Cultural Resources Sample Clauses

Cultural Resources. If a cultural resource is discovered, the Purchaser shall immediately suspend all operations in the vicinity of the cultural resource and notify the Forest Officer. Operations may only resume if authorized by the Forest Officer. Cultural resources identified and protected elsewhere in this contract are exempted from this clause. Cultural resources, once discovered or identified, are not to be disturbed by the Purchaser, or his, her or its employees and/or sub- contractors.
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Cultural Resources. (1) Before undertaking any activities that may disturb the surface of the leased lands, the lessee shall conduct a cultural resource intensive field inventory in a manner specified by the Authorized Officer of the BLM or of the surface managing agency, if different, on portions of the mine plan area and adjacent areas, or exploration plan area, that may be adversely affected by lease-related activities and which were not previously inventoried at such a level of intensity. The inventory shall be conducted by a qualified professional cultural resource specialist (i.e., archeologist, historian, historical architect, as appropriate), approved by the Authorized Officer of the surface managing agency (BLM, if the surface is privately owned), and a report of the inventory and recommendations for protecting any cultural resources identified shall be submitted to the Regional Director of the Western Region of the Office of Surface Mining (the Western Regional Director), the Authorized Officer of the BLM, if activities are associated with coal exploration outside an approved mining permit area (hereinafter called Authorized Officer), and the Authorized Officer of the surface managing agency, if different. The lessee shall undertake measures, in accordance with instructions from the Western Regional Director, or Authorized Officer, to protect cultural resources on the leased lands. The lessee shall not commence the surface disturbing activities until permission to proceed is given by the Western Regional Director or Authorized Officer.
Cultural Resources. 12. Except as other provided by the Development Agreement, no demolition of buildings or structures built 40 years of age or older shall be permitted until the end of a 60-day review period by the Landmarks Commission to determine whether an application for landmark designation shall be filed. If an application for landmark designation is filed, no demolition shall be approved until a final determination is made by the Landmarks Commission on the application.
Cultural Resources. Information System (XXXX) determination from New York State Historic Preservation Office (“NYSHPO”); and
Cultural Resources. The parcel was surveyed to determine the presence of sites eligible for inclusion on the National Register of Historic places. This survey indicated no significant sites. FINANCIAL/REVENUE In accordance with R850-80-200, a market analysis completed on this sale indicates that the potential for revenue generation from this parcel by other uses is limited. The revenue generated from a sale of this property at fair-market value exceeds current and projected revenue from this land. Based on this analysis, it is in the best interest of the Trust to sell this land. The minimum acceptable sale price for the property has been set at $140,000.00. The total fees to be collected are $3,450.00 (the application fee of $250.00, advertising fee of $200.00, appraisal reimbursement of $1,500.00, cultural resource survey reimbursement of $1,000.00 and a sale processing fee of $500.00).
Cultural Resources. TP Attachment 000-0 Xxxxx Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxxx Project Record of Decision (ROD) Developer’s Environmental Commitment Requirements The following table includes the Project-specific environmental commitments as written in the ROD, with minor modifications for clarification purposes. As it relates to these Technical Provisions, references to freeway, project, South Mountain Freeway, proposed action, proposed freeway, and Selected Alternative mean the Project, and references to contractor mean Developer. Developer shall comply with and perform all of the contractor and ADOT requirements, including the ADOT obligations, commitments, and responsibilities, identified in the following table, except to the extent of those requirements that are specifically identified in the third column, entitled “Description of ADOT Responsibilities,” which are not delegated to Developer.
Cultural Resources. Should any cultural resources, such as structural features, unusual amounts of bone or shell, artifacts, human remains, or architectural remains be encountered during any of PERMITTEE’s activities, then work shall be immediately suspended and the Sacramento County Department of Planning and Environmental Review (PER) shall be immediately notified at (916) 874- 6141. At that time, PER will coordinate any necessary investigation with the appropriate specialists as needed. PERMITTEE shall be required to implement any mitigation deemed necessary for the protection of the cultural resources. In addition, pursuant to Section 5097.97 of the State Public Resources Code and Section 7050.5 of the State Health and Safety Code, in the event of the discovery of human remains, all work is to stop and the County Coroner shall be immediately notified. If the remains are determined to be Native American, guidelines of the Native American Heritage Commission shall be adhered to in the treatment and disposition of the remains.
