (41 U.S.C. 254c), 
    except that the period of the contract may exceed 5 years but may 
    not exceed 10 years.
        ``(3) Offsets.--
            ``(A) In general.--In connection with agreement or contracts 
        under subsection (a), the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land 
        Management may apply the value of timber or other forest 
        products removed as an offset against the cost of services 
        received.
            ``(B) Methods of appraisal.--The value of timber or other 
        forest products used as offsets under subparagraph (A)--
                ``(i) shall be determined using appropriate methods of 
            appraisal commensurate with the quantity of products to be 
            removed;
                ``(ii) may be determined using a unit of measure 
            appropriate to the agreement or contracts; and
                ``(iii) may include valuing products on a per-acre 
            basis.
        ``(4) Relation to other laws.--The Forest Service may enter into 
    agreement or contracts under subsection (a), notwithstanding 
    subsections (d) and (g) of section 14 of the National Forest 
    Management Act of 1976 (16 U.S.C. 472a).
        ``(5) Contracting officer.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
    of law, the Secretary of Agriculture or the Secretary of the 
    Interior may determine the appropriate contracting officer to enter 
    into and administer an agreement or contract under subsection (a).
    ``(d) Receipts.--
        ``(1) In general.--The Forest Service and the Bureau of Land 
    Management may collect monies from an agreement or contract under 
    subsection (a) so long as such collection is a secondary objective 
    of negotiating contracts that will best achieve the purposes of this 
    section.
        ``(2) Use.--Monies from an agreement or contract under 
    subsection (a) may be retained by the Forest Service and the Bureau 
    of Land Management and shall be available for expenditure without 
    further appropriation at the project site from which the monies are 
    collected or at another project site.
        ``(3) Relation to other laws.--The value of services received by 
    the Forest Service or the Bureau of Land Management under a 
    stewardship contract project conducted under this section, and any 
    payments made or resources provided by the contractor or the Forest 
    Service or the Bureau of Land Management under such a project, shall 
    not be considered to be monies received from the National Forest 
    System or the public lands under any provision of law. The Act of 
    June 9, 1930 (16 U.S.C. 576 et seq.; commonly known as the Knutson-
    Vandenberg Act), shall not apply to stewardship contracts entered 
    into under this section.
    ``(e) Costs of Removal.--The Forest Service may collect deposits 
from contractors covering the costs of removal of timber or other forest 
products pursuant to the Act of August 11, 1916 (39 Stat. 462, chapter 
313; 16 U.S.C. 490); and the next to the last paragraph under the 
heading `Forest Service.' under the heading `Department of Agriculture' 
in the Act of June 30, 1914 (38 Stat. 430, chapter 131; 16 U.S.C. 498); 
notwithstanding the fact that the timber purchasers did not harvest the 
timber.
    ``(f) Performance and Payment Guarantees.--
        ``(1) In general.--The Forest Service and the Bureau of Land 
    Management may require performance and payment bonds, in accordance 
    with sections 103-2 and 103-2 of part 28 of the Federal Acquisition 
    Regulation (48 C.F.R. 28.103-2, 28.103-3), in an amount that the 
    contracting officer considers sufficient to protect the Government's 
    investment in receipts generated by the contractor from the 
    estimated value of the forest products to be removed under contract 
    under subsection (a).
        ``(2) Excess offset value.--If the offset value of the forest 
    products exceeds the value of the resource improvement treatments, 
    the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management may--
            ``(A) collect any residual receipts pursuant to the Act of 
        June 9, 1930 (46 Stat. 527, chapter 416; 16 U.S.C. 576b); and
            ``(B) apply the excess to other authorized stewardship 
        projects.
    ``(g) Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting.--The Forest Service and 
the Bureau of Land Management shall establish a multiparty monitoring 
and evaluation process that accesses the stewardship contracting 
projects conducted under this section. Besides the Forest Service and 
the Bureau of Land Management, participants in this process may include 
any cooperating governmental agencies, including tribal governments, and 
any interested groups or individuals. The Forest Service and the Bureau 
of Land Management shall report annually to the Committee on 
Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Appropriations of the Senate on--
        ``(1) the status of development, execution, and administration 
    of agreements or contracts under subsection (a);
        ``(2) the specific accomplishments that have resulted; and
        ``(3) the role of local communities in development of agreements 
    or contract plans.''


          Herger-Feinstein Quincy Library Group Forest Recovery

    Pub. L. 105-277, div. A, Sec. 101(e) [title IV], Oct. 21, 1998, 112 
Stat. 2681-231, 2681-305, as amended by Pub. L. 107-171, title VI, 
Sec. 6201(d)(5), May 13, 2002, 116 Stat. 419, provided that:
    ``Sec. 401. Pilot Project for Plumas, Lassen, and Tahoe National 
Forests to Implement Quincy Library Group Proposal. (a) Definition.--For 
purposes of this section, the term `Quincy Library Group-Community 
Stability Proposal' means the agreement by a coalition of 
representatives of fisheries, timber, environmental, county government, 
citizen groups, and local communities that formed in northern California 
to develop a resource management program that promotes ecologic and 
economic health for certain Federal lands and communities in the Sierra 
Nevada area. Such proposal includes the map entitled `QUINCY LIBRARY 
GROUP Community Stability Proposal', dated October 12, 1993, and 
prepared by VESTRA Resources of Redding, California.
    ``(b) Pilot Project Required.--
        ``(1) Pilot project and purpose.--The Secretary of Agriculture 
    (in this section referred to as the `Secretary'), acting through the 
    Forest Service and after completion of an environmental impact 
    statement (a record of decision for which shall be adopted within 
    300 days), shall conduct a pilot project on the Federal lands 
    described in paragraph (2) to implement and demonstrate the 
    effectiveness of the resource management activities described in 
    subsection (d) and the other requirements of this section, as 
    recommended in the Quincy Library Group-Community Stability 
    Proposal.
        ``(2) Pilot project area.--The Secretary shall conduct the pilot 
    project on the Federal lands within Plumas National Forest, Lassen 
    National Forest, and the Sierraville Ranger District of Tahoe 
    National Forest in the State of California designated as `Available 
    for Group Selection' on the map entitled `QUINCY LIBRARY GROUP 
    Community Stability Proposal', dated October 12, 1993 (in this 
    section referred to as the `pilot project area'). Such map shall be 
    on file and available for inspection in the appropriate offices of 
    the Forest Service.
    ``(c) Exclusion of Certain Lands, Riparian Protection and 
Compliance.--
        ``(1) Exclusion.--All spotted owl habitat areas and protected 
    activity centers located within the pilot project area designated 
    under subsection (b)(2) will be deferred from resource management 
    activ
From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2105]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2105. Urban and community forestry assistance


(a) Findings

    The Congress finds that--
        (1) the health of forests in urban areas and communities, 
    including cities, their suburbs, and towns, in the United States is 
    on the decline;
        (2) forest lands, shade trees, and open spaces in urban areas 
    and communities improve the quality of life for residents;
        (3) forest lands and associated natural resources enhance the 
    economic value of residential and commercial property in urban and 
    community settings;
        (4) urban trees are 15 times more effective than forest trees at 
    reducing the buildup of carbon dioxide and aid in promoting energy 
    conservation through mitigation of the heat island effect in urban 
    areas;
        (5) tree plantings and ground covers such as low growing dense 
    perennial turfgrass sod in urban areas and communities can aid in 
    reducing carbon dioxide emissions, mitigating the heat island 
    effect, and reducing energy consumption, thus contributing to 
    efforts to reduce global warming trends;
        (6) efforts to encourage tree plantings and protect existing 
    open spaces in urban areas and communities can contribute to the 
    social well-being and promote a sense of community in these areas; 
    and
        (7) strengthened research, education, technical assistance, and 
    public information and participation in tree planting and 
    maintenance programs for trees and complementary ground covers for 
    urban and community forests are needed to provide for the protection 
    and expansion of tree cover and open space in urban areas and 
    communities.

