[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 36, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 36CFR1010.7]

[Page 256-258]
 
              TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY
 
                        CHAPTER X--PRESIDIO TRUST
 
PART 1010--ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1010.7  Actions that do not require an EA or EIS.

    (a) Categorical Exclusions. Pursuant to 40 CFR 1508.4, the Trust has 
determined that the categories of action identified in this paragraph 
have no significant effect, either individually or cumulatively, on the 
human environment and are therefore categorically excluded. Such actions 
(whether approved by the Trust or undertaken by the Trust directly or 
indirectly) do not require the preparation of an EA or an EIS:
    (1) Personnel actions and investigations and personal services 
contracts;
    (2) Administrative actions and operations directly related to the 
operation of the Trust (e.g., purchase of furnishings, services, and 
equipment) provided such actions and operations are consistent with 
applicable Executive Orders;
    (3) Internal organizational changes and facility and office 
expansions, reductions, and closings;
    (4) Routine financial transactions, including such things as 
salaries and expenses, procurement, guarantees, financial assistance, 
income transfers, audits, fees, bonds and royalties;
    (5) Management, formulation, allocation, transfer and reprogramming 
of the Trust's budget;
    (6) Routine and continuing government business, including such 
things as supervision, administration, operations, maintenance, and 
replacement activities having limited context and intensity (limited 
size and magnitude or short-term effects);
    (7) Preparation, issuance, and submittal of publications and routine 
reports;
    (8) Activities which are educational, informational, or advisory 
(including interpretive programs), or otherwise in consultation with or 
providing technical assistance to other agencies, public and private 
entities, visitors, individuals, or the general public;
    (9) Legislative proposals of an administrative or technical nature, 
including such things as changes in authorizations for appropriations or 
financing authority, minor boundary changes and land transactions; or 
having primarily economic, social, individual or institutional effects, 
as well as comments and reports on legislative proposals;
    (10) Proposal, adoption, revision, and termination of policies, 
directives, regulations, and guidelines:
    (i) That are of an administrative, financial, legal, technical, or 
procedural nature, the environmental effects of which are too broad, 
speculative, or conjectural to lend themselves to environmental analysis 
and the implementation of which will be subject to the NEPA process 
either collectively or on a case-by-case basis; or
    (ii) Where such actions will not potentially:
    (A) Increase public use to the extent of compromising the nature and 
character of the area or of causing significant physical damage to it;
    (B) Introduce non-compatible uses that might compromise the nature 
and characteristics of the area or cause significant physical damage to 
it;
    (C) Conflict with adjacent ownerships or land uses; or
    (D) Cause a significant nuisance to adjacent owners or occupants;
    (11) Preparation, approval, coordination, and implementation of 
plans, including priorities, justifications, and strategies, for 
research, monitoring, inventorying, and information gathering that is 
not or is only minimally manipulative and causes no or only minimal 
physical damage;
    (12) Identification, nomination, certification, and determination of 
eligibility of properties for listing in the National Register of 
Historic Places and the National Historic Landmark and National Natural 
Landmark Programs;
    (13) Minor or temporary changes in amounts or types of visitor use 
for the purpose of ensuring visitor safety or resource protection, minor 
changes in programs or regulations pertaining to visitor activities, and 
approval of permits or other use and occupancy agreements for special 
events or public assemblies and meetings, provided such events, 
assemblies, and meetings entail

[[Page 257]]