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Cultural Resources. (1) Before undertaking any activities that may disturb the surface of the leased lands, the lessee shall conduct a cultural resource intensive field inventory in a manner specified by the Authorized Officer of the BLM (hereinafter referred to as the Authorized Officer) on portions of the mine plan area, or exploration plan area, that may be adversely affected by lease-related activities and which were not previously inventoried at such a level of intensity. Cultural resources are defined as a broad, general term meaning any cultural property or any traditional lifeway value, as defined below: Cultural property: a definite location of past human activity, occupation, or use identifiable through field inventory (survey), historical documentation, or oral evidence. The term includes archaeological, historic, or architectural sites, structure, or places with important public and scientific uses, and may include traditional cultural or religious importance to specified social and/or cultural groups. Cultural properties are concrete, material places, and things that are classified, ranked, and managed through the system of inventory, evaluation, planning, protection, and utilization. Traditional lifeway value: the quality of being useful in or important to the maintenance of a specified social and/or cultural group's traditional systems of (a) religious belief, (b) cultural practice, or (c) social interaction, not closely identified with definite locations. Another group's shared values are abstract, nonmaterial, ascribed ideas that one cannot know about without being told. Traditional lifeway values are taken into account through public participation during planning and environmental analysis. The cultural resources inventory shall be conducted by a qualified professional cultural resource specialist; i.e., archaeologist, anthropologist, historian, or historical architect, as appropriate and necessary, and approved by the Authorized Officer (BLM if the surface is privately owned). A report of the inventory and recommendations for protection of any cultural resources identified shall be submitted to the Assistant Director of the Western Support Center of the Office of Surface Mining (hereinafter referred to as the Assistant Director) by the Authorized Officer. Prior to any on-the-ground cultural resource inventory, the selected professional cultural resource specialist shall consult with the BLM, the Northern Cheyenne Cultural Protection Board, and the Crow Hist...
Cultural Resources. 28.1. Unit employees shall permitted to telecommute, subject to the approval of the commissioner, and subject to reasonable conditions imposed by the commissioner.
Cultural Resources. ‌‌‌ Cultural resources are the physical evidence of our heritage. Cultural resources are: historic properties as defined in the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), cultural items as defined in the Native American Xxxxxx Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), archeological resources as defined in the Archaeological Resources Protection Act (ARPA), sacred sites as defined in EO 13007 to which access is provided under the American Indian Religious Freedom Act (AIRFA), and collections as defined in 36 CFR 79, Curation of Federally Owned and Administered Collections. Requirements set forth in NEPA, NHPA, ARPA, NAGPRA, AIRFA, 36 CFR 79, EO 13007, and Presidential Memorandum on Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal Governments define the basis of the VA’s compliance responsibilities for management of cultural resources. Regulations applicable to the VA's management of cultural resources include those promulgated by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP) and the National Park Service (NPS). Architectural and Archaeological Resources No historic architectural resources, historic (or current) structures, or other historic or precultural resources (i.e. “historic properties”) are located on the site. One historic property was identified within the immediate vicinity of the Campus. It is the Xxxxx Xxxx Recreation Center that is located adjacent to the SE Corner of the Campus. There are no historic properties on the VAMC campus. The NY state SHPO office has responded to an inquiry and they have determined that “no historic property will be affected” by the Preferred Action. Native American Consultation/Coordination The VA maintains a VA Cultural Resource Management Checklist, dated December 2009. The checklist was developed by the VA to determine the likelihood that a given cultural resource legal requirement applies to a proposed project or other activity. Based on judicial interpretation, the American Indian Religious Freedom Act (AIRFA) requires the federal agency to consult with Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian groups about agency actions that might interfere with religious practices and to make efforts to avoid or minimize such interference (Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Executive Order 13007). According to the VA Cultural Resource Management Checklist, if the ground surface will not be disturbed as part of the Proposed Action, consultation under NAGPRA and Section 106 of NHPA with tribes is not necessary as l...
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