(b) Purposes

    The purposes of this section are to--
        (1) improve understanding of the benefits of preserving existing 
    tree cover in urban areas and communities;
        (2) encourage owners of private residences and commercial 
    properties to maintain trees and expand forest cover on their 
    properties;
        (3) provide education programs and technical assistance to State 
    and local organizations (including community associations and 
    schools) in maintaining forested lands and individual trees in urban 
    and community settings and identifying appropriate tree species and 
    sites for expanding forest cover;
        (4) provide assistance through competitive matching grants 
    awarded to local units of government, approved organizations that 
    meet the requirements of section 501(c)(3) of title 26, or other 
    local community tree volunteer groups, for urban and community 
    forestry projects;
        (5) implement a tree planting program to complement urban and 
    community tree maintenance and open space programs and to reduce 
    carbon dioxide emissions, conserve energy, and improve air quality 
    in addition to providing other environmental benefits;
        (6) promote the establishment of demonstration projects in 
    selected urban and community settings to illustrate the benefits of 
    maintaining and creating forest cover and trees;
        (7) enhance the technical skills and understanding of sound tree 
    maintenance and arboricultural practices including practices 
    involving the cultivation of trees, shrubs and complementary ground 
    covers, of individuals involved in the planning, development, and 
    maintenance of urban and community forests and trees; and
        (8) expand existing research and educational efforts intended to 
    improve understanding of--
            (A) tree growth and maintenance, tree physiology and 
        morphology, species adaptations, and forest ecology,
            (B) the value of integrating trees and ground covers,
            (C) the economic, environmental, social, and psychological 
        benefits of trees and forest cover in urban and community 
        environments, and
            (D) the role of urban trees in conserving energy and 
        mitigating the urban heat island.

(c) General authority

    The Secretary is authorized to provide financial, technical, and 
related assistance to State foresters or equivalent State officials for 
the purpose of encouraging States to provide information and technical 
assistance to units of local government and others that will encourage 
cooperative efforts to plan urban forestry programs and to plant, 
protect, and maintain, and utilize wood from, trees in open spaces, 
greenbelts, roadside screens, parks, woodlands, curb areas, and 
residential developments in urban areas. In providing such assistance, 
the Secretary is authorized to cooperate with interested members of the 
public, including nonprofit private organizations. The Secretary is also 
authorized to cooperate directly with units of local government and 
others in implementing this section whenever the Secretary and the 
affected State forester or equivalent State official agree that direct 
cooperation would better achieve the purposes of this section.

(d) Program of education and technical assistance

    The Secretary, in cooperation with State foresters and State 
extension directors or equivalent State officials and interested members 
of the public, including nonprofit private organizations, shall 
implement a program of education and technical assistance for urban and 
community forest resources. The program shall be designed to--
        (1) assist urban areas and communities in conducting inventories 
    of their forest resources, including inventories of the species, 
    number, location, and health of trees in urban areas and 
    communities, identifying opportunities for the establishment of 
    plantings for the purposes of conserving energy, and determining the 
    status of related resources (including fish and wildlife habitat, 
    water resources, and trails);
        (2) assist State and local organizations (including community 
    associations and schools) in organizing and conducting urban and 
    community forestry projects and programs;
        (3) improve education and technical support in--
            (A) selecting tree species appropriate for planting in urban 
        and community environments and for promotion of energy 
        conservation;
            (B) providing for proper tree planting, maintenance, and 
        protection in urban areas and communities;
            (C) protecting individual trees and preserving existing open 
        spaces with or without tree cover; and
            (D) identifying opportunities for expanding tree cover in 
        urban areas and communities;

        (4) assist in the development of State and local management 
    plans for trees and associated resources in urban areas and 
    communities; and
        (5) increase public understanding of the energy conservation, 
    economic, social, environmental, and psychological values of trees 
    and open space in urban and community environments and expand 
    knowledge of the ecological relationships and benefits of trees and 
    related resources in these environments.

(e) Procurement of plant materials

    The Secretary, in cooperation with State foresters or equivalent 
State officials, shall assist in identifying sources of plant materials 
and may procure or otherwise obtain such plant materials from public or 
private sources and may make such plant materials available to urban 
areas and communities for the purpose of reforesting open spaces, 
replacing dead and dying urban trees, promoting energy conservation, and 
providing other environmental benefits through expanding tree cover in 
urban areas and communities.

(f) Challenge cost-share program

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary shall establish an urban and community forestry 
    challenge cost-share program. Funds or other support shall be 
    provided under such program to eligible communities and 
    organizations, on a competitive basis, for urban and community 
    forestry projects. The Secretary shall annually make awards under 
    the program in accordance with criteria developed in consultation 
    with, and after consideration of recommendations received from, the 
    National Urban and Community Forestry Advisory Council established 
    under subsection (g) of this section. Each State forester or 
    equivalent State official may make recommendations to the Secretary 
    for awards under the program for project proposals in their State 
    which meet such criteria. Awards shall be consistent with the cost-
    share requirements of this section.

                          (2) Cost-sharing

        The Federal share of support for a project provided under this 
    subsection may not exceed 50 percent of the support for that project 
    and shall be provided on a matching basis. The non-Federal share of 
    such support may be in the form of cash, services, or in-kind 
    contributions.

(g) Forestry Advisory Council

                    (1) Establishment and purpose

        The Secretary shall establish a National Urban and Community 
    Forestry Advisory Council (hereafter in this section referred to as 
    the ``Council'') for the purpose of--
            (A) developing a national urban and community forestry 
        action plan;
            (B) evaluating the implementation of that plan; and
            (C) developing criteria for, and submitting recommendations 
        with respect to, the urban and community forestry challenge 
        cost-share program under subsection (f) of this section.

                    (2) Composition and operation

        (A) Composition

            The Council shall be composed of 15 members appointed by the 
        Secretary, as follows:
                (i) 2 members representing national nonprofit forestry 
            and conservation citizen organizations,
                (ii) 3 members, 1 each representing State, county, and 
            city and town governments,
                (iii) 1 member representing the forest products, 
            nursery, or related industries,
                (iv) 1 member representing urban forestry, landscape, or 
            design consultants,
                (v) 2 members representing academic institutions with an 
            expertise in urban and community forestry activities,
                (vi) 1 member representing State forestry agencies or 
            equivalent State agencies,
                (vii) 1 member representing a professional renewable 
            natural resource or arboricultural society,
                (viii) 1 member from the Extension Service,
                (ix) 1 member from the Forest Service, and
                (x) 2 members who are not officers or employees of any 
            governmental body, 1 of whom is a resident of a community 
            with a population of less than 50,000 as of the most recent 
            census and both of whom have expertise and have been active 
            in urban and community forestry.

        (B) Vacancy

            A vacancy in the Council shall be filled in the manner in 
        which the original appointment was made.

