[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 36, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 36CFR72.72]

[Page 403-405]
 
              TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY
 
      CHAPTER I--NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 72_URBAN PARK AND RECREATION RECOVERY ACT OF 1978--Table of Contents
 
          Subpart E_Post-Completion Compliance Responsibilities
 
Sec. 72.72  Conversion requirements.

    (a) Background and legal requirements. The UPARR program has made 
funds available for the renovation and rehabilitation of numerous urban 
parks and recreation facilities. In many cases, the UPARR funds were 
used only in a portion of a site or facility or were only a small 
percentage of the funds required to renovate or rehabilitate a property. 
Nevertheless, all recipients of funds for renovation and rehabilitation 
projects are obligated by the terms of the grant agreement to 
continually maintain the site or facility for public recreation use 
regardless of the percent of UPARR funds expended relative to the 
project and the facility as a whole. This provision is contained in the 
UPARR Program Administration Guideline (NPS-37) and is also referenced 
in Sec. 72.36. In accordance with section 1010 of the UPARR Act, no 
property improved or developed with UPARR assistance shall, without the 
approval of NPS, be converted to other than public recreation uses. A 
conversion will only be approved if it is found to be in accord with the 
current local park and recreation Recovery Action Program and/or 
equivalent recreation plans and only upon such conditions as deemed 
necessary to assure the provision of adequate recreation properties and 
opportunities of reasonably equivalent location and usefulness. Section 
1010 is designed to ensure that areas or facilities receiving UPARR 
grant assistance are continually maintained in recreation use and 
available to the general public.
    (b) Prerequisites for conversion approval. Requests for permission 
to convert UPARR assisted properties in whole or in part to other than 
public recreation uses must be submitted by the recipient to the 
appropriate NPS Regional Director in writing. NPS will only consider 
conversion requests if the following prerequisites have been met:

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    (1) All practical alternatives to the proposed conversion have been 
evaluated.
    (2) The proposed conversion and substitution are in accord with the 
current Recovery Action Program and/or equivalent recreation plans.
    (3) The proposal assures the provision of adequate recreation 
properties and opportunities of reasonably equivalent usefulness and 
location. Dependent upon the situation and at the discretion of NPS, the 
replacement property need not provide identical recreation experiences 
or be located at the same site, provided it is in a reasonably 
equivalent location. It must, however, be administered by the same 
political jurisdiction as the converted property. Equivalent usefulness 
and location will be determined based on the following criteria:
    (i) Property to be converted must be evaluated in order to determine 
what recreation needs are being fulfilled by the facilities which exist 
and the types of recreation resources and opportunities available. The 
property being proposed for substitution must then be evaluated in a 
similar manner to determine if it will meet recreation needs which are 
at least like in magnitude and impact to the user community as the 
converted site.
    (ii) Replacement property need not necessarily be directly adjacent 
to or close by the converted site. This policy provides the 
administrative flexibility to determine location recognizing that the 
property should meet existing public recreation needs. While generally 
this will involve the selection of a site serving the same 
community(ies) or area as the converted site, there may be exceptions. 
For example, if property being converted is in an area undergoing major 
demographic change and the area has no existing or anticipated future 
need for recreation facilities, then the project sponsor should seek to 
locate the substitute area in another location within the jurisdiction.
    (4) In the case of assisted sites which are partially rather than 
wholly converted, the impact of the converted portion on the remainder 
shall be considered. If such a conversion is approved, the unconverted 
area must remain recreationally viable or be replaced as well.
    (5) The guidelines for environmental evaluation have been 
satisfactorily completed and considered by NPS during its review of the 
proposed 1010 action. In cases where the proposed conversion arises from 
another Federal action, final review of the proposal shall not occur 
until NPS is assured that all environmental review requirements related 
to that other action have been met.
    (6) State intergovernmental clearinghouse review procedures have 
been adhered to if the proposed conversion and substitution constitute 
significant changes to the original grant.
    (c) Amendments for conversion. All conversions require amendments to 
the original grant agreement. Amendment requests should be submitted 
concurrently with conversion requests or at such time as all details of 
the conversion have been worked out with NPS. Section 1010 project 
boundary maps shall be submitted with the amendment request to identify 
the changes to the original area caused by the proposed conversion and 
to establish a new project area pursuant to the substitution. Once the 
conversion has been approved, replacement property should be immediately 
acquired. Exceptions to this rule would occur only when it is not 
possible for replacement property to be identified prior to the request 
for the conversion. It will, however, be NPS policy to avoid such a 
situation if at all possible and to agree only if warranted by 
exceptional circumstances. In such cases, express commitment to satisfy 
section 1010 substitution requirements within a specified period, 
normally not to exceed one year following conversion approval, must be 
received from the local government agency in the form of a grant 
amendment.
    (d) Obsolete facilities. Recipients are not required to continue 
operation of a particular facility beyond its useful life. However, when 
a facility is declared obsolete, the site must nonetheless be maintained 
in public recreation use following discontinuance of the assisted 
facility. Failure to so maintain is considered to be a conversion. 
Requests regarding changes from a

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UPARR funded facility to another otherwise eligible facility at the same 
site that significantly contravene the original plans for the area must 
be made in writing to the Regional Director. NPS approval must be 
obtained prior to the occurrence of the change. NPS approval is not 
necessarily required, however, for each and every facility use change. 
Rather, a project area should be viewed in the context of overall use 
and should be monitored in this context. A change from UPARR-developed 
tennis courts to basketball courts, for example, would not require NPS 
approval. A change from a swimming pool to a less intense area of 
limited development such as picnic facilities, or vice versa, would, 
however, require NPS review and approval. To assure that facility 
changes do not significantly contravene the original project agreement, 
NPS shall be notified by the recipient of all proposed changes in 
advance of their occurrence. A primary NPS consideration in the review 
of requests for changes in use will be the consistency of the proposal 
with the Recovery Action Program and/or equivalent recreation plans. 
Changes to other than public recreation use require NPS approval and the 
substitution of replacement land in accordance with section 1010 of the 
UPARR Act and paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section.