home / openregs

cfr_sections

Current Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR) — the actual text of federal regulations in force. Covers 19 CFR titles with 123,000+ regulatory sections and full-text search.

Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API

3 rows where agency = "DOC" and part_number = 1 sorted by section_id

✎ View and edit SQL

This data as json, CSV (advanced)

Suggested facets: full_text

title_number 1

  • 15 3

part_number 1

  • 1 · 3 ✖

agency 1

  • DOC · 3 ✖
section_id ▼ title_number title_name chapter subchapter part_number part_name subpart subpart_name section_number section_heading agency authority source_citation amendment_citations full_text
15:15:1.1.1.1.2.0.1.1 15 Commerce and Foreign Trade     1 PART 1—THE SEAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE       § 1.1 [Reserved] DOC        
15:15:1.1.1.1.2.0.1.2 15 Commerce and Foreign Trade     1 PART 1—THE SEAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE       § 1.2 Description and design. DOC       (a) The Act of February 14, 1903 (32 Stat. 825, as amended) (15 U.S.C. 1501), which established the Department of Commerce, provided that “The said Secretary shall cause a seal of office to be made for the said department of such device as the President shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken of the said seal.” On April 4, 1913, the President approved and declared to be the seal of the Department of Commerce the device which he described as follows: Arms: Per fesse azure and or, a ship in full sail on waves of the sea, in chief proper; and in base a lighthouse illumined proper. Crest: The American Eagle displayed. Around the Arms, between two concentric circles, are the words: Department of Commerce United States of America Arms: Per fesse azure and or, a ship in full sail on waves of the sea, in chief proper; and in base a lighthouse illumined proper. Crest: The American Eagle displayed. Around the Arms, between two concentric circles, are the words: (b) The design of the approved seal is as shown below. Where necessitated by requirements of legibility, immediate comprehension, or clean reproduction, the concentric circles may be eliminated from the seal on publications and exhibits, and in slides, motion pictures, and television. In more formal uses of the seal, such as on letterheads, the full, proper rendition of the seal shall be used. (c) The official symbolism of the seal shall be the following: The ship is a symbol of commerce; the blue denotes uprightness and constancy; the lighthouse is a well-known symbol representing guidance from the darkness which is translated to commercial enlightenment; and the gold denotes purity. The crest is the American bald eagle denoting the national scope of the Department's activities. (The above is a modification of the original symbolism issued with the President's approval of the seal, made necessary by changes in the functions of the Department.)
15:15:1.1.1.1.2.0.1.3 15 Commerce and Foreign Trade     1 PART 1—THE SEAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE       § 1.3 [Reserved] DOC        

Advanced export

JSON shape: default, array, newline-delimited, object

CSV options:

CREATE TABLE cfr_sections (
    section_id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
    title_number INTEGER,
    title_name TEXT,
    chapter TEXT,
    subchapter TEXT,
    part_number TEXT,
    part_name TEXT,
    subpart TEXT,
    subpart_name TEXT,
    section_number TEXT,
    section_heading TEXT,
    agency TEXT,
    authority TEXT,
    source_citation TEXT,
    amendment_citations TEXT,
    full_text TEXT
);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_title ON cfr_sections(title_number);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_part ON cfr_sections(part_number);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_agency ON cfr_sections(agency);
Powered by Datasette · Queries took 806.878ms · Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API