        (C) Chairperson

            The Secretary shall select 1 member, from members appointed 
        to the Council, who is not an officer or employee of the United 
        States nor any State, county, city, or town government, who 
        shall serve as the chairperson of the Council.

        (D) Terms

            (i) In general

                Except as provided in clauses (ii) and (iii) of this 
            paragraph, members shall be appointed for terms of 3 years, 
            and no member may serve more than 2 consecutive terms on the 
            Council.
            (ii) Staggered terms

                Of the members first appointed--
                    (I) 5, including the chairperson and 2 governmental 
                employees, shall be appointed for a term of 3 years,
                    (II) 5, including 2 governmental employees, shall be 
                appointed for a term of 2 years, and
                    (III) 5, including 2 governmental employees, shall 
                be appointed for a term of 1 year, as designated by the 
                Secretary at the time of appointment.
            (iii) Continuation

                Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring before 
            the expiration of the term of the member's predecessor shall 
            be appointed only for the remainder of such term. A member 
            may serve after the expiration of the member's term until 
            the member's successor has taken office.

        (E) Compensation

            (i) In general

                Except as provided in clause (ii), members of the 
            Council shall serve without pay, but may be reimbursed for 
            reasonable costs incurred while in the actual performance of 
            duties vested in the Council.
            (ii) Federal officers and employees

                Members of the Council who are full-time officers or 
            employees of the United States shall receive no additional 
            pay, allowances, or benefits by reason of their service on 
            the Council.
            (iii) Financial and administrative support

                The Secretary shall provide financial and administrative 
            support for the Council.

            (3) Urban and Community Forestry Action Plan

        Within 1 year after November 28, 1990, and every 10 years 
    thereafter, the Council shall prepare a National Urban and Community 
    Forestry Action Plan. The plan shall include (but not be limited to) 
    the following:
            (A) An assessment of the current status of urban forest 
        resources in the United States.
            (B) A review of urban and community forestry programs and 
        activities in the United States, including education and 
        technical assistance activities conducted by the Department of 
        Agriculture, and other Federal agencies, the State forestry 
        organizations, private industry, private nonprofit 
        organizations, community and civic organizations and interested 
        others.
            (C) Recommendations for improving the status of the Nation's 
        urban and community forest resources, including education and 
        technical assistance and modifications required in existing 
        programs and policies of relevant Federal agencies.
            (D) A review of urban and community forestry research, 
        including--
                (i) a review of all ongoing research associated with 
            urban and community forests, arboricultural practices, and 
            the economic, social, and psychological benefits of trees 
            and forest cover in urban and community environments being 
            conducted by the Forest Service, other Federal agencies, and 
            associated land grant colleges and universities;
                (ii) recommendations for new and expanded research 
            efforts directed toward urban and community forestry 
            concerns; and
                (iii) a summary of research priorities and an estimate 
            of the funds needed to implement such research, on an annual 
            basis, for the next 10 years.

            (E) Proposed criteria for evaluating proposed projects under 
        the urban and community forestry challenge cost share program 
        under subsection (f) of this section, with special emphasis 
        given to projects that would demonstrate the benefits of 
        improved forest management (including the maintenance and 
        establishment of forest cover and trees) in urban areas and 
        communities.
            (F) An estimate of the resources needed to implement the 
        National Urban and Community Forestry Action Plan for the 
        succeeding 10 fiscal years.

                        (4) Amendment of plan

        The plan may be amended by a majority of the Council members. 
    Such amendments shall be incorporated into the Council's annual 
    review of the plan submitted to the Secretary pursuant to paragraph 
    (5) of this subsection.

                         (5) Review of plan

        The Council shall submit the plan to the Secretary and the 
    Committee on Agriculture of the House of Representatives and the 
    Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry of the Senate upon 
    its completion. Beginning no later than one year after the plan is 
    submitted and annually thereafter, the Council shall submit a review 
    of the plan to the Secretary no later than December 31. The review 
    shall consist of--
            (A) the Council's assessment of prior year accomplishments 
        in research, education, technical assistance, and related 
        activities in urban and community forestry;
            (B) the Council's recommendations for research, education, 
        technical assistance, and related activities in the succeeding 
        year; and
            (C) the Council's recommendations for the urban and 
        community forestry challenge cost share projects to be funded 
        during the succeeding year.

    The review submitted to the Secretary shall be incorporated into the 
    annual report required under section 1601(d) of this title.

                       (6) Detail of personnel

        Upon request of the Council, the Secretary is authorized to 
    detail, on a reimbursable basis, any of the personnel of the 
    Department of Agriculture to the Council to assist the Council in 
    carrying out its duties under this chapter.

(h) Definitions

    For the purposes of this section--
        (1) the term ``Council'' means the National Urban and Community 
    Forestry Advisory Council established under subsection (g) of this 
    section;
        (2) the term ``plan'' means the National Urban and Community 
    Forestry Action Plan developed under subsection (g)(3) of this 
    section; and
        (3) the term ``urban and community area'' includes cities, their 
    suburbs, and towns.

(i) Authorization of appropriations

    There are hereby authorized to be appropriated $30,000,000 for each 
of the fiscal years 1991 through 1995, and such sums as may be necessary 
for each fiscal year thereafter, for the implementation of this section.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 9, formerly Sec. 6, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 369; 
renumbered Sec. 9 and amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Secs. 1215(1), 
1219(a), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3533; Pub. L. 102-237, title X, 
Sec. 1018(a)(3), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1905.)

                          Codification

    November 28, 1990, referred to in subsec. (g)(3), was in the 
original ``the date of enactment of this subsection'', which was 
translated as meaning the date of enactment of Pub. L. 101-624, which 
amended this section generally, to reflect the probable intent of 
Congress.


                               Amendments

    1991--Subsec. (g)(1)(C), (3)(E). Pub. L. 102-237, 
Sec. 1018(a)(3)(A), (B), substituted ``subsection (f)'' for ``subsection 
(e)''.
    Subsec. (h)(1). Pub. L. 102-237, Sec. 1018(a)(3)(C), substituted 
``subsection (g)'' for ``subsection (f)''.
    Subsec. (h)(2). Pub. L. 102-237, Sec. 1018(a)(3)(D), substituted 
``subsection (g)(3)'' for ``subsection (f)(3)''.
    1990--Pub. L. 101-624 amended section generally, substituting 
present provisions for provisions relating to Congressional findings 
concerning urban forestry assistance, financial, technical, and related 
assistance to State foresters or equivalent State officials to encourage 
planning of urban forestry programs, and authorization of 
appropriations.


                    Termination of Advisory Councils

    Advisory councils established after Jan. 5, 1973, to terminate not 
later than the expiration of the 2-year period beginning on the date of 
their establishment, unless, in the case of a council established by the 
President or an officer of the Federal Government, such council is 
renewed by appropriate action prior to the expiration of such 2-year 
period, or in the case of a council established by the Congress, its 
duration is otherwise provided by law. See sections 3(2) and 14 of Pub. 
L. 92-463, Oct. 6, 1972, 86 Stat. 770, 776, set out in the Appendix to 
Title 5, Government Organization and Employees.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2106]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2106. Rural fire prevention and control


(a) Congressional findings

    Congress finds that--
        (1) significant accomplishments have been made by the Secretary 
    and cooperating States in the prevention and control of fires on 
    forest lands and on nonforested watersheds for more than fifty 
    years;
        (2) progress is being made by the Secretary and cooperating 
    States and rural communities in the protection of human lives, 
    agricultural crops and livestock, property and other improvements, 
    and natural resources from fires in rural areas;
        (3) notwithstanding the accomplishments and progress that have 
    been made, fire prevention and control on rural lands and in rural 
    communities are of continuing high priority to protect human lives, 
    agricultural crops and livestock, property and other improvements, 
    and natural resources;
        (4) the effective cooperative relationships between the 
    Secretary and the States regarding fire prevention and control on 
    rural lands and in rural communities should be retained and 
    improved;
        (5) efforts in fire prevention and control in rural areas should 
    be coordinated among Federal, State, and local agencies; and
        (6) in addition to providing assistance to State and local rural 
    fire prevention and control programs, the Secretary should provide 
    prompt and adequate assistance whenever a rural fire emergency 
    overwhelms, or threatens to overwhelm, the firefighting capability 
    of the affected State or rural area.

