[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 36, Volume 3]

[Revised as of July 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 36CFR800.5]



[Page 92-94]

 

              TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY

 

                     CHAPTER VIII--ADVISORY COUNCIL

                        ON HISTORIC PRESERVATION

 

PART 800_PROTECTION OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES--Table of Contents

 

                    Subpart B_The section 106 Process

 

Sec. 800.5  Assessment of adverse effects.



    (a) Apply criteria of adverse effect. In consultation with the SHPO/

THPO and any Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization that attaches 

religious and cultural significance to identified historic properties, 

the agency official shall apply the criteria of adverse effect to 

historic properties within the area of potential effects. The agency 

official shall consider any views concerning such effects which have 

been provided by consulting parties and the public.

    (1) Criteria of adverse effect. An adverse effect is found when an 

undertaking may alter, directly or indirectly, any of the 

characteristics of a



[[Page 93]]



historic property that qualify the property for inclusion in the 

National Register in a manner that would diminish the integrity of the 

property's location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, 

or association. Consideration shall be given to all qualifying 

characteristics of a historic property, including those that may have 

been identified subsequent to the original evaluation of the property's 

eligibility for the National Register. Adverse effects may include 

reasonably foreseeable effects caused by the undertaking that may occur 

later in time, be farther removed in distance or be cumulative.

    (2) Examples of adverse effects. Adverse effects on historic 

properties include, but are not limited to:

    (i) Physical destruction of or damage to all or part of the 

property;

    (ii) Alteration of a property, including restoration, 

rehabilitation, repair, maintenance, stabilization, hazardous material 

remediation, and provision of handicapped access, that is not consistent 

with the Secretary's standards for the treatment of historic properties 

(36 CFR part 68) and applicable guidelines;

    (iii) Removal of the property from its historic location;

    (iv) Change of the character of the property's use or of physical 

features within the property's setting that contribute to its historic 

significance;

    (v) Introduction of visual, atmospheric or audible elements that 

diminish the integrity of the property's significant historic features;

    (vi) Neglect of a property which causes its deterioration, except 

where such neglect and deterioration are recognized qualities of a 

property of religious and cultural significance to an Indian tribe or 

Native Hawaiian organization; and

    (vii) Transfer, lease, or sale of property out of Federal ownership 

or control without adequate and legally enforceable restrictions or 

conditions to ensure long-term preservation of the property's historic 

significance.

    (3) Phased application of criteria. Where alternatives under 

consideration consist of corridors or large land areas, or where access 

to properties is restricted, the agency official may use a phased 

process in applying the criteria of adverse effect consistent with 

phased identification and evaluation efforts conducted pursuant to Sec. 

800.4(b)(2).

    (b) Finding of no adverse effect. The agency official, in 

consultation with the SHPO/THPO, may propose a finding of no adverse 

effect when the undertaking's effects do not meet the criteria of 

paragraph (a)(1) of this section or the undertaking is modified or 

conditions are imposed, such as the subsequent review of plans for 

rehabilitation by the SHPO/THPO to ensure consistency with the 

Secretary's standards for the treatment of historic properties (36 CFR 

part 68) and applicable guidelines, to avoid adverse effects.

    (c) Consulting party review. If the agency official proposes a 

finding of no adverse effect, the agency official shall notify all 

consulting parties of the finding and provide them with the 

documentation specified in Sec. 800.11(e). The SHPO/THPO shall have 30 

days from receipt to review the finding.

    (1) Agreement with, or no objection to, finding. Unless the Council 

is reviewing the finding pursuant to papagraph (c)(3) of this section, 

the agency official may proceed after the close of the 30 day review 

period if the SHPO/THPO has agreed with the finding or has not provided 

a response, and no consulting party has objected. The agency official 

shall then carry out the undertaking in accordance with paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section.

    (2) Disagreement with finding. (i) If within the 30 day review 

period the SHPO/THPO or any consulting party notifies the agency 

official in writing that it disagrees with the finding and specifies the 

reasons for the disagreement in the notification, the agency official 

shall either consult with the party to resolve the disagreement, or 

request the Council to review the finding pursuant to paragraphs 

(c)(3)(i) and (c)(3)(ii) of this section. The agency official shall 

include with such request the documentation specified in Sec. 

800.11(e). The agency official shall also concurrently notify all 

consulting parties that such a submission has been made and make the 

submission documentation available to the public.



[[Page 94]]



    (ii) If within the 30 day review period the Council provides the 

agency official and, if the Council determines the issue warrants it, 

the head of the agency, with a written opinion objecting to the finding, 

the agency shall then proceed according to paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this 

section. A Council decision to provide its opinion to the head of an 

agency shall be guided by the criteria in appendix A to this part.

    (iii) The agency official should seek the concurrence of any Indian 

tribe or Native Hawaiian organization that has made known to the agency 

official that it attaches religious and cultural significance to a 

historic property subject to the finding. If such Indian tribe or Native 

Hawaiian organization disagrees with the finding, it may within the 30 

day review period specify the reasons for disagreeing with the finding 

and request the Council to review and object to the finding pursuant to 

paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section.

    (3) Council review of findings. (i) When a finding is submitted to 

the Council pursuant to paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, the Council 

shall review the finding and provide the agency official and, if the 

Council determines the issue warrants it, the head of the agency with 

its opinion as to whether the adverse effect criteria have been 

correctly applied. A Council decision to provide its opinion to the head 

of an agency shall be guided by the criteria in appendix A to this part. 

The Council will provide its opinion within 15 days of receiving the 

documented finding from the agency official. The Council at its 

discretion may extend that time period for 15 days, in which case it 

shall notify the agency of such extension prior to the end of the 

initial 15 day period. If the Council does not respond within the 

applicable time period, the agency official's responsibilities under 

section 106 are fulfilled.

    (ii)(A) The person to whom the Council addresses its opinion (the 

agency official or the head of the agency) shall take into account the 

Council's opinion in reaching a final decision on the finding.

    (B) The person to whom the Council addresses its opinion (the agency 

official or the head of the agency) shall prepare a summary of the 

decision that contains the rationale for the decision and evidence of 

consideration of the Council's opinion, and provide it to the Council, 

the SHPO/THPO, and the consulting parties. The head of the agency may 

delegate his or her duties under this paragraph to the agency's senior 

policy official. If the agency official's initial finding will be 

revised, the agency official shall proceed in accordance with the 

revised finding. If the final decision of the agency is to affirm the 

initial finding of no adverse effect, once the summary of the decision 

has been sent to the Council, the SHPO/THPO, and the consulting parties, 

the agency official's responsibilities under section 106 are fulfilled.

    (C) The Council shall retain a record of agency responses to Council 

opinions on their findings of no adverse effects. The Council shall make 

this information available to the public.

    (d) Results of assessment. (1) No adverse effect. The agency 

official shall maintain a record of the finding and provide information 

on the finding to the public on request, consistent with the 

confidentiality provisions of Sec. 800.11(c). Implementation of the 

undertaking in accordance with the finding as documented fulfills the 

agency official's responsibilities under section 106 and this part. If 

the agency official will not conduct the undertaking as proposed in the 

finding, the agency official shall reopen consultation under paragraph 

(a) of this section.

    (2) Adverse effect. If an adverse effect is found, the agency 

official shall consult further to resolve the adverse effect pursuant to 

Sec. 800.6.



[65 FR 77725, Dec. 12, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 40553, July 6, 2004]