Or. Admin. Code § 660-023-0200 - Historic Resources
(1) For
purposes of this rule, the following definitions apply:
(a) "Demolition" means any act that destroys,
removes, or relocates, in whole or part, a significant historic resource such
that its historic, cultural, or architectural character and significance is
lost. This definition applies directly to local land use decisions regarding a
National Register Resource. This definition applies directly to other local
land use decisions regarding a historic resource unless the local comprehensive
plan or land use regulations contain a different definition.
(b) "Designation" is a decision by a local
government to include a significant resource on the resource list.
(c) "Historic context statement" is an
element of a comprehensive plan that describes the important broad patterns of
historical development in a community and its region during a specified time
period. It also identifies historic resources that are representative of the
important broad patterns of historical development.
(d) "Historic preservation plan" is an
element of a comprehensive plan that contains the local government's goals and
policies for historic resource preservation and the processes for creating and
amending the program to achieve the goal.
(e) "Historic resources" are those buildings,
structures, objects, sites, or districts that potentially have a significant
relationship to events or conditions of the human past.
(f) "Locally significant historic resource"
means a building, structure, object, site, or district deemed by a local
government to be a significant resource according to the requirements of this
division and criteria in the comprehensive plan.
(g) "National Register Resource" means
buildings, structures, objects, sites, or districts listed in the National
Register of Historic Places pursuant to the National Historic Preservation Act
of 1966 ( PL 89-665;
16 U.S.C.
470).
(h) "Owner":
(A) Means the owner of fee title to the
property as shown in the deed records of the county where the property is
located; or
(B) Means the purchaser
under a land sale contract, if there is a recorded land sale contract in force
for the property; or
(C) Means, if
the property is owned by the trustee of a revocable trust, the settlor of a
revocable trust, except that when the trust becomes irrevocable only the
trustee is the owner; and
(D) Does
not include individuals, partnerships, corporations or public agencies holding
easements or less than fee interests (including leaseholds) of any nature;
or
(E) Means, for a locally
significant historic resource with multiple owners, including a district, a
simple majority of owners as defined in (A)-(D).
(F) Means, for National Register Resources,
the same as defined in
36
CFR 60.3(k).
(i) "Protect" means to require
local government review of applications for demolition, relocation, or major
exterior alteration of a historic resource, or to delay approval of, or deny,
permits for these actions in order to provide opportunities for continued
preservation.
(j) "Significant
historic resource" means a locally significant historic resource or a National
Register Resource.
(2)
Relationship of Historic Resource Protection to the Standard Goal 5 Process.
(a) Local governments are not required to
amend acknowledged plans or land use regulations in order to provide new or
amended inventories, resource lists or programs regarding historic resources,
except as specified in section (8). Local governments are encouraged to
inventory and designate historic resources and must adopt historic preservation
regulations to protect significant historic resources.
(b) The requirements of the standard Goal 5
process in OAR 660-023-0030 through
660-023-0050, in conjunction
with the requirements of this rule, apply when local governments choose to
amend acknowledged historic preservation plans and regulations.
(c) Local governments are not required to
apply the ESEE process pursuant to OAR
660-023-0040 in order to
determine a program to protect historic resources.
(3) Comprehensive Plan Contents. Local
comprehensive plans should foster and encourage the preservation, management,
and enhancement of significant historic resources within the jurisdiction in a
manner conforming with, but not limited by, the provisions of ORS
358.605. In developing local
historic preservation programs, local governments should follow the
recommendations in the Secretary of the Interior's Standards and Guidelines for
Archeology and Historic Preservation, produced by the National Park Service.
Local governments should develop a local historic context statement and adopt a
historic preservation plan and a historic preservation ordinance in conjunction
with inventorying historic resources.
(4) Inventorying Historic Resources. When a
local government chooses to inventory historic resources, it must do so
pursuant to OAR 660-023-0030, this section, and
sections (5) through (7). Local governments are encouraged to provide
opportunities for community-wide participation as part of the inventory
process. Local governments are encouraged to complete the inventory in a manner
that satisfies the requirements for such studies published by the Oregon State
Historic Preservation Office and provide the inventory to that office in a
format compatible with the Oregon Historic Sites Database.
(5) Evaluating and Determining Significance.
After a local government completes an inventory of historic resources, it
should evaluate which resources on the inventory are significant pursuant to
OAR 660-023-0030(4)
and this section.
(a) The evaluation of
significance should be based on the National Register Criteria for Evaluation,
historic context statement and historic preservation plan. Criteria may
include, but are not limited to, consideration of whether the resource has:
(A) Significant association with events that
have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of local, regional,
state, or national history;
(B)
Significant association with the lives of persons significant to local,
regional, state, or national history;
(C) Distinctive characteristics of a type,
period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or
possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable
entity whose components may lack individual distinction;
(D) A high likelihood that, if preserved,
would yield information important in prehistory or history; or
(E) Relevance within the local historic
context and priorities described in the historic preservation plan.