(b) Implementation of provisions

    Notwithstanding the Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1974 
[15 U.S.C. 2201 et seq.] the Secretary is authorized, under whatever 
conditions the Secretary may prescribe, to--
        (1) cooperate with State foresters or equivalent State officials 
    in developing systems and methods for the prevention, control, 
    suppression, and prescribed use of fires on rural lands and in rural 
    communities that will protect human lives, agricultural crops and 
    livestock, property and other improvements, and natural resources;
        (2) provide financial, technical, and related assistance to 
    State foresters or equivalent State officials, and through them to 
    other agencies and individuals, for the prevention, control, 
    suppression, and prescribed use of fires on non-Federal forest lands 
    and other non-Federal lands;
        (3) provide financial, technical, and related assistance to 
    State foresters or equivalent State officials in cooperative efforts 
    to organize, train, and equip local firefighting forces, including 
    those of Indian tribes or other native groups, to prevent, control, 
    and suppress fires threatening human lives, crops, livestock, 
    farmsteads or other improvements, pastures, orchards, wildlife, 
    rangeland, woodland, and other resources in rural areas. As used 
    herein, the term ``rural areas'' shall have the meaning set out in 
    the first clause of section 1926(a)(7) \1\ of title 7; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ See References in Text note below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
        (4) provide financial, technical, and related assistance to 
    State foresters or equivalent State officials, and through them to 
    other agencies and individuals, including rural volunteer fire 
    departments, to conduct preparedness and mobilization activities, 
    including training, equipping, and otherwise enabling State and 
    local firefighting agencies to respond to requests for fire 
    suppression assistance.

(c) Encouragement of use of excess personal property by State and local 
        fire forces receiving assistance; cooperation and assistance of 
        Administrator of General Services

    The Secretary, with the cooperation and assistance of the 
Administrator of General Services, shall encourage the use of excess 
personal property (within the meaning of the Federal Property and 
Administrative Services Act of 1949) by State and local fire forces 
receiving assistance under this section.

(d) Coordination of assistance with assistance of Secretary of Commerce 
        under Federal fire prevention and control provisions

    To promote maximum effectiveness and economy, the Secretary shall 
seek to coordinate the assistance the Secretary provides under this 
section with the assistance provided by the Secretary of Commerce under 
the Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1974 [15 U.S.C. 2201 et 
seq.].

(e) Authorization of appropriations for implementation of provisions

    (1) There are hereby authorized to be appropriated annually such 
sums as may be needed to implement paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of 
subsection (b) of this section.
    (2)(A) There are hereby authorized to be appropriated annually 
$70,000,000 to carry out subsection (b)(4) of this section. Of the total 
amount appropriated to carry out subsection (b)(4) of this section--
        (i) one-half shall be available only for State foresters or 
    equivalent State officials, and through them to other agencies and 
    individuals, of which not less than $100,000 shall be made available 
    to each State; and
        (ii) one-half shall be available only for rural volunteer fire 
    departments.

    (B) The Federal share of the cost of any activity carried out with 
funds made available pursuant to this paragraph may not exceed 50 
percent of the cost of that activity. The non-Federal share for such 
activity may be in the form of cash, services, or in kind contributions.

(f) Special rural fire disaster fund; establishment, appropriations, 
        etc.

    There shall be established in the Treasury a special rural fire 
disaster fund that shall be immediately available to and used by the 
Secretary to supplement any other money available to carry out this 
section with respect to rural fire emergencies, as determined by the 
Secretary. The Secretary shall determine that State and local resources 
are fully used or will be fully used before expending money in the 
disaster fund to assist a State in which one or more rural fire 
emergencies exist. There are hereby authorized to be appropriated such 
sums as may be needed to establish and replenish the disaster fund 
established by this subsection.

(g) Definitions

    As used in this section--
        (1) the term ``rural volunteer fire department'' means any 
    organized, not for profit, fire protection organization that 
    provides service primarily to a community or city with a population 
    of 10,000 or less or to a rural area, as defined by the Secretary, 
    whose firefighting personnel is 80 percent or more volunteer, and 
    that is recognized as a fire department by the laws of the State; 
    and
        (2) the term ``mobilization'' means any activity in which one 
    firefighting organization assists another that has requested 
    assistance.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 10, formerly Sec. 7, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 370; 
renumbered Sec. 10 and amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Secs. 1215(1), 1220, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3539; Pub. L. 102-
237, title X, Sec. 1018(a)(4), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1905.)

                       References in Text

    The Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1974, referred to in 
subsecs. (b) and (d), is Pub. L. 93-498, Oct. 29, 1974, 88 Stat. 1535, 
as amended, which is classified principally to chapter 49 (Sec. 2201 et 
seq.) of Title 15, Commerce and Trade. For complete classification of 
the Act to the Code, see Short Title note set out under section 2201 of 
Title 15 and Tables.
    Section 1926(a)(7) of title 7, referred to in subsec. (b)(3), was 
repealed by Pub. L. 107-171, title VI, Sec. 6020(b)(1), May 13, 2002, 
116 Stat. 363.
    The Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949, 
referred to in subsec. (c), is act June 30, 1949, ch. 288, 63 Stat. 377, 
as amended. Except for title III of the Act, which is classified 
generally to subchapter IV (Sec. 251 et seq.) of chapter 4 of Title 41, 
Public Contracts, the Act was repealed and reenacted by Pub. L. 107-217, 
Secs. 1, 6(b), Aug. 21, 2002, 116 Stat. 1062, 1304, as chapters 1 to 11 
of Title 40, Public Buildings, Property, and Works.


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 10 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 13 and 
is classified to section 2109 of this title.


                               Amendments

    1991--Subsec. (g)(2). Pub. L. 102-237 substituted ``firefighting 
organization'' for ``fire fighting organization''.
    1990--Subsec. (b)(4). Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1220(a), added par. (4).
    Subsec. (e). Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1220(b), designated existing 
provisions as par. (1), inserted reference to paragraphs (1), (2), and 
(3) of subsec. (b), and added par. (2).
    Subsec. (g). Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1220(c), added subsec. (g).

