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Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project Presented by: Brent Handley, MA, RPA Archaeology Division Director

Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

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Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project. Presented by: Brent Handley, MA, RPA Archaeology Division Director. What are Cultural Resource?. Anything human made or manipulated that is 50 years or older. Archaeological Sites. Historic Structures and Bridges. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Presented by: Brent Handley, MA, RPA

Archaeology Division Director

Page 2: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

What are Cultural Resource?

Anything human made or manipulated that is 50 years or older

Page 3: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Archaeological Sites

Page 4: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Historic Structures and Bridges

Page 5: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Historic Cemeteries

Page 6: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Submerged Archaeological Sites

Page 7: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Linear Resource Groups

Page 8: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Florida Archaeological Sites

Page 9: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Are all cultural resources eligible for the National Register of Historic Places?

Criterion A: Properties associated with events that have made a significant contribution to broad patterns of our history;

Criterion B: Properties that are associated with lives of persons significant in our past;

Criterion C: Properties that embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or that represent the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or that represent a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; and

Criterion D: Properties that have yielded, or may likely yield, important information in prehistory or history.

Page 10: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Survey requests in response to permit compliance may include: Reconnaissance Surveys Cultural Resource Assessment Surveys Site Evaluations Data Recovery/Mitigation Underwater Archaeology Architectural Analysis/APE

Archaeological and Architectural Investigations

Page 11: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Project Type Agency Legal Authority

Transportation FHWA; FDOT; FTA; US Coast Guard

NHPA; 36 CFR 800; NEPA; Chapters 267 and 373 FL Sta.

Housing HUD; FEMA NHPA; 36 CFR 800; Chapter 267 Fl Sta.

Telecommunication FCC NHPA; NEPA; 36 CFR 800; Chapter 267 Fl Sta.

Military US Air Force; Navy; Marines; and Fl National Guard

NHPA; NEPA; 36 CFR 800; Chapter 267 Fl Sta.

Educational Facilities Fl Department of Education NHPA; NEPA; 36 CFR 800; Chapters 235 and 267 Fl Sta.

Commercial Redevelopment USDA; FEMA; HUD; FDIC; OCC NHPA; 36 CFR 800; NEPA; Chapter 267 Fl Sta.

Energy FERC NHPA; 36 CFR 800; NEPA; Chapter 267 Fl Sta.

Page 12: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Project Type Agency Legal Authority

Industrial Fla. Department of Regulation NHPA; 36 CFR 800; NEPA; Chapters 373 and 404 Fl Sta.; FCMP

Coastal Impacts USACE NHPA; 36 CFR 800; NEPA; Coastal Zone; Chapter 267

Mining DEP Chapters 373 and 267 Fl Sta.

DRI; FQD Florida Department of Community Affairs

Chapters 380.06 and 267; FCMP

Water Management Districts DEP; Five WMD Chapters 373 and 267; FCMP

State Lands DEP Chapters 253, 258, and 267 FL Sta.; FCMP

County/City Ordinances Various local governments Locally triggering chapter 267

Page 13: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project
Page 14: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project
Page 15: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Architectural Mitigation

Page 16: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

• What is a conservation easement?

• Why do you need a conservation easement?

• Types of easements• Historic Preservation

Easements• Open Space/Scenic Easements

• What should they include?

• Tax Incentives for Easements

• Where to go from here?

Page 17: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Cemetery

Page 18: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

Unmarked Burial

Page 19: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project
Page 20: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

• Review process normally occurs after permit application is submitted to review agency.

• DHR (SHPO) generally takes 30 days to review application and make a determination as to whether or not to recommend some level of cultural resource investigation.

• DHR generally takes 30 days to review reports.

• DHR will make a determination prior to application submittal “in anticipation of compiling with state or federal permit action.”

• Delays caused by the occurrence of cultural resources include: scheduling, re-planning for avoidance, and additional work. However, innovated approaches to cultural resource management and early archaeological/historical involvement could have cost and time savings.

Page 21: Florida Cultural Resources and How They Relate to Your Public Works Project

• 2005: 1,250

• 2006: 1,174

• 2007: 862

• 2008: 817

• 2009: 526