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<?I50 PUBLIC LAW 116–208—DEC. 4, 2020?>


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<?I50 PUBLIC LAW 116–208—DEC. 4, 2020?>
<?I51 PUBLIC LAW 116–208—DEC. 4, 2020?>
<?I52 PUBLIC LAW 116–208—DEC. 4, 2020?>


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<meta><dc:title>Public Law 116–208: To award a Congressional Gold Medal to Greg LeMond, in recognition of his service to the Nation as an athlete, activist, role model, and community leader.</dc:title>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>208</docNumber>
<citableAs>Public Law 116–208</citableAs><citableAs>134 Stat. 1008</citableAs>
<approvedDate>2020-12-04</approvedDate>
<dc:date>2020-12-04</dc:date>
<dc:publisher>United States Government Publishing Office</dc:publisher><dc:creator>National Archives and Records Administration</dc:creator><dc:creator>Office of the Federal Register</dc:creator><dc:format>text/xml</dc:format><dc:language>EN</dc:language><dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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<preface><page display="no">?1007</page><note role="coverPage"><centerRunningHead>PUBLIC LAW 116–208—DEC. 4, 2020</centerRunningHead>
<coverTitle>GREG LEMOND CONGRESSIONAL <br/>GOLD MEDAL ACT</coverTitle>
</note>
<page identifier="/us/stat/134/1008">134 STAT. 1008</page>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>116–208</docNumber>
<congress value="116">116th Congress</congress>
</preface>
<main>
<longTitle>
<docTitle class="centered fontsize12" style="-uslm-lc:I658005">An Act</docTitle>
<officialTitle class="indentUp0 firstIndent1 fontsize8" style="-uslm-lc:I658011">To award a Congressional Gold Medal to Greg LeMond, in recognition of his service to the Nation as an athlete, activist, role model, and community leader.<sidenote><p class="centered fontsize8" id="x486b2cc6-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658076"><approvedDate date="2020-12-04">Dec. 4, 2020</approvedDate></p><p class="centered fontsize8" id="x486b2cc7-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658076">[<ref href="/us/bill/116/hr/3589">H.R. 3589</ref>]<?GPOvSpace 08?></p></sidenote></officialTitle>
</longTitle>
<enactingFormula style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><i>  Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representa­tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,</i></enactingFormula><sidenote><p class="leftAlign firstIndent0 fontsize8" id="x486b2cc8-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658180">Greg LeMond Congressional Gold Medal Act.</p><p class="leftAlign firstIndent0 fontsize8" id="x486b2cc9-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658180"><ref href="/us/usc/t31/s5111">31 USC 5111 note</ref>.</p></sidenote>
<section id="d108866e102" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s1" style="-uslm-lc:I658146"><num class="bold" value="1">SECTION 1. </num><heading>SHORT TITLE.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  This Act may be cited as the “<shortTitle role="act">Greg LeMond Congressional Gold Medal Act</shortTitle>”.</content></section>
<section id="d108866e112" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="2">SEC. 2. </num><heading>FINDINGS.</heading><chapeau class="indentUp0 firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="x486c172a-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The Congress finds the following:</chapeau><paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c172b-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/1" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="1">(1) </num><content>Gregory James “Greg” LeMond was born in Lakewood, California, on June 26, 1961.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c172c-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/2" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="2">(2) </num><content>Greg began cycling at the age of 14, winning an astonishing 11 straight races to begin his career.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c172d-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/3" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="3">(3) </num><content>Greg took home a full suite of medals at the 1979 Junior World Championships, including gold, silver, and bronze, emerging victorious in the road race and placing in both team and track pursuit events.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c172e-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/4" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="4">(4) </num><content>At age 18, Greg became the youngest cyclist in the history of the sport to be selected for the United States Men’s Olympic team.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c172f-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/5" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="5">(5) </num><content>Greg emerged victorious in the 1980 Circuit de la Sarthe, becoming the first American in history and the youngest rider ever to win a major pro-am cycling event on the European continent.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1730-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/6" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="6">(6) </num><content>At age 19, Greg signed his first professional contract.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1731-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/7" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="7">(7) </num><content>In 1982, Greg made the first of several remarkable recoveries, returning from a broken collarbone to win the silver medal at the world championships in Great Britain.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1732-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/8" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="8">(8) </num><content>The Tour de France, the world’s preeminent cycling competition, was first held over a century ago, in 1903.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1733-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/9" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="9">(9) </num><content>The Tour de France takes place over 23 days, covering an extraordinary 2,200 miles, winding through multiple mountain ranges, spanning multiple nations, and is viewed as comparable to running a marathon every day for three consecutive weeks.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1734-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/10" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="10">(10) </num><content>Greg first competed in the Tour de France in 1984, finishing third, and finishing second the following year, in both years deputizing himself to his teammates, sacrificing a chance to win himself to boost his teammates toward victory.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1735-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/11" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="11">(11) </num><content>Greg emerged victorious in the 1986 Tour de France, ascending the fabled Alpe D’Huez, defeating the field by more <page identifier="/us/stat/134/1009">134 STAT. 1009</page>