                          Transfer of Functions

    For transfer of functions, personnel, assets, and liabilities of the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency, including the functions of the 
Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency relating thereto, to 
the Secretary of Homeland Security, and for treatment of related 
references, see sections 313(1), 551(d), 552(d), and 557 of Title 6, 
Domestic Security, and the Department of Homeland Security 
Reorganization Plan of November 25, 2002, as modified, set out as a note 
under section 542 of Title 6.
    Functions vested in Secretary of Commerce pursuant to provisions of 
Federal Fire Prevention Control Act of 1974, 15 U.S.C. 2201 et seq., 
transferred to Director of Federal Emergency Management Agency pursuant 
to Reorg. Plan No. 3 of 1978, Sec. 201, June 19, 1978, 43 F.R. 41944, 92 
Stat. 3788, set out in the Appendix to Title 5, Government Organization 
and Employees, effective Apr. 1, 1979, as provided by Ex. Ord. No. 
12127, Secs. 1-101, 1-103(a), Mar. 31, 1979, 44 F.R. 19637.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2106a]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2106a. Emergency reforestation assistance


(a) In general

    The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to provide assistance 
under this section to eligible landowners who suffer destruction of 35 
percent or more of a commercial tree stand due to damaging weather, 
related condition, or wildfire.

(b) Form of assistance

    The assistance, if any, provided by the Secretary under this section 
shall consist of either--
        (1) reimbursement of up to 65 percent of the cost of 
    reestablishing such tree stand damaged by the damaging weather, 
    related condition, or wildfire in excess of 35 percent mortality; or
        (2) at the discretion of the Secretary, provision of sufficient 
    tree seedlings to reestablish such tree stand.

(c) Conditions

                    (1) Limitation on assistance

        No person may receive an amount in excess of $25,000 in any 
    fiscal year, or an equivalent value in tree seedlings, under this 
    section.

                          (2) Ineligibility

        A person who has qualifying gross revenues in excess of 
    $2,000,000 annually, as determined by the Secretary, shall not be 
    eligible to receive any disaster payment or other benefits under 
    this section.

                         (3) Implementation

        In implementing this section, the Secretary shall issue 
    regulations--
            (A) defining the term ``person'' for the purposes of this 
        section that shall conform, to the extent practicable, to the 
        regulations defining the term ``person'' issued under section 
        1308 of title 7;
            (B) prescribing such rules as the Secretary determines 
        necessary to ensure a fair and reasonable application of the 
        limitations established under this subsection; and
            (C) ensuring that no person receives duplicative payments or 
        assistance under this section, the Cooperative Forestry 
        Assistance Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 2101 et seq.), and the 
        environmental quality incentives program established under 
        chapter 4 of subtitle D of title XII of the Food Security Act of 
        1985 [16 U.S.C. 3839aa et seq.], or other Federal program.

(d) Definitions

    As 
From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
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[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2106b]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2106b. Use of money collected from States for fire 
        suppression assistance
        
    Any money collected from the States for fire suppression assistance 
rendered by the Forest Service on non-Federal lands not in the vicinity 
of National Forest System lands shall on and after October 21, 1998, be 
used to reimburse the applicable appropriation and shall remain 
available until expended as the Secretary may direct in conducting 
activities authorized by 16 U.S.C. 2101 note, 2101-2110, 1606, and 2111.

(Pub. L. 105-277, div. A, Sec. 101(e) [title II], Oct. 21, 1998, 112 
Stat. 2681-231, 2681-273.)

                          Codification

    Section was enacted as part of the Department of the Interior and 
Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1999, and also as part of the 
Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act, 
1999, and not as part of the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978 
which comprises this chapter.


                           Similar Provisions

    Provisions similar to this section were contained in the following 
prior appropriation acts:
    Pub. L. 105-83, title II, Nov. 14, 1997, 111 Stat. 1577.
    Pub. L. 104-208, div. A, title I, Sec. 101(d) [title II], Sept. 30, 
1996, 110 Stat. 3009-181, 3009-208.
    Pub. L. 104-134, title I, Sec. 101(c) [title II], Apr. 26, 1996, 110 
Stat. 1321-156, 1321-185; renumbered title I, Pub. L. 104-140, 
Sec. 1(a), May 2, 1996, 110 Stat. 1327.
    Pub. L. 103-332, title II, Sept. 30, 1994, 108 Stat. 2524.
    Pub. L. 103-138, title II, Nov. 11, 1993, 107 Stat. 1403.
    Pub. L. 102-381, title II, Oct. 5, 1992, 106 Stat. 1402.
    Pub. L. 102-154, title II, Nov. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1018.
    Pub. L. 101-512, title II, Nov. 5, 1990, 104 Stat. 1943.
    Pub. L. 101-121, title II, Oct. 23, 1989, 103 Stat. 727.
    Pub. L. 100-446, title II, Sept. 27, 1988, 102 Stat. 1810.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
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[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2107]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2107. Financial, technical, and related assistance to 
        States
        

(a) Development of State organizations for protection and management of 
        non-Federal forest lands; scope of assistance; request by 
        officials

    To aid in achieving maximum effectiveness in the programs and 
activities conducted under this chapter, the Secretary is authorized to 
provide financial, technical, and related assistance to State foresters 
or equivalent State officials for the development of stronger and more 
efficient State organizations that will enable them to fulfill better 
their responsibilities for the protection and management of non-Federal 
forest lands. Assistance under this subsection may include, but will not 
be limited to, assistance in matters related to organization management, 
program planning and management, budget and fiscal accounting services, 
personnel training and management, information services, and 
recordkeeping. Assistance under this subsection may be extended only 
upon request by State foresters or equivalent State officials.

(b) Assembly, analysis, display, and reporting of State forest resources 
        data, resources planning, etc.; scope of assistance; other 
        statutory provisions unaffected

    To ensure that data regarding forest lands are available for and 
effectively presented in State and Federal natural resources planning, 
the Secretary is authorized to provide financial, technical, and related 
assistance to State foresters or equivalent State officials in the 
assembly, analysis, display, and reporting of State forest resources 
data, in the training of State forest resources planners, and in 
participating in natural resources planning at the State and Federal 
levels. The Secretary shall restrict assistance under this subsection to 
the implementation of the forestry aspects of State and Federal natural 
resources planning conducted under other laws. This subsection shall not 
be construed, in any way whatsoever, as extending, limiting, amending, 
repealing, or otherwise affecting any other law or authority.

(c) Technology implementation program; scope of program; availability of 
        funds; use of forest resources planning committees

    To ensure that new technology is introduced, new information is 
integrated into existing technology, and forest resources research 
findings are promptly made available to State forestry personnel, 
private forest landowners and managers, vendors, forest operators, wood 
processors, public agencies, and individuals, the Secretary is 
authorized to carry out a program of technology implementation.
        (1) In implementing this subsection, the Secretary is authorized 
    to work through State foresters or equivalent State officials, and, 
    if the State forester or equivalent State official is unable to 
    deliver these services, the Secretary is authorized to act through 
    appropriate United States Department of Agriculture agencies, 
    subdivisions of States, agencies, institutions, organizations, or 
    individuals to--
            (A) strengthen technical assistance and service programs of 
        cooperators participating in programs under this chapter by 
        applying research results and conducting pilot projects and 
        field tests of management and utilization practices, equipment, 
        and technologies, related to programs and activities authorized 
        under this chapter;
            (B) study the effects of tax laws, methods, and practices on 
        forest management;
            (C) develop and maintain technical information systems in 
        support of programs and activities authorized under this 
        chapter;
            (D) test, evaluate, and seek registration of chemicals for 
        use in implementing the programs and activities authorized under 
        this chapter;
            (E) conduct other activities, including training of State 
        forestry personnel whom the Secretary deems necessary to ensure 
        that the programs and activities authorized under this chapter 
        are responsive to special problems, unique situations, and 
        changing conditions.

