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STATE HISTORIC BRIDGE INVENTORY AND EVALUATION 2024 UPDATE <br /> and must receive a written concurrence before a project can proceed.' In HRS § 6E-2, a "project" is <br /> defined as any activity directly undertaken by the State or its political subdivisions or supported in <br /> whole, or in part, through appropriation, contracts, grants, subsides, loans, or other forms of funding <br /> assistance from the State or its political subdivisions or involving any lease, permit, license, certificate, <br /> land use change, or other entitlement for use issued by the State or its political subdivisions (Hawaii <br /> Senate Bill SB 3010). <br /> Hawaii Administrative Rules(HAR), § 13-275 <br /> The HAR "Rules Governing Procedures for Historic Preservation Review for Governmental Projects <br /> Covered Under Sections 6E-7 and 6E-8, HRS" includes a review process that is "designed to identify <br /> significant historic properties in project areas and then to develop and execute plans to handle impacts <br /> to the significant historic properties in the public interest." Pursuant to HAR § 13-275-2, a historic <br /> property means, "any building, structure, object, district, area or site, including heiau and underwater <br /> site, which is over fifty years old."A significant historic property means, "any historic property that <br /> meets the criteria of the Hawaii register of historic places."3 A significant historic property shall possess <br /> integrity of location, design, setting. materials, workmanship, feeling, and association and shall meet <br /> one or more of the following criterion: <br /> a. Be associated with events that have made an important contribution to the broad patterns of <br /> our history; <br /> b. Be associated with the lives of persons important in our past; <br /> c. Embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, represent <br /> the work of a master, or possess high artistic value; <br /> d. Have yielded, or is likely to yield, information important for research on prehistory or history; <br /> or <br /> e. Have an important value to the native Hawaiian people or to another ethnic group of the <br /> state due to associations with cultural practices once carried out, or still carried out, at the <br /> property or due to associations with traditional beliefs, events or oral accounts--these <br /> associations being important to the group's history and cultural identity. <br /> FEDERAL LAW <br /> National Historic Preservation Act(NHPA)of 1966, 54 United States Code (U.S.C.)§300101 <br /> The NHPA recognizes the Nation's historic heritage and establishes a national policy for the preservation <br /> of historic properties. The project is an undertaking subject to compliance with Section 106 of the <br /> National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended (NHPA) (54 United States Code (U.S.C) § 300101 <br /> et seq.) and its implementing regulations (36 Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.) Part 800). Specifically, <br /> Section 106 of the NHPA requires that the responsible federal agency consider the effects of its actions <br /> 'State of Hawaii, §6E-8 Review of effect of proposed State and County projects, under Hawaii Revised <br /> Statutes Chapter 6E, http://www.state.hi.us/dlnr/hpd/hpfctsht.htm (accessed March 28, 2013). <br /> 3 "Administrative Rules Pertaining to Historic Preservation in Hawai'i," State of Hawaii, State Historic <br /> Preservation Division, accessed January 5, 2024,https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/shpd/rules/. <br />