(b) Local governments may delegate
the determination of locally significant historic resources to a local planning
commission or historic resources commission.
(6) Designating Locally Significant Historic
Resources. After inventorying and evaluating the significance of historic
resources, if a local government chooses to protect a historic resource, it
must adopt or amend a resource list (i.e., "designate" such resources) pursuant
to OAR 660-023-0030(5)
and this section.
(a) The resource list must
be adopted or amended as a land use decision.
(b) Local governments must allow owners of
inventoried historic resources to refuse historic resource designation at any
time during the designation process in subsection (a) and must not include a
site on a resource list if the owner of the property objects to its designation
on the public record. A local government is not required to remove a historic
resource from an inventory because an owner refuses to consent to
designation.
(7)
Historic Resource Protection Ordinances. Local governments must adopt land use
regulations to protect locally significant historic resources designated under
section (6). This section replaces OAR
660-023-0050. Historic
protection ordinances should be consistent with standards and guidelines
recommended in the Standards and Guidelines for Archeology and Historic
Preservation published by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, produced by the
National Park Service.
(8) National
Register Resources are significant historic resources. For these resources,
local governments are not required to follow the process described in OAR
660-023-0030 through
660-023-0050 or sections (4)
through (6). Instead, a local government:
(a)
Must protect National Register Resources, regardless of whether the resources
are designated in the local plan or land use regulations, by review of
demolition or relocation that includes, at minimum, a public hearing process
that results in approval, approval with conditions, or denial and considers the
following factors: condition, historic integrity, age, historic significance,
value to the community, economic consequences, design or construction rarity,
and consistency with and consideration of other policy objectives in the
acknowledged comprehensive plan. Local jurisdictions may exclude accessory
structures and non-contributing resources within a National Register
nomination;
(b) May apply
additional protection measures. For a National Register Resource listed in the
National Register of Historic Places after the effective date of this rule,
additional protection measures may be applied only upon considering, at a
public hearing, the historic characteristics identified in the National
Register nomination; the historic significance of the resource; the
relationship to the historic context statement and historic preservation plan
contained in the comprehensive plan, if they exist; the goals and policies in
the comprehensive plan; and the effects of the additional protection measures
on the ability of property owners to maintain and modify features of their
property. Protection measures applied by a local government to a National
Register resource listed before the effective date of this rule continue to
apply until the local government amends or removes them; and
(c) Must amend its land use regulations to
protect National Register Resources in conformity with subsections (a) and (b).
Until such regulations are adopted, subsections (a) and (b) shall apply
directly to National Register Resources.
(9) Removal of a historic resource from a
resource list by a local government is a land use decision and is subject to
this section.
(a) A local government must
remove a property from the resource list if the designation was imposed on the
property by the local government and the owner at the time of designation:
(A) Has retained ownership since the time of
the designation, and
(B) Can
demonstrate that the owner objected to the designation on the public record,
or
(C) Was not provided an
opportunity to object to the designation, and
(D) Requests that the local government remove
the property from the resource list.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (a), a
local government may only remove a resource from the resource list if the
circumstances in paragraphs (A), (B), or (C) exist.
(A) The resource has lost the qualities for
which it was originally recognized;
(B) Additional information shows that the
resource no longer satisfies the criteria for recognition as a historic
resource or did not satisfy the criteria for recognition as a historic resource
at time of listing;
(C) The local
building official declares that the resource poses a clear and immediate hazard
to public safety and must be demolished to abate the unsafe
condition.
(10) A local government shall not issue a
permit for demolition or modification of a locally significant historic
resource during the 120-day period following:
(a) The date of the property owner's refusal
to consent to the historic resource designation, or
(b) The date of an application to demolish or
modify the resource if the local government has not designated the locally
significant resource under section (6).
(11) OAR
660-023-0200(1)(a) and
(1)(h) are effective upon filing of the rule
with the Secretary of State.
(12)
OAR 660-023-0200(8)
is effective upon filing of the rule with the Secretary of State and applies
directly to local government permit decisions until the local government has
amended its land use regulations as required by OAR
660-023-0200(8)(c).
(13) OAR
660-023-0200(9)
is effective upon filing of the rule with the Secretary of State and applies
directly to local government decisions until the local government has amended
its land use regulations to conform with the rule.
(14) OAR
660-023-0200(10)
is effective upon filing of the rule with the Secretary of State and applies
directly to local government permit decisions.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 197.040
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 197.040, 197.225 - 197.245 & 197.772
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