        (2) The Secretary may make funds available to cooperators under 
    this chapter without regard to the provisions of section 3324(a) and 
    (b) of title 31, which prohibits advances of public money.
        (3) The Secretary shall use forest resources planning committees 
    at National and State levels in implementing this subsection.

(d) Authorization of appropriations

    There are hereby authorized to be appropriated annually such sums as 
may be needed to implement this section.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 11, formerly Sec. 8, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 371; 
renumbered Sec. 11, Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Sec. 1215(1), Nov. 28, 
1990, 104 Stat. 3525.)

                          Codification

    In subsec. (c)(2), ``section 3324(a) and (b) of title 31'' 
substituted for ``section 3648 of the Revised Statutes (31 U.S.C. 529)'' 
on authority of Pub. L. 97-258, Sec. 4(b), Sept. 13, 1982, 96 Stat. 
1067, the first section of which enacted Title 31, Money and Finance.


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 11 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 14 and 
is classified to section 2110 of this title.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2108]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2108. Consolidation of payments


(a) Request by State; excluded funds

    To provide flexibility in funding activities authorized under this 
chapter, the Secretary may, upon the request of any State, consolidate 
the annual financial assistance payments to that State under this 
chapter, in lieu of functional cost sharing mechanisms, formulas, or 
agreements. However, consolidated payments shall not include money 
appropriated under section 2103 of this title or money from any special 
Treasury fund established under this chapter.

(b) State forest resources programs as basis

    Consolidation of payments made under this section shall be based 
upon State forest resources programs developed by State foresters or 
equivalent State officials, and reviewed by the Secretary.

(c) Amount of payments

    Consolidated payments to any State during any fiscal year shall not 
exceed the total amount of non-Federal funds expended within the State 
during that year to implement its State forest resources program. 
However, the Secretary may make payments that exceed the non-Federal 
amount expended for selected activities under the program, if the total 
Federal expenditure during any fiscal year does not exceed the total 
non-Federal expenditure during that year under the State forest 
resources program.

(d) Certification requirement by State forester or equivalent State 
        official for Federal payment

    The Secretary may make consolidated payments on the certificate of 
the State forester or equivalent State official that the conditions for 
Federal payment have been met.

(e) Administration of consolidated payments program not to adversely 
        affect, etc., other programs

    The Secretary shall administer this section to ensure that the use 
of consolidated payments does not adversely affect or eliminate any 
program authorized under this chapter.

(f) Total annual amount of financial assistance to participating State; 
        financial assistance for special projects not to be included in 
        determining base amount

    Subject to applicable appropriation Acts, the total annual amount of 
financial assistance to any participating State after July 1, 1978, 
shall not be less than the base amount of financial assistance provided 
to that State under all the provisions of law specified in section 2111 
of this title during the fiscal year in which this chapter is enacted. 
However, financial assistance for special projects of two years or less 
duration shall not be included in determining the base amount for any 
participating State.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 12, formerly Sec. 9, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 372; 
renumbered Sec. 12 and amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Secs. 1215(1), 1224(2), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3542.)


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 12 of Pub. L. 95-313, which amended section 1606 of 
this title and enacted provisions set out as a note under that section, 
was renumbered section 15.


                               Amendments

    1990--Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1224(2), made technical 
amendment to reference to section 2111 of this title to reflect 
renumbering of corresponding section of original act.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2109]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2109. General provisions


(a) Cooperative and coordinating requirements for implementation of 
        programs, etc.

    In implementing this chapter, the Secretary shall, to the maximum 
extent practicable--
        (1) work through, cooperate with, and assist State foresters or 
    equivalent State officials;
        (2) encourage cooperation and coordination between State 
    foresters or equivalent State officials and other State agencies 
    that manage renewable natural resources;
        (3) use and encourage cooperators under this chapter to use, 
    private agencies, consultants, organizations, firms, and individuals 
    to furnish necessary materials and services; and
        (4) promote effectiveness and economy by coordinating the direct 
    actions and assistance authorized under this chapter with related 
    programs the Secretary administers, and with cooperative programs of 
    other agencies.

(b) Availability of appropriations

    Money appropriated under this chapter shall remain available until 
expended.

(c) Consultation requirements for implementation of programs, etc.

    Requirements for the development of State forest resources programs 
and State participation in management assistance, planning assistance, 
and technology implementation, the apportionment of funds among States 
participating under this chapter, the administrative expenses in 
connection with activities and programs under this chapter, and the 
amounts to be expended by the Secretary to assist non-State cooperators 
under this chapter, shall be determined by the Secretary in consultation 
with a committee of not less than five State foresters or equivalent 
State officials selected by a majority of the State foresters or 
equivalent State officials from States participating in programs under 
this chapter. However, the Secretary need not consult with such 
committee regarding funds to be expended under emergency conditions that 
the Secretary may determine.

(d) Definitions

    For the purposes of this chapter--
        (1) The terms ``United States'' and ``State'' shall include each 
    of the several States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of 
    Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the United States, the 
    Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Trust Territory of 
    the Pacific Islands, and the territories and possessions of the 
    United States;
        (2) The term ``forest resources'' shall include esthetics, fish 
    and wildlife, forage, outdoor recreation opportunities, timber, and 
    water; and
        (3) The term ``urban forestry'' means the planning, 
    establishment, protection, and management of trees and associated 
    plants, individually, in small groups, or under forest conditions 
    within cities, their suburbs, and towns.

(e) Rules and regulations

    The Secretary may prescribe rules and regulations, as the Secretary 
deems appropriate, to implement the provisions of this chapter.

(f) Granting, etc., authorities

    The Secretary is authorized to make grants, agreements, contracts, 
and other arrangements the Secretary deems necessary to implement this 
chapter.

(g) Construction of statutory provisions

    This chapter shall be construed as supplementing all other laws 
relating to the Department of Agriculture and shall not be construed as 
limiting or repealing any existing law or authority of the Secretary, 
except as specifically cited in section 2111 of this title.

(h) Additional assistance

    In addition to the authority provided elsewhere in this chapter, the 
Secretary may provide assistance to other countries with respect to the 
activities described in paragraphs (1) through (10) of section 2102(b) 
of this title, paragraphs (1) through (5) of section 2104(b) \1\ of this 
title, and paragraphs (1) through (3) of section 2105(b) of this title. 
For the purposes of providing assistance to other countries under this 
subsection, the term ``non-Federal forest land'' shall mean any forest 
land and related renewable natural resources in such countries. In 
providing the assistance authorized under this subsection, the Secretary 
shall coordinate with other Federal officials, departments, agencies, or 
international organizations, as the President may direct. The references 
to ``State foresters or equivalent State officials'' in this chapter 
shall not apply to the assistance provided by the Secretary to other 
countries under this subsection.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ See References in Text note below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 13, formerly Sec. 10, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 373; 
Pub. L. 101-513, title VI, Sec. 611(b)(3), formerly Sec. 607(b)(3), Nov. 
5, 1990, 104 Stat. 2072, renumbered Sec. 611(b)(3), Pub. L. 102-574, 
Sec. 2(a)(1), Oct. 29, 1992, 106 Stat. 4593; renumbered Sec. 13 and 
amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Secs. 1215(1), 1224(3), Nov. 28, 
1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3542.)

                       References in Text

    Section 2104(b) of this title, referred to in subsec. (h), was in 
the original a reference to section 7(b), meaning section 7(b) of Pub. 
L. 95-313, which has been translated as reading section 8(b) of Pub. L. 
95-313 as the probable intent of Congress. Section 7(b) of Pub. L. 95-
313, which is classified to section 2103c of this title, does not 
contain pars. (1) to (5).


