[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR2200.0-6]

[Page 62-65]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
    CHAPTER II--BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 2200--EXCHANGES: GENERAL PROCEDURES--Table of Contents
 
                    Subpart 2200--Exchanges--General
 
Sec. 2200.0-6  Policy.

    (a) Discretionary nature of exchanges. The Secretary is not required 
to exchange any Federal lands. Land exchanges are discretionary, 
voluntary real estate transactions between the Federal and non-Federal 
parties. Unless and until the parties enter into a binding exchange 
agreement, any party may withdraw from and terminate an exchange 
proposal or an agreement to initiate an exchange at any time during the 
exchange process, without any obligation to reimburse, or incur any 
liability to, any party, person or other entity.
    (b) Determination of public interest. The authorized officer may 
complete an exchange only after a determination is made that the public 
interest will be well served. When considering the public interest, the 
authorized officer shall

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give full consideration to the opportunity to achieve better management 
of Federal lands, to meet the needs of State and local residents and 
their economies, and to secure important objectives, including but not 
limited to: Protection of fish and wildlife habitats, cultural 
resources, watersheds, wilderness and aesthetic values; enhancement of 
recreation opportunities and public access; consolidation of lands and/
or interests in lands, such as mineral and timber interests, for more 
logical and efficient management and development; consolidation of split 
estates; expansion of communities; accommodation of land use 
authorizations; promotion of multiple-use values; and fulfillment of 
public needs. In making this determination, the authorized officer must 
find that:
    (1) The resource values and the public objectives that the Federal 
lands or interests to be conveyed may serve if retained in Federal 
ownership are not more than the resource values of the non-Federal lands 
or interests and the public objectives they could serve if acquired, and
    (2) The intended use of the conveyed Federal lands will not, in the 
determination of the authorized officer, significantly conflict with 
established management objectives on adjacent Federal lands and Indian 
trust lands. Such finding and the supporting rationale shall be made 
part of the administrative record.
    (c) Equal value exchanges. Except as provided in Sec. 2201.5 of this 
part, lands or interests to be exchanged shall be of equal value or 
equalized in accordance with the methods set forth in Sec. 2201.6 of 
this part. An exchange of lands or interests shall be based on market 
value as determined by the Secretary through appraisal(s), through 
bargaining based on appraisal(s), or through arbitration.
    (d) Same-State exchanges. The Federal and non-Federal lands involved 
in an exchange authorized pursuant to the Federal Land Policy and 
Management Act of 1976, as amended, shall be located within the same 
State.
    (e) O and C land exchanges. Non-Federal lands acquired in exchange 
for revested Oregon and California Railroad Company Grant lands or 
reconveyed Coos Bay Wagon Road Grant lands are required to be located 
within any one of the 18 counties in which the original grants were 
made, and, upon acquisition by the United States, automatically shall 
assume the same status as the lands for which they were exchanged.
    (f) Congressional designations. Upon acceptance of title by the 
United States, lands acquired by an exchange that are within the 
boundaries of any unit of the National Forest System, National Park 
System, National Wildlife Refuge System, National Wild and Scenic Rivers 
System, National Trails System, National Wilderness Preservation System, 
or any other system established by Act of Congress; the California 
Desert Conservation Area; or any national conservation or national 
recreation area established by Act of Congress, immediately are reserved 
for and become part of the unit or area within which they are located, 
without further action by the Secretary, and thereafter shall be managed 
in accordance with all laws, rules, regulations, and land use plans 
applicable to such unit or area.
    (g) Land and resource management planning. The authorized officer 
shall consider only those exchange proposals that are in conformance 
with land use plans or plan amendments, where applicable. Lands acquired 
by an exchange within a Bureau of Land Management district shall 
automatically become public lands as defined in 43 U.S.C. 1702 and shall 
become part of that district. The acquired lands shall be managed in 
accordance with existing regulations and provisions of applicable land 
use plans and plan amendments. Lands acquired by an exchange that are 
located within the boundaries of areas of critical environmental concern 
or any other area having an administrative designation established 
through the land use planning process shall automatically become part of 
the unit or area within which they are located, without further action 
by the Bureau of Land Management, and shall be managed in accordance 
with all laws, rules, regulations, and land use plans applicable to such 
unit or area.
    (h) Environmental analysis. After an agreement to initiate an 
exchange is

