[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: 36CFR801.3]

[Page 118-121]
 
              TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY
 
                     CHAPTER VIII--ADVISORY COUNCIL
                        ON HISTORIC PRESERVATION
 
PART 801--HISTORIC PRESERVATION REQUIREMENTS OF THE URBAN DEVELOPMENT ACTION GRANT PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 801.3  Applicant responsibilities.

    As early as possible before the applicant makes a final decision 
concerning a project and in any event prior to taking any action that 
would foreclose alternatives or the Council's ability to comment, the 
applicant should take the following steps to comply with the 
requirements of section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act 
and section 110 of the HCDA of 1980.

In order to facilitate the commenting process the applicant should 
forward to the Council information on the proposed project at the 
earliest practicable time if it appears that National Register 
properties or properties which meet the Criteria for inclusion will be 
affected. This will allow the Council to assist the applicant in 
expeditiously meeting its historic preservation requirements and 
facilitate the development of the Council's comments.
    (a) Information required. It is the primary responsibility of the 
applicant requesting Council comments to conduct the appropriate studies 
and to provide the information necessary for a review of the effect a 
proposed project may have on a National Register property or a property 
which meets the Criteria, as well as the information necessary for 
adequate consideration of modifications or alterations to the proposed 
project that could avoid, mitigate, or minimize any adverse effects. It 
is the responsibility of the applicant to provide the information 
specified in Sec. 801.7, to make an informed and reasonable evaluation 
of whether a property meets the National Register Criteria (36 CFR 60.6) 
and to determine the effect of a proposed undertaking on a National 
Register property or property which meets the Criteria.
    (b) Identification of properties. Section 110 of the HCDA of 1980 
makes UDAG applicants responsible for the identification of National 
Register properties and properties which may meet the Criteria for 
listing in the National Register that may be affected by the project. An 
appendix to these regulations sets forth guidance to applicants in 
meeting their identification responsibilities but does not set a fixed 
or inflexible standard for such efforts. Meeting this responsibility 
requires the applicant to make an earnest effort to identify and 
evaluate potentially affected historic properties by:
    (1) Consulting the National Register of Historic Places to determine 
whether the project's impact area includes such properties;

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    (2) Obtaining, prior to initiating the State Historic Preservation 
Officer Review Period, relevant information that the State Historic 
Preservation Officer may have available concerning historic properties, 
if any are known, in the project's impact area;
    (3) Utilizing local plans, surveys, and inventories of historic 
properties prepared by the locality or a recognized State or local 
historic authority;
    (4) Utilizing other sources of information or advice the applicant 
deems appropriate;
    (5) Conducting an on-the-ground inspection of the project's impact 
area by qualified personnel to identify properties which may meet the 
Criteria for evaluation taking into consideration the views of the State 
Historic Preservation Officer as to the need for and methodology of such 
inspections;
    (6) Applying the Department of the Interior Criteria for Evaluation 
(36 CFR 60.6) to properties within the project's impact area.
    (c) Evaluation of effect. Applicants are required by section 110(a) 
of the HCDA of 1980 to include in their applications a description of 
the effect of a proposed UDAG project on any National Register property 
and or any property which may meet the Criteria.
    (1) Criteria of Effect and Adverse Effect. The following criteria, 
similar to those set forth in 36 CFR 800.3, shall be used to determine 
whether a project has an effect or an adverse effect.
    (i) Criteria of effect. The effect of a project on a National 
Register or eligible property is evaluated in the context of the 
historical, architectural, archeological, or cultural significance 
possessed by the property. A project shall be considered to have an 
effect whenever any condition of the project causes or may cause any 
change, beneficial or adverse, in the quality of the historical, 
architectural, archeological, or cultural characteristics that qualify 
the property to meet the Criteria of the National Register. An effect 
occurs when a project changes the integrity of location, design, 
setting, materials, workmanship, feeling or association of the property 
that contributes to its significance in accordance with the National 
Register Criteria. An effect may be direct or indirect. Direct effects 
are caused by the project and occur at the same time and place. Indirect 
effects include those caused by the undertaking that are later in time 
or farther removed in distance, but are still reasonably foreseeable. 
Such effects involve development of the project site around historic 
properties so as to affect the access to, use of, or significance of 
those properties.
    (ii) Criteria of adverse effect. Adverse effects on National 
Register properties or properties which meet the Criteria may occur 
under conditions which include but are not limited to:
    (A) Destruction or alteration of all or part of a property;
    (B) Isolation from or alteration of the property's surrounding 
environment;
    (C) Introduction of visual, audible, or atmospheric elements that 
are out of character with the property or alter its setting;
    (D) Neglect of a property resulting in its deterioration or 
destruction;
    (iii) Special considerations. If rehabilitation is a project 
activity, such components of the project may be considered to have no 
adverse effect and need not be referred to the Council if they are 
undertaken in accordance with the Secretary of the Interior's Standards 
for Historic Preservation Projects (U.S. Department of the Interior, 
Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service, Washington, DC, 1979) and 
the State Historic Preservation Officer concurs in the proposed 
activity. Additionally, the following types of project components or 
elements will be considered to not normally adversely affect properties 
listed in the National Register or which meet the Criteria.
    (A) Insulation (except for the use of granular or liquid injected 
foam insulation in exterior walls or other vertical surfaces);
    (B) Caulking;
    (C) Weatherstripping;
    (D) Replacement of Heating, Ventilating and Air Conditioning (HVAC) 
equipment, provided that such equipment is not historic and that 
replacement equipment is screened from public view and that the State 
Historic Preservation Officer and the applicant agree the equipment will 
not affect those qualities of the property which

