13 Tex. Admin. Code § 26.7 - Location and Discovery of Cultural Resources and Landmarks
(a) It is the public policy and in the
interest of the State of Texas to locate archeological sites and other cultural
resources, in, on, or under any land within the jurisdiction of the State of
Texas per Texas Natural Resources Code, §
191.002.
(b) The commission shall provide for the
discovery and/or scientific investigation of publicly owned cultural resources
in accordance with Texas Natural Resources Code, §
191.051.
(c) The commission, state agencies, political
subdivisions of the state, and law enforcement agencies shall work together to
locate and protect cultural resources when deemed prudent, necessary, and/or in
the best interest of the state per Texas Natural Resources Code, §
191.174.
(d) To achieve these mandates, the commission
shall review construction plans for projects on public lands prior to
development to determine the project's potential impact to cultural resources,
and invoke its power to issue Antiquities Permits and supervise Antiquities
Permit investigations in accordance with Texas Natural Resources Code, §
191.054. These
mandates and the review of construction plans that may adversely affect
archeological sites and historic buildings or structures are accomplished in
the following manner.
(1) Project
notification. As provided by Texas Natural Resources Code, §§
191.0525,
191.054,
191.093, and
191.098,
public agencies shall notify the commission before groundbreaking on public
land or construction projects that could take, alter, damage, destroy, salvage,
or excavate archeological sites, historic buildings or structures, designated
historic districts, or other cultural resources or landmarks on non-federal
public land in Texas. The notification must contain a brief written scope of
work and a copy of the appropriate topographical quadrangle map with clearly
marked project boundaries and photographs of the buildings or structures
involved in the project work.
(A) State
agencies.
(i) State agencies, other than
institutions of higher education, shall furnish the commission with
documentation of each building possessed by the agency that is 45 years old or
older, pursuant to Texas Natural Resources Code, Chapter 31 (General Land
Office), § 31.153. After an agency's initial report, it must annually
furnish documentation on each building that was acquired after the date of the
previous submission and is 45 years old or older on the date of the current
submission, or is possessed by the agency and has become 45 years old since the
date of the previous submission.
(ii) State agencies must send advance
notification at least 30 days prior to any groundbreaking per § 191.0525,
or at least 60 days prior to altering, renovating, or demolishing a building
that is 50 years old or older per §
191.098 of the
Texas Natural Resources Code.
(iii)
Once the commission receives a complete notification, a response will be
provided within 30 days of receipt of the review request, or within 15 days of
receipt for project locations regarding oil, gas, or other mineral exploration,
production, processing, marketing, refining, or transportation facility or
pipeline projects. The commission shall review submitted documentation and
notify the state agency if archeological sites or historic buildings involved
in the work are landmarks or are eligible for landmark designation, and/or of
the possible need for a survey to locate cultural resources situated in the
proposed development tract. The commission may also issue advisory comments if
a building is historically significant but not eligible for landmark
designation. If the commission does not respond within the specified timeframe,
the state agency may proceed without further notice to the commission.
Expedited reviews may be accommodated on a case-by-case basis if
warranted.
(B) Political
subdivisions.
(i) Political subdivisions must
send advance notification at least 30 days prior to any project that may affect
potential or designated archeological sites if the project affects a cumulative
area larger than five acres or disturbs a cumulative area of more than 5,000
cubic yards, whichever measure is triggered first, or if the project is inside
a recorded archeological site or designated historic district.
(ii) Once the commission receives a complete
notification, a response will be provided within 30 days of receipt of the
review request, or within 15 days of receipt for project locations regarding
oil, gas, or other mineral exploration, production, processing, marketing,
refining, or transportation facility or pipeline projects. The commission shall
review submitted documentation and notify the public agency if archeological
sites involved in the work are landmarks or are eligible for landmark
designation, and/or of the possible need for a survey to locate cultural
resources situated in the proposed development tract. If the commission does
not respond within the specified timeframe, the public agency may proceed
without further notice to the commission. Expedited reviews may be accommodated
on a case-by-case basis if warranted.
