Collapse to view only § 2636. Deductions from amounts due carriers
- § 2631. Preference for United States vessels in transporting supplies by sea
- § 2631a. Contingency planning: sealift and related intermodal transportation requirements
- § 2632. Transportation to and from certain places of employment and on military installations
- § 2633. Stevedoring and terminal services: vessels carrying cargo or passengers sponsored by military department
- [§ 2634. Repealed.
- § 2635. Medical emergency helicopter transportation assistance and limitation of individual liability
- § 2636. Deductions from amounts due carriers
- § 2636a. Loss or damage to personal property transported at Government expense: full replacement value; deduction from amounts due carriers
- § 2637. Transportation in certain areas outside the United States
- § 2638. Transportation of civilian clothing of enlisted members
- § 2639. Transportation to and from school for certain minor dependents
- § 2640. Charter air transportation of members of the armed forces or cargo
- § 2641. Transportation of certain veterans on Department of Defense aeromedical evacuation aircraft
- § 2641a. Transportation of American Samoa veterans on Department of Defense aircraft for certain medical care in Hawaii
- § 2641b. Space-available travel on Department of Defense aircraft: program authorized and eligible recipients
- § 2642. Transportation services provided to certain non-Department of Defense agencies and entities: use of Department of Defense reimbursement rate
- § 2643. Commissary and exchange services: transportation overseas
- § 2644. Control of transportation systems in time of war
- § 2645. Indemnification of Department of Transportation for losses covered by vessel war risk insurance
- § 2646. Travel services: procurement for official and unofficial travel under one contract
- § 2647. Next-of-kin of persons unaccounted for from conflicts after World War II: transportation to annual meetings
- § 2648. Persons and supplies: sea, land, and air transportation
- § 2649. Civilian passengers and commercial cargoes: transportation on Department of Defense vessels, vehicles, and aircraft
- § 2650. Civilian personnel in Alaska
- § 2651. Passengers and merchandise to Guam: sea transport
- § 2652. Prohibition on charge of certain tariffs on aircraft traveling through channel routes
The Secretary of Defense may authorize the commander of a unified combatant command to use Government owned or leased vehicles to provide transportation in an area outside the United States for members of the uniformed services and Federal civilian employees under the jurisdiction of that commander, and for the dependents of such members and employees, if the commander determines that public or private transportation in such area is unsafe or not available. Such transportation shall be provided in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Defense.
The Secretary of the military department concerned may provide for the transportation of the civilian clothing of any person entering the armed forces as an enlisted member to the member’s home of record.
Funds appropriated to the Department of Defense may be used to provide minor dependents of members of the armed forces and of civilian officers and employees of the Department of Defense with transportation to and from primary and secondary schools if the schools attended by the dependents are not accessible by regular means of transportation.
In time of war, the President, through the Secretary of Defense, may take possession and assume control of all or part of any system of transportation to transport troops, war material, and equipment, or for other purposes related to the emergency. So far as necessary, he may use the system to the exclusion of other traffic.
The Secretary of Defense may provide transportation for the next-of-kin of persons who are unaccounted for from the Korean conflict, the Cold War, Vietnam War era, or the Persian Gulf War to and from an annual meeting in the United States. Such transportation shall be provided under such regulations as the Secretary of Defense may prescribe.
Whenever space is available, passengers, and merchandise produced in the United States, or the Commonwealths and possessions, and consigned to residents and mercantile firms of Guam, may be transported to Guam on vessels operated by the Department of Defense, under regulations and at rates to be prescribed by the Secretary of Defense.
The United States Transportation Command may not charge a tariff by reason of the use by a military service of an aircraft of that military service on a route designated by the United States Transportation Command as a channel route.