IDENTIFICATION AND EVALUATION OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES. 1. The Agency Official shall define and document the Area of Potential Effects (APE) and identify historic properties within the APE that may be directly or indirectly affected by the project. For purposes of this Agreement, when an Undertaking consists solely of the rehabilitation of the interior features of an individual building, the APE will be limited to the individual building and parcel. 2. For each Undertaking, the Agency Official shall review existing information, including the records of the SHPO, to determine if any historic properties are located within the APE, including properties listed on the National Register individually or as contributing elements of an historic district, properties with a Determination of Eligibility (DOE) from the Secretary of the Interior, properties determined eligible for the National Register through a previous Section 106 review, or properties designated in state SHPO and local historic survey and inventory records. Much of this information is available online through the SHPO’s Cultural Resources Information System (XXXX) (xxxxx://xxxxx.xx.xxx/shpo/online-tools/xxxx/). 3. For any properties in the APE that have not been listed or previously determined eligible for listing in the National Register, the Agency Official shall evaluate the properties to determine if they are eligible for the National Register, and offer the SHPO, consulting tribes and other consulting parties the opportunity to review and comment on this evaluation and determination of eligibility per 36 CFR 800.4(c). 4. The Agency Official shall use HUD Notice CPD-12-006 and the May 5, 2015 HUD policy memo that adopts the Notice for Part 50 reviews for guidance on when and how to consult with Indian tribes and NHOs about sites of religious and cultural significance to tribes, including archeological sites, that may be considered historic properties.
Appears in 7 contracts
Samples: Programmatic Agreement, Programmatic Agreement, Programmatic Agreement
IDENTIFICATION AND EVALUATION OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES. 1. The Agency Official shall define and document the Area of Potential Effects (APE) and identify historic properties within the APE that may be directly or indirectly affected by the project. For purposes of this Agreement, when an Undertaking consists solely of the rehabilitation of the interior features of an individual building, the APE will be limited to the individual building and parcel.
2. For each Undertaking, the Agency Official shall review existing information, including the records of the SHPO, to determine if any historic properties are located within the APE, including properties listed on the National Register individually or as contributing elements of an historic district, properties with a Determination of Eligibility (DOE) from the Secretary of the Interior, properties determined eligible for the National Register through a previous Section 106 review, or properties designated in state SHPO and local historic survey and inventory records. Much of this information is available online through the SHPO’s Cultural Resources Information System (XXXX) (xxxxx://xxxxx.xx.xxx/shpo/online-tools/xxxx/).
3. For any properties in the APE that have not been listed or previously determined eligible for listing in the National Register, the Agency Official shall evaluate the properties to determine if they are eligible for the National Register, and offer the SHPO, consulting tribes and other consulting parties the opportunity to review and comment on this evaluation and determination of eligibility per 36 CFR 800.4(c).
4. The Agency Official shall use HUD Notice CPD-12-006 (“Process for Tribal Consultation in Projects that are Reviewed Under 24 CFR Part 58”) and the May 5, 2015 HUD policy memo (“Section 106 Tribal Consultation in Projects Reviewed Under 24 CFR Part 50”) that adopts the Notice for Part 50 reviews for guidance on when and how to consult with Indian tribes and NHOs about sites of religious and cultural significance to tribes, including archeological sites, that may be considered historic properties.
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Programmatic Agreement, Programmatic Agreement, Programmatic Agreement
IDENTIFICATION AND EVALUATION OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES. 1. The Agency Official shall define and document the Area of Potential Effects (APE) and identify historic properties within the APE that may be directly or indirectly affected by the project. For purposes of this Agreement, when an Undertaking consists solely of the rehabilitation of the interior features of an individual building, the APE will be limited to the individual building and parcel.
2. For each Undertaking, the Agency Official shall review existing information, including the records of the SHPO, to determine if any historic properties are located within the APE, including properties listed on the National Register individually or as contributing elements of an historic district, properties with a Determination of Eligibility (DOE) from the Secretary of the Interior, properties determined eligible for the National Register through a previous Section 106 review, or properties designated in state SHPO and local historic survey and inventory records. Much of this information is available online through the SHPO’s Cultural Resources Information System (XXXX) (( xxxxx://xxxxx.xx.xxx/shpo/online-tools/xxxx/).
3. For any properties in the APE that have not been listed or previously determined eligible for listing in the National Register, the Agency Official shall evaluate the properties to determine if they are eligible for the National Register, and offer the SHPO, consulting tribes and other consulting parties the opportunity to review and comment on this evaluation and determination of eligibility per 36 CFR 800.4(c).
4. The Agency Official shall use HUD Notice CPD-12-006 and the May 5, 2015 HUD policy memo that adopts the Notice for Part 50 reviews for guidance on when and how to consult with Indian tribes and NHOs about sites of religious and cultural significance to tribes, including archeological sites, that may be considered historic properties.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Programmatic Agreement