Legislative History of the National Marine Sanctuaries Act

In 1966, Congress passed the Marine Resources and Engineering Act, which resulted to the formation of the Commission on Marine Sciences, Engineering, and Resources (COMSER) chaired by Julius Stratton, former president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. COMSER, which ultimately became known as the Stratton Commission, was impaneled to review the status of most areas of American ocean policy, and investigate the possibilities of a coordinated governmental effort regarding coastal resource conservation. The Commission issued its report concurrently with the incoming of the Nixon administration in January 1969.

Several important themes emerged from the Stratton report. First, it called for a centralization of the federal government's ocean effort if the full benefits of the nation's marine and coastal resources were to be realized. Concomitantly, the report called for the creation of a civilian ocean and atmosphere agency to undertake the full range of actions needed to realize the effective use of the sea. Second, the report stated the urgent need for a concerted effort to begin planning and managing the nation's coastal zones. It advocated more research and recommended a federal-state program in coastal zone management. Finally, the report highlighted the need for a much-expanded program in ocean science, technology, and engineering, at both the national and global levels.

The Stratton Commission's report and other studies spurred Congress to introduce a series of bills in 1970-'72 which culminated in legislation which contained many fundamental coastal and nearshore ocean protective measures. Among those enactments were the Coastal Zone Management Act, the Marine Mammal Protection Act, the Magnuson Fishery Conservation and Management Act, the Clean Water Act, the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Amendments, and the Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act (MPRSA)

1972 - Enactment of the MPRSA

In 1972, exactly one hundred years after the birth of the National Park System, the U.S. Congress enacted, and President Nixon signed, The Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act. Title III of that Act created what was then known as the National Marine Sanctuaries Program, a framework for the protection of oceanic parks.

As originally enacted, Title III permitted the Secretary of Commerce to:

"…designate as marine sanctuaries those areas of the oceans, coastal, and other waters, as far seaward as the outer edge of the Continental Shelf…which he determines necessary for the purpose of preserving or restoring such areas for their conservation, recreational, ecological, or esthetic values."

Title III also provided that:

1980 - The First Substantive Amendment to Title III

1984 - Congressional clarification

1988 - Significant Changes

1992 - Major Overhaul

1996 - Incremental Change

2000 - Latest Revisions