Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 124.djvu/2291

 124 STAT. 2265 PUBLIC LAW 111–211—JULY 29, 2010 ‘‘(14) in coordination with the Attorney General pursuant to subsection (g) of section 302 of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3732), collecting, ana- lyzing, and reporting data regarding Indian country crimes on an annual basis; ‘‘(15) on an annual basis, sharing with the Department of Justice all relevant crime data, including Uniform Crime Reports, that the Office of Justice Services prepares and receives from tribal law enforcement agencies on a tribe-by- tribe basis to ensure that individual tribal governments pro- viding data are eligible for programs offered by the Department of Justice; ‘‘(16) submitting to the appropriate committees of Congress, for each fiscal year, a detailed spending report regarding tribal public safety and justice programs that includes— ‘‘(A)(i) the number of full-time employees of the Bureau and tribal governments who serve as— ‘‘(I) criminal investigators; ‘‘(II) uniform police; ‘‘(III) police and emergency dispatchers; ‘‘(IV) detention officers; ‘‘(V) executive personnel, including special agents in charge, and directors and deputies of various offices in the Office of Justice Services; and ‘‘(VI) tribal court judges, prosecutors, public defenders, appointed defense counsel, or related staff; and ‘‘(ii) the amount of appropriations obligated for each category described in clause (i) for each fiscal year; ‘‘(B) a list of amounts dedicated to law enforcement and corrections, vehicles, related transportation costs, equipment, inmate transportation costs, inmate transfer costs, replacement, improvement, and repair of facilities, personnel transfers, detailees and costs related to their details, emergency events, public safety and justice commu- nications and technology costs, and tribal court personnel, facilities, indigent defense, and related program costs; ‘‘(C) a list of the unmet staffing needs of law enforce- ment, corrections, and court personnel (including indigent defense and prosecution staff) at tribal and Bureau of Indian Affairs justice agencies, the replacement and repair needs of tribal and Bureau corrections facilities, needs for tribal police and court facilities, and public safety and emergency communications and technology needs; and ‘‘(D) the formula, priority list or other methodology used to determine the method of disbursement of funds for the public safety and justice programs administered by the Office of Justice Services; ‘‘(17) submitting to the appropriate committees of Congress, for each fiscal year, a report summarizing the technical assist- ance, training, and other support provided to tribal law enforce- ment and corrections agencies that operate relevant programs pursuant to self-determination contracts or self-governance compacts with the Secretary; and ‘‘(18) promulgating regulations to carry out this Act, and routinely reviewing and updating, as necessary, the regulations Regulations. Reports. Reports. Information sharing. Data collection. Reports.