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 13 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 16 and 
is classified to section 2111 of this title.


                               Amendments

    1990--Subsec. (g). Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1224(3), made technical 
amendment to reference to section 2111 of this title to reflect 
renumbering of corresponding section of original act.
    Subsec. (h). Pub. L. 101-513, which directed amendment of section 12 
of Pub. L. 95-313 by adding a new subsec. (h), was executed to this 
section to reflect the probable intent of Congress.

          Termination of Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands

    For termination of Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, see note 
set out preceding section 1681 of Title 48, Territories and Insular 
Possessions.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2110]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2110. Statement of limitation

    This chapter shall not authorize the Federal Government to regulate 
the use of private land or to deprive owners of land of their rights to 
property or to income from the sale of property, unless such property 
rights are voluntarily conveyed or limited by contract or other 
agreement. This chapter does not diminish in any way the rights and 
responsibilities of the States and political subdivisions of States.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 14, formerly Sec. 11, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 374; 
renumbered Sec. 14 and amended Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Secs. 1215(1), 1221, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3525, 3540.)


                            Prior Provisions

    A prior section 14 of Pub. L. 95-313 was renumbered section 17 and 
is set out as a note under section 2101 of this title.


                               Amendments

    1990--Pub. L. 101-624, Sec. 1221, amended section generally. Prior 
to amendment, section read as follows: ``This chapter does not authorize 
the Federal Government to regulate the use of private land or to deprive 
owners of land of their rights to property or to income from the sale of 
property, and this chapter does not diminish in any way the rights and 
responsibilities of the States and political subdivisions of States.''



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2111]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2111. Other Federal programs


(a) Repeal of statutory authorities

    The following laws, and portions of laws, are hereby repealed:
        (1) sections 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Act of June 7, 1924, known as 
    the Clarke-McNary Act (43 Stat. 653-654, as amended; 16 U.S.C. 564, 
    565, 566, 567);
        (2) the Act of April 26, 1940, known as the White Pine Blister 
    Rust Protection Act (54 Stat. 168; 16 U.S.C. 594a);
        (3) the Forest Pest Control Act;
        (4) the Cooperative Forest Management Act;
        (5) section 401 of the Agricultural Act of 1956 [16 U.S.C. 
    568e];
        (6) title IV of the Rural Development Act of 1972 [7 U.S.C. 2651 
    et seq.]; and
        (7) section 1009 and the proviso to section 1010 \1\ of the 
    Agricultural Act of 1970, as added by the Agriculture and Consumer 
    Protection Act of 1973 [16 U.S.C. 1509, 1510].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ See References in Text note below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

(b) Force and effect of contracts and cooperative and other agreements 
        under cooperative forestry programs executed under authority of 
        repealed statutes

    Contracts and cooperative and other agreements under cooperative 
forestry programs executed under authority of the Acts, or portions 
thereof, repealed under subsection (a) of this section shall remain in 
effect until revoked or amended by their own terms or under other 
provisions of law.

(c) Availability of funds appropriated under authority of repealed 
        statutes for cooperative forestry assistance programs

    Funds appropriated under the authority of the Acts, or portions 
thereof, repealed under subsection (a) of this section shall be 
available for expenditure for the programs authorized under this 
chapter.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 16, formerly Sec. 13, July 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 374; 
renumbered Sec. 16, Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Sec. 1215(1), Nov. 28, 
1990, 104 Stat. 3525.)

                       References in Text

    Act of April 26, 1940, known as the White Pine Blister Rust 
Protection Act (54 Stat. 168; 16 U.S.C. 594a), referred to in subsec. 
(a)(2), is act Apr. 26, 1940, ch. 159, 54 Stat. 168, which enacted 
section 594a of this title.
    The Forest Pest Control Act, referred to in subsec. (a)(3), is act 
June 25, 1947, ch. 141, 61 Stat. 177, as amended, which enacted sections 
594-1 to 594-5 of this title and enacted provisions set out as notes 
under section 594-1 of this title. For complete classification of this 
Act to the Code, see Tables.
    The Cooperative Forest Management Act, referred to in subsec. 
(a)(4), is act Aug. 25, 1950, ch. 781, 64 Stat. 473, as amended, which 
enacted sections 568c and 568d of this title, repealed section 568b of 
this title, and enacted a provision set out as a note under section 568c 
of this title. For complete classification of this Act to the Code, see 
Tables.
    The Rural Development Act of 1972, referred to in subsec. (a)(6), is 
Pub. L. 92-419, Aug. 30, 1972, 86 Stat. 657, as amended. Title IV of the 
Rural Development Act of 1972 was classified generally to subchapter I 
(Sec. 2651 et seq.) of chapter 59 of Title 7, Agriculture. For complete 
classification of this Act to the Code, see Short Title of 1972 
Amendment note set out under section 1921 of Title 7 and Tables.
    Section 1010 of the Agricultural Act of 1970, as added by the 
Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973, referred to in subsec. 
(a)(7), was classified to section 1510 of this title prior to repeal by 
Pub. L. 104-127, title III, Sec. 336(d)(1), Apr. 4, 1996, 110 Stat. 
1006.



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2112]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2112. Cooperative national forest products marketing 
        program
        

(a) Findings and purposes

                            (1) Findings

        Congress finds that--
            (A) the health and vitality of the domestic forest products 
        industry is important to the well-being of the economy of the 
        United States;
            (B) the domestic forest products industry has a significant 
        potential for expansion in both domestic and foreign markets;
            (C) many small-sized to medium-sized forest products firms 
        lack the tools that would enable them to meet the increasing 
        challenge of foreign competition in domestic and foreign 
        markets; and
            (D) a new cooperative forest products marketing program will 
        improve the competitiveness of the United States forest products 
        industry.

                            (2) Purposes

        The purposes of this section are to--
            (A) provide direct technical assistance to the United States 
        forest products industry to improve marketing activities;
            (B) provide cost-share grants to States to support State and 
        regional forest products marketing programs; and
            (C) target assistance to small-sized and medium-sized 
        producers of solid wood and processed wood products, including 
        pulp.

(b) Program authority

                           (1) In general

        The Secretary shall establish a cooperative national forest 
    products marketing program under this chapter that provides--
            (A) technical assistance to States, landowners, and small-
        sized to medium-sized forest products firms on ways to improve 
        domestic and foreign markets for forest products; and
            (B) grants of financial assistance with matching 
        requirements to the States to assist in State and regional 
        forest products marketing efforts targeted to aid small-sized to 
        medium-sized forest products firms and private, nonindustrial 
        forest landowners.

                (2) Interstate cooperative agreements

        Grant agreements shall encourage the establishment of interstate 
    cooperative agreements by the States for the purpose of promoting 
    the development of domestic and foreign markets for forest products.

(c) Limitations

             (1) Cooperation with other Federal agencies

        In carrying out this section, the Secretary shall cooperate with 
    Federal departments and agencies to avoid the duplication of efforts 
    and to increase program efficiency.

                        (2) Domestic program

        The program authorized under this section shall be carried out 
    within the United States and not be extended to Department of 
    Agriculture activities in foreign countries.

(d) Authorization for appropriations

    There are authorized to be appropriated $5,000,000 for each of the 
fiscal years 1988 through 1991, to carry out this section.