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qualify it to meet the 36 CFR 60.6 Criteria;
    (E) In-kind refenestration (for example, replacement of deteriorated 
windows of a similar configuration, color and material);
    (F) Lowering of ceilings, provided the ceilings will not be visible 
from outside of the building or from an interior public space and that 
the State Historic Preservation Officer and the applicant agree it will 
not affect a quality which qualified the building to meet the 36 CFR 
60.6 Criteria;
    (G) Replacement in-kind of substantially deteriorated material, 
provided that the State Historic Preservation Officer and the applicant 
agree;
    (H) Installation of machinery, equipment, furnishings, fixtures, 
etc., in the interior of existing buildings, provided that the State 
Historic Preservation Officer and the applicant agree such installations 
will not affect a quality which qualified the building to meet the 36 
CFR 60.6 Criteria.
    (I) Site improvements such as sidewalk paving and landscaping, 
provided that the State Historic Preservation Officer and the applicant 
agree that the site improvement will not affect those qualities of the 
property which qualify it to meet the 36 CFR 60.6 Criteria.
    (iv) Special considerations for archeological sites. Under certain 
conditions, alteration of land containing archeological resources in the 
project area may have no adverse effect on those resources. Procedures 
for determining whether such conditions exist were published by the 
Council in the Federal Register on November 26, 1980 (45 FR 78808), as 
part X of the ``Executive Director's Procedures for Review of Proposals 
for Treatment of Archeological Properties.'' Because the identification 
of archeological sites in an urban context, and consideration of 
appropriate treatment methods, present special problems, further 
guidance is provided in Appendix 2.
    (2) Determinations of Effect. Prior to submitting an application to 
HUD, the applicant shall apply the Criteria of Effect and Adverse Effect 
to all properties which are listed in the National Register or which may 
meet the Criteria in the area of the project's potential environmental 
impact. The determination of the Secretary of the Interior shall be 
final with respect to properties which are eligible for listing in the 
National Register. The Council will not comment on affected properties 
which are not either listed in or eligible for listing in the National 
Register. In order to facilitate the process, information to be 
requested from the State Historic Preservation Officer under 
Sec. 801.3(b)(2) should include advice on applying the Criteria of 
Effect and Adverse Effect provided that this period shall not be 
included in the 45 day State Historic Preservation Officer Review 
Period. Special attention should be paid to indirect effects, such as 
changes in land use, traffic patterns, street activity, population 
density and growth rate. While some aspects of a project may have little 
potential to adversely affect the significant qualities of a historic 
property, other project components may meet the Criteria of Effect and 
Adverse Effect. If any aspect of the project results in an effect 
determination, further evaluation of the effect shall be undertaken in 
accordance with these regulations. The resulting determination regarding 
the effect shall be included in the application.
    (i) No effect. If the applicant determines that the project will 
have no effect on any National Register property and/or property which 
meets the Criteria, the project requires no further review by the 
Council unless a timely objection is made by the Executive Director. An 
objection may be made by the Executive Director at any time during the 
UDAG application process prior to the expiration of the period for 
receiving objections to HUD's release of funds as specified in 24 CFR 
58.31. The manner in which the Executive Director shall make an 
objection is set forth in Sec. 801.4(a).
    (ii) Determinations of no adverse effect. If the applicant finds 
there is an effect on the property but it is not adverse, the applicant 
after receiving the comments of the State Historic Preservation Officer 
during the State Historic Preservation Officer Review Period shall 
forward adequate documentation (see Sec. 801.7(a)) of the Determination, 
including the written comments of the State Historic Preservation 
Officer, if

[[Page 121]]

available, to the Executive Director for review in accordance with 
Sec. 801.4.
    (iii) Adverse effect determination. If the applicant finds the 
effect to be adverse or if the Executive Director objects to an 
applicant's no adverse effect determination pursuant to Sec. 801.4(a), 
the applicant shall proceed with the consultation process in accordance 
with Sec. 801.4(b).