than 3 full minutes, becoming the first American and the first non-European to win cycling’s most prestigious race.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1736-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/12" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="12">(12) </num><content>In 1987, while recovering from a broken wrist and collarbone, Greg was tragically shot during a turkey hunting accident, leaving him in intensive care, requiring the removal of over 40 shotgun pellets from his abdomen, was deemed unlikely to ever ride a bicycle again, and likely survived only due to the abnormal strength of his cardiovascular system.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1737-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/13" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="13">(13) </num><content>Greg mounted the greatest comeback in the history of American sports, taking home an astonishing victory at the 1989 Tour de France, following multiple surgeries, life-threatening gunshot wounds, tendon repair, and an appendectomy, winning by 8 seconds in the closest finish in the history of the Tour de France.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1738-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/14" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="14">(14) </num><content>Greg would win a third Tour de France victory in 1990.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1739-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/15" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="15">(15) </num><content>Greg is the only American to win the Tour de France.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173a-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/16" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="16">(16) </num><content>Greg has vocally spoken out to champion healthy sport amongst athletes of all ages and competition levels.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173b-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/17" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="17">(17) </num><content>Greg and his wife, Kathy, are active in numerous nonprofit causes, including healthy sport, assisting victims of sexual abuse and various childhood illnesses.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173c-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/18" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="18">(18) </num><content>Cycling offers young people a healthy, active, outdoor hobby.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173d-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/19" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="19">(19) </num><content>Greg completed his professional career having won 2 World Championships, 3 Tour de France championships, and 22 titles overall.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173e-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/20" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="20">(20) </num><content>More than any other cyclist, Greg personified the “breakaway” culture of American cycling in the 1970s and 80s, viewed universally as the epitome of a young person on a bicycle, attempting to accomplish feats no other American had achieved.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c173f-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/21" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="21">(21) </num><content>Greg has not only reached the pinnacle of international sport, but has devoted his time and resources to assisting his fellow athletes.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y486c1740-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s2/22" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="22">(22) </num><content>Greg has demonstrated the commitment to excellence, generosity, community, and tenacity that makes him an example for all to follow.</content></paragraph>
</section>
<section id="d108866e236" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s3" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="3">SEC. 3. </num><heading>CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y486c3e51-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s3/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Presentation Authorized</inline>.—</heading><content>The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President pro tempore of the Senate shall make appropriate arrangements for the presentation, on behalf of the Congress, of a gold medal of appropriate design to Greg LeMond, in recognition of his contributions to the Nation as an athlete, activist, role model, and community leader.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y486c3e52-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s3/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Design and Striking</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of the presentation referred to in subsection (a), the Secretary of the Treasury (referred to in this Act as the “Secretary”) shall strike a gold medal with suitable emblems, devices, and inscriptions, to be determined by the Secretary.</content></subsection>
</section>
<section id="d108866e260" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s4" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="4">SEC. 4. </num><heading>DUPLICATE MEDALS.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The Secretary may strike and sell duplicates in bronze of the gold medal struck pursuant to section 3 under such regulations as the Secretary may prescribe, at a price sufficient to cover the cost thereof, including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and overhead expenses, and the cost of the gold medal.<page identifier="/us/stat/134/1010">134 STAT. 1010</page></content></section>
<section id="d108866e269" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s5" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="5">SEC. 5. </num><heading>STATUS OF MEDALS.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y486c6563-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s5/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">National Medals</inline>.—</heading><content>The medals struck pursuant to this Act are national medals for purposes of <ref href="/us/usc/t31/ch51">chapter 51 of title 31, United States Code</ref>.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y486c6564-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s5/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Numismatic Items</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of <ref href="/us/usc/t31/s5134">section 5134 of title 31, United States Code</ref>, all medals struck under this Act shall be considered to be numismatic items.</content></subsection>
</section>
<section id="d108866e300" identifier="/us/pl/116/208/s6" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="6">SEC. 6. </num><heading>DETERMINATION OF BUDGETARY EFFECTS.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The budgetary effects of this Act, for the purpose of complying with the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010, shall be determined by reference to the latest statement titled “Budgetary Effects of PAYGO Legislation” for this Act, submitted for printing in the Congressional Record by the Chairman of the House Budget Committee, provided that such statement has been submitted prior to the vote on passage.</content></section>
<action>
<actionDescription style="-uslm-lc:I658030">Approved</actionDescription> <date date="2020-12-04">December 4, 2020</date>.</action>
</main>
<legislativeHistory>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658031"><inline class="underline">LEGISLATIVE HISTORY</inline>—<ref href="/us/bill/116/hr/3589">H.R. 3589</ref>:</heading>
<note>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658032">CONGRESSIONAL RECORD:</heading>
<subheading style="-uslm-lc:I658033">Vol. 165 (2019):</subheading>
<p class="indentUp2 firstIndent-1" id="x486c6565-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658034">Sept. 19, considered and passed House.</p><subheading style="-uslm-lc:I658033">Vol. 166 (2020):</subheading>
<p class="indentUp2 firstIndent-1" id="x486c6566-e826-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658034">Nov. 16, considered and passed Senate.</p></note>
</legislativeHistory>
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</pLaw>