(e) Program report

    The Secretary shall report to Congress annually on the activities 
taken under the marketing program established under this section. A 
final report including recommendations for program changes and the need 
and desirability of the reauthorization of this authority, and required 
levels of funding, shall be submitted to Congress not later than 
September 30, 1990.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 18, formerly Sec. 15, as added Pub. L. 100-418, 
title IV, Sec. 4403, Aug. 23, 1988, 102 Stat. 1400; renumbered Sec. 18, 
Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, Sec. 1215(1), Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 
3525.)


              International Forest Products Trade Institute

    Section 1247 of Pub. L. 101-624, as amended by Pub. L. 102-237, 
title X, Sec. 1018(c), Dec. 13, 1991, 105 Stat. 1905, provided that:
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Agriculture may establish an 
International Forest Products Trade Institute (hereafter in this section 
referred to as the `Institute').
    ``(b) Mission.--The mission of the Institute will be to increase the 
competitive position of the forest industries of the northeastern United 
States as major producers of international forest products in order to 
increase domestic employment and stimulate rural development, and to 
provide a knowledgeable, objective analysis of global forest resource 
problems.
    ``(c) Functions.--The Institute shall--
        ``(1) emphasize the application of existing knowledge to the 
    manufacturing and international marketing of forest products as well 
    as conduct new research related to the competitiveness of the 
    northeastern forest products industry;
        ``(2) study and evaluate domestic and international forest, 
    forest sector, agroforestry, development, economic, and trade 
    policies;
        ``(3) design, analyze and test technologically appropriate 
    manufacturing, processing and marketing systems which are supportive 
    of and consistent with forest policy and management strategies 
    formulated by the Institute and which enhance opportunities for 
    markets in forest products; and
        ``(4) formulate and test management strategies for--
            ``(A) United States forests, and
            ``(B) manufacturing facilities that promote ecologically 
        sustainable use, and long-term management, of international 
        forests.
    ``(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated such sums as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of 
this section.''



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2113]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2113. Federal, State, and local coordination and 
        cooperation
        

(a) Department of Agriculture Coordinating Committee

                          (1) Establishment

        The Secretary shall establish an intradepartmental committee, to 
    be known as the ``Forest Resource Coordinating Committee'' 
    (hereafter referred to in this section as the ``Coordinating 
    Committee''), to coordinate forestry activities.

                           (2) Composition

        The Coordinating Committee shall be composed of representatives, 
    appointed by the Secretary, from the Agricultural Research Service, 
    Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, Extension 
    Service, Forest Service, and Soil Conservation Service.

                           (3) Chairperson

        The Secretary shall designate the Chief of the Forest Service as 
    chairperson.

                             (4) Duties

        The Coordinating Committee shall--
            (A) provide assistance in directing and coordinating actions 
        of the Department of Agriculture that relate to educational, 
        technical, and financial assistance concerning forest land to 
        private landowners;
            (B) clarify individual agency responsibilities concerning 
        forest land of each agency represented on the Committee; and
            (C) advise the Secretary of intradepartmental differences 
        regarding the implementation of this chapter, and any other Act 
        related to the authority of the Secretary concerning non-Federal 
        forest lands.

(b) State Coordinating Committees

                          (1) Establishment

        (A) In general

            The Secretary, in consultation with the State forester or 
        equivalent State official of each State, shall establish a State 
        Forest Stewardship Coordinating Committee (hereafter referred to 
        in this section as the ``State Coordinating Committee'') for 
        each such State.

        (B) Composition

            The State Coordinating Committee shall be chaired and 
        administered by the State forester, or equivalent State 
        official, or the designee thereof, and shall be composed, to the 
        extent practicable, of--
                (i) representatives from the Forest Service, Soil 
            Conservation Service, Agricultural Stabilization and 
            Conservation Service, and Extension Service;
                (ii) representatives, to be appointed by the State 
            forester or equivalent State official, representative of--
                    (I) local government;
                    (II) consulting foresters;
                    (III) environmental organizations;
                    (IV) forest products industry;
                    (V) forest land owners;
                    (VI) land-trust organizations, if applicable in the 
                State;
                    (VII) conservation organizations; and
                    (VIII) the State fish and wildlife agency; and

                (iii) any other individuals determined appropriate by 
            the Secretary.

        (C) Terms

            The members of the State Coordinating Committee appointed 
        under subparagraph (B)(ii) shall serve 3-year terms, with the 
        initial members serving staggered terms as determined by the 
        State forester or equivalent State official, and may be 
        reappointed for consecutive terms.

        (D) Existing committees

            Existing State forestry committees may be used to 
        complement, formulate, or replace the State Coordinating 
        Committees to avoid duplication of efforts if such existing 
        committees are made up of membership that is similar to that 
        described in subparagraph (B)(ii), and if such existing 
        committees include landowners and the general public in their 
        memberships.

                             (2) Duties

        A State Coordinating Committee shall--
            (A) consult with other Department of Agriculture and State 
        committees that address State and private forestry issues;
            (B) make recommendations to the Secretary concerning the 
        assignment of priorities and the coordination of 
        responsibilities for the implementation of this chapter by the 
        various Federal and State forest management agencies that take 
        into consideration the mandates of each such agency;
            (C) make recommendations to the State forester or equivalent 
        State official concerning the development of a Forest 
        Stewardship Plan under paragraph (3); and
            (D) make recommendations to the Secretary concerning those 
        forest lands that should be given priority for inclusion in the 
        Forest Legacy Program established pursuant to section 2103c of 
        this title.

                     (3) Forest Stewardship Plan

        The State forester or equivalent State official of each State, 
    in consultation with the State Coordinating Committee of such State, 
    shall develop a Forest Stewardship Plan that shall--
            (A) provide baseline data on the forest resources of the 
        State;
            (B) outline threats to the forest resources of the State;
            (C) describe economic and environmental opportunities that 
        are linked with the forest resources of the State;
            (D) address management problems, opportunities, and 
        objectives associated with intermingled Federal, State, and 
        private land ownership patterns within the State; and
            (E) make planning recommendations for Federal, State, and 
        local implementation of this chapter.

                           (4) Other plans

        Other State forest management plans may be used as the basis for 
    or in lieu of establishing a plan for the State under paragraph (3) 
    if such plans fully conform to the objectives of this section.

                           (5) Termination

        The State Coordinating Committees shall not terminate.

                      (6) Rule of construction

        Nothing in this section shall be construed to compel action by 
    any State official.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 19, as added Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Sec. 1222, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3540.)



From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 3, 2006]
[CITE: 16USC2114]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
               CHAPTER 41--COOPERATIVE FORESTRY ASSISTANCE
 
Sec. 2114. Administration


(a) In general

    The Secretary shall administer this chapter in accordance with 
regulations that the Secretary shall develop.

(b) Guidelines

    The regulations promulgated under this chapter shall include 
guidelines for the administration of this chapter at the Federal and 
State levels and shall identify the measures and activities that are 
eligible for cost sharing under this chapter.

(c) Existing mechanisms

    Existing mechanisms shall be used to the extent possible to make 
payments and deliver services to the landowner under this chapter.

(d) Land grant universities

    The Secretary, in consultation with State foresters or equivalent 
State officials, may provide assistance directly to other State and 
local natural resource management agencies and land grant universities 
in implementing this chapter in cases in which the State foresters or 
equivalent State officials are not able to make fund transfers to other 
State and local agencies.

(Pub. L. 95-313, Sec. 20, as added Pub. L. 101-624, title XII, 
Sec. 1223, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat. 3542.)










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