Submission of U.S. Nominations to the World Heritage List, 5676-5677 [E9-2044]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 19 / Friday, January 30, 2009 / Notices
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[FR Doc. E9–2040 Filed 1–29–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Submission of U.S. Nominations to the
World Heritage List
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
AGENCY: Department of the Interior,
National Park Service.
ACTION: Notice of Decision To Submit
Nominations to the World Heritage List.
SUMMARY: This notice constitutes the
official publication of the decision to
submit nominations to the World
Heritage List for Papahanaumokuakea
Marine National Monument, Hawaii,
and Mount Vernon, Virginia, and serves
as the Third Notice referred to in Sec.
73.7(j) of the World Heritage Program
regulations (36 CFR part 73).
The nominations are being submitted
through the Department of State for
consideration by the World Heritage
Committee, which will likely occur at
the Committee’s 34th annual session in
mid-2010.
These two properties have been
selected from the U.S. World Heritage
Tentative List. The Tentative List
consists of properties that appear to
qualify for World Heritage status and
which may be considered for
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:54 Jan 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
nomination by the United States to the
World Heritage List. The current U.S.
Tentative List was transmitted to the
UNESCO World Heritage Centre on
January 24, 2008.
The new U.S. Tentative List appeared
in a Federal Register notice on March
19, 2008 (73 FR 14835–14838, March
19, 2008) with a request for public
comment on possible initial
nominations from the 14 sites on the
U.S. Tentative List, particularly for the
two sites named above.
The comments received and the
Department of the Interior’s responses to
them as well as the Department’s
decision to request preparation of these
two nominations appeared in a
subsequent Federal Register Notice