only short-term or readily mitigated environmental impacts;
    (14) Designation of environmental study areas and research areas, 
including those closed temporarily or permanently to the public, 
provided such designation would cause no or only minimal environmental 
impact;
    (15) Land and boundary surveys and minor boundary adjustments or 
transfers of administrative jurisdiction resulting in no significant 
change in land use;
    (16) Archaeological surveys and permits involving only surface 
collection or small-scale test excavations;
    (17) Changes or amendments to an approved plan or action when such 
changes or amendments would cause no or only minimal environmental 
impact;
    (18) Contracts, work authorizations, or procurement actions related 
to proposals, programs, and master agreements related to administrative 
operation of the Trust;
    (19) The leasing, permitting, sale, or financing of, or granting of 
non-fee interests regarding, real or personal property in the Presidio 
Trust Area, provided that such actions would have no or only minimal 
environmental impact;
    (20) Extension, reissuance, renewal, minor modification, or 
conversion in form of agreements for use of real property (including but 
not limited to leases, permits, licenses, concession contracts, use and 
occupancy agreements, easements, and rights-of-way), so long as such 
agreements were previously subject to NEPA and do not involve new 
construction or new or substantially greater environmental impacts, and 
so long as no new information is known or no changed circumstances have 
occurred that would give rise to new or substantially greater 
environmental impacts.
    (21) Rehabilitation, modification, or improvement of historic 
properties that have been determined to be in conformance with the 
Secretary of the Interior's ``Standards for the Treatment of Historic 
Properties'' at 36 CFR part 68 and that would have no or only minimal 
environmental impact;
    (22) Rehabilitation, maintenance, modification or improvement of 
non-historic properties that is consistent with applicable Executive 
Orders, provided there is no potential for significant environmental 
impacts, including impacts to cultural landscapes or archaeological 
resources;
    (23) Removal, reduction, or restraint of resident individuals of 
species that are not threatened or endangered which pose dangers to 
visitors, residents, or neighbors or immediate threats to resources of 
the Presidio Trust Area;
    (24) Removal of non-historic materials and structures in order to 
restore natural conditions when such removal has no potential for 
significant environmental impacts, including impacts to cultural 
landscapes or archaeological resources and is consistent with applicable 
Executive Orders;
    (25) Installation of signs, displays, and kiosks, etc.;
    (26) Replacement of minor structures and facilities (e.g., signs, 
kiosks, fences, comfort stations, and parking lots) with little or no 
change in location, capacity, or appearance;
    (27) Repair, resurfacing, striping, installation of traffic control 
devices, and repair/replacement of guardrails, culverts, signs, and 
other minor features, on existing roads and parking facilities, provided 
there is no potential for significant environmental impact;
    (28) Minor trail relocation, development of compatible trail 
networks on roads or other formally established routes, and trail 
maintenance and repair;
    (29) Construction or rehabilitation in previously disturbed or 
developed areas required to meet health or safety regulations, or to 
meet requirements for making facilities accessible to the handicapped 
provided such construction or rehabilitation is implemented in a manner 
consistent with applicable Executive Orders;
    (30) Landscaping and landscape maintenance in previously disturbed 
or developed areas;
    (31) Minor changes in programs and regulations pertaining to visitor 
activities;
    (32) Routine maintenance, property management, and resource 
management, with no potential for significant environmental impact and 
that are

[[Page 258]]

consistent with the Secretary of the Interior's ``Standards for the 
Treatment of Historic Properties'' at 36 CFR part 68, as applicable, and 
with applicable Executive Orders;
    (33) Upgrading or adding new utility facilities to existing poles, 
or replacement poles which do not change existing pole line 
configurations.
    (34) Issuance of rights-of-way for overhead utility lines to an 
individual building or well from an existing line where installation 
will not result in significant visual intrusion or non-conformance with 
the Secretary's ``Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties'' 
at 36 CFR part 68, as applicable, and will involve no clearance of 
vegetation other than for placement of poles;
    (35) Issuance of rights-of-way for minor overhead utility lines not 
involving placement of poles or towers and not involving vegetation 
management or significant visual intrusion in an area administered by 
NPS or the Trust or non-conformance with the Secretary's ``Standards for 
the Treatment of Historic Properties'' at 36 CFR part 68, as applicable;
    (36) Installation of underground utilities in previously disturbed 
areas having stable soils, or in an existing utility right-of-way; and
    (37) Experimental testing of no longer than 180 days of mass transit 
systems, and changes in operation of existing systems with no potential 
for significant environmental impact.
    (b) Extraordinary circumstances. An action that falls into one or 
more of the categories in paragraph (a) of this section may still 
require the preparation of an EIS or an EA if the NEPA Compliance 
Coordinator determines that it meets the criteria stated in 
Sec. 1010.8(b) or Sec. 1010.10(b), respectively, or involves 
extraordinary circumstances that may have a significant environmental 
effect. At its discretion, the Trust may require the preparation of an 
EA or an EIS for a proposal or action that otherwise qualifies for a 
categorical exclusion. Criteria used in determining whether to prepare 
an EA or EIS for an action that otherwise qualifies for a categorical 
exclusion include whether an action may:
    (1) Have significant adverse effects on public health or safety;
    (2) Have significant adverse effects on such unique geographic 
characteristics as historic or cultural resources, park, recreation or 
refuge lands, sole or principal drinking water aquifers, wetlands, 
floodplains, or ecologically significant or critical areas;
    (3) Have highly controversial environmental effects;
    (4) Have highly uncertain and potentially significant environmental 
effects or involve unique or unknown environmental risks;
    (5) Establish a precedent for future action or represent a decision 
in principle about future actions with potentially significant 
environmental effects;
    (6) Be directly related to other actions with individually 
insignificant but cumulatively significant environmental effects;
    (7) Have significant adverse effects on properties listed or 
eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places;
    (8) Have significant adverse effects on species listed or proposed 
to be listed on the List of Endangered or Threatened Species, or have 
adverse effects on designated Critical Habitat for these species;
    (9) Require compliance with Executive Order 11988 (Floodplain 
Management), Executive Order 11990 (Protection of Wetlands), Executive 
Order 13007 (Indian Sacred Sites), or the Fish and Wildlife Coordination 
Act; and/or
    (10) Threaten to violate a Federal, State, local or tribal law or 
requirement imposed for the protection of the environment.