Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 110 Part 6.djvu/442

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110 STAT. 4264 PUBLIC LAW 104-333—NOV. 12, 1996 (A) whether the plan has strong local support from a diversity of landowners, business interests, nonprofit organizations, and governments within the area; (B) whether the plan is consistent with and complements continued economic activity in the area; (C) whether the plan has a high potential for effective partnership mechanisms; (D) whether the plan improperly infringes on private property rights; and (E) whether the plan will take appropriate action to ensure private property rights are observed. (3) DISAPPROVAL. — (A) IN GENERAL.— I f the Secretary disapproves the proposed heritage plan, the Secretary shall notify the management entity. (B) CONTENTS.—A notification under subparagraph (A) shall include— (i) the reasons for the disapproval; and (ii) recommendations for revision. (C) REVISED PLAN. —The management entity shall revise and resubmit the heritage plan to the Secretary for approval. Not later than 180 days after receipt of the revised plan, the Secretary shall approve or disapprove the plan as provided in paragraph (2). The management entity shall revise and submit the heritage plan until the heritage plan is approved by the Secretary. SEC. 607. SUNSET. The Secretary may not make any grant or provide any assistance under this title after September 30, 2012. SEC. 608. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS. (a) IN GENERAL. —There is authorized to be appropriated under this title not more than $1,000,000 for any fiscal year. Not more than a total of $10,000,000 may be appropriated for the Corridor under this title. (b) 50 PERCENT MATCH. —Federal funding provided under this title, after the designation of this Corridor, may not exceed 50 percent of the toted cost of any assistance or grant provided or authorized under this title. Iowa. 16 USC 461 note. TITLE VII—AMERICA'S AGRICULTURAL HERITAGE PARTNERSHIP SEC. 701. FINDINGS AND PURPOSES. (a) The Congress finds that— (1) the city of Waterloo, Iowa, and northeast Iowa posses many important elements of the nationally significant story of American agriculture, including Native American agriculture, agricultural mechanization, seed hybridization, farm cooperative movements, rural electrification, farm-to-market systems, rural to urban migration, veterinary practice, food processing and preservation, national farm organizations, international hunger relief, and the development of national and international agribusiness;