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signed, an environmental analysis shall be conducted by the authorized 
officer in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 
(42 U.S.C. 4371), the Council on Environmental Quality regulations (40 
CFR parts 1500-1508), and the environmental policies and procedures of 
the Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Land Management. In 
making this analysis, the authorized officer shall consider timely 
written comments received in response to the published exchange notice, 
pursuant to Sec. 2201.2 of this part.
    (i) Reservations or restrictions in the public interest. In any 
exchange, the authorized officer shall reserve such rights or retain 
such interests as are needed to protect the public interest or shall 
otherwise restrict the use of Federal lands to be exchanged, as 
appropriate. The use or development of lands conveyed out of Federal 
ownership are subject to any restrictions imposed by the conveyance 
documents and all laws, regulations, and zoning authorities of State and 
local governing bodies.
    (j) Hazardous substances--(1) Federal lands. The authorized officer 
shall determine whether hazardous substances may be present on the 
Federal lands involved in an exchange and shall provide notice of known 
storage, release, or disposal of hazardous substances on the Federal 
lands to the other parties in accordance with the provisions of 40 CFR 
part 373. The authorized officer shall provide this notice in the 
exchange agreement. The authorized officer shall also provide such 
notice, to the extent information is readily available, in the agreement 
to initiate an exchange. Unless the non-Federal party is a potentially 
responsible party under 42 U.S.C. 9607(a), the conveyance document from 
the United States shall contain a covenant in accordance with 42 U.S.C. 
9620(h)(3). Where the non-Federal party is a potentially responsible 
party with respect to the property, it may be appropriate to enter into 
an agreement, as referenced in 42 U.S.C. 9607(e), whereby that party 
would indemnify the United States and hold the United States harmless 
against any loss or cleanup costs after conveyance.
    (2) Non-Federal lands. The non-Federal party shall notify the 
authorized officer of any known, suspected and/or reasonably 
ascertainable storage, release, or disposal of hazardous substances on 
the non-Federal land pursuant to Sec. 2201.1 of this part. 
Notwithstanding such notice, the authorized officer shall determine 
whether hazardous substances are known to be present on the non-Federal 
land involved in an exchange. If hazardous substances are known or 
believed to be present on the non-Federal land, the authorized officer 
shall reach an agreement with the non-Federal party regarding the 
responsibility for appropriate response action concerning the hazardous 
substances before completing the exchange. The terms of this agreement 
and any appropriate ``hold harmless'' agreement shall be included in an 
exchange agreement, pursuant to Sec. 2201.7-2 of this part.
    (k) Legal description of properties. All lands subject to an 
exchange shall be properly described on the basis of either a survey 
executed in accordance with the Public Land Survey System laws and 
standards of the United States or, if those laws and standards cannot be 
applied, the lands shall be properly described and clearly locatable by 
other means as may be prescribed or allowed by law.
    (l) Unsurveyed school sections. For purposes of exchange only, 
unsurveyed school sections, which would become State lands upon survey 
by the Secretary, are considered as ``non-Federal'' lands and may be 
used by the State in an exchange with the United States. However, 
minerals shall not be reserved by the State when unsurveyed sections are 
used in an exchange. As a condition of the exchange, the State shall 
have waived, in writing, all rights to unsurveyed sections used in the 
exchange.
    (m) Coordination with State and local governments. At least 60 days 
prior to the conveyance of and upon issuance of the deed or patent for 
Federal lands, the authorized officer will notify the Governor of the 
State within which the Federal lands covered by the notice are located 
and the head of the governing body of any political subdivision having 
zoning or other land use regulatory authority in the geographical area

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within which the Federal lands are located.
    (n) Fee coal exchanges. As part of the consideration of whether 
public interest would be served by the acquisition of fee coal through 
exchange, the provisions of subpart 3461 of this title shall be applied 
and shall be evaluated as a factor and basis for the exchange.