(C) Categorical exclusions. Since many
activities conducted on non-federal public land have little, if any, chance to
damage cultural resources, the following activities do not require
notification:
(i) water injection into
existing oil and gas wells;
(ii)
upgrading of electrical transmission lines when there will be no new
disturbance of the existing easement;
(iii) seismic exploration activity when there
is no ground penetration or disturbance;
(iv) building and repairing fences that do
not require construction or modification of associated roads, fire breaks, or
previously disturbed ground;
(v)
road maintenance that does not involve widening or lengthening the
road;
(vi) installation or
replacement of meter taps;
(vii)
controlled burning of fields;
(viii) animal grazing;
(ix) plowing, if the techniques are similar
to those used previously;
(x)
installation of monuments and sign posts unless within the boundaries of
designated historic districts;
(xi)
maintenance of existing trails;
(xii) land sales and trades of land held by
the permanent school fund and permanent university fund;
(xiii) permanent school fund and permanent
university fund leases, easements, and permits, including mineral leases and
pooling agreements, in which the lessee, grantee, or permittee is specifically
required to comply with the provisions of this chapter;
(xiv) oil, gas, or other mineral exploration,
production, processing, marketing, refining, or transportation facility or
pipeline project in an area where the project will cross state or local public
roads, rivers, and streams, unless they contain a recorded archeological site
or a designated state land tract in Texas' submerged lands; and
(xv) maintenance, operation, replacement, or
minor modification of an existing oil, gas, or other mineral exploration,
production, processing, marketing, refining, or transportation facility or
pipeline.
(D) Emergency
situations. Advance notification is not required for immediate remediation of a
fire, spill, or other emergency associated with an existing facility located on
state or local public lands if the emergency requires an immediate response.
Notification of actions taken in response to an emergency must be submitted
within 15 days of the action. If cultural resources were affected by the
emergency or remediation measures, or may be affected by any long-term actions,
the commission will respond in accordance with paragraph (2) of this
subsection.
(2) Project
coordination. If a survey investigation or review of project work is required,
professional personnel meeting the applicable requirements of §
26.4 of this title (relating to
Professional Qualifications and Requirements) will perform the investigations
or work under an Antiquities Permit in accordance with §§26.13 -
26.18 and §§
26.20-
26.24 of this title.
(3) Construction discovery. Any person
working on public lands who discovers an archeological site that may qualify
for designation as a landmark according to the criteria listed in §§
26.10-
26.12 of this title shall cease
work and report such discovery to the state agency or political subdivision
owning or controlling the property and to the commission. Upon notification,
the commission staff will respond within two business days. The commission may
initiate designation proceedings if it determines the site to be a significant
cultural or historical property, and/or may issue a permit for mitigative
archeological investigation or any other investigation. The cost of a proper
investigation, excavation, or preservation of such a landmark or potential
landmark will be borne by the owner or developer of the property rather than by
the commission.
(4) Discovery of
Unverified Cemeteries. Section
711.0111 of
the Health and Safety Code of Texas requires that any person that discovers an
unverified cemetery shall file a notice and evidence of the discovery with the
commission on a form provided by the commission. Section 711.0111 also requires
that any person that discovers an unverified cemetery shall concurrently
provide a notice of the filing with the landowner on record in the county
appraisal district on whose land the unverified cemetery is located. The
commission shall evaluate the notice and evidence submitted with the notice,
and consider the response of the landowner, if any is received not later than
the 30th day after notice, and shall determine whether there is enough evidence
to support the claim of the existence of a cemetery. If the commission
determines that sufficient evidence supports a determination the commission
shall notify the landowner and may file notice of the existence of the cemetery
under §
711.011 of the
Health and Safety Code. If a notice of existence has already been filed under
§711.011 and the commission has determined that there is not sufficient
evidence of a cemetery the commission will file an amendment with the county
clerk to remove the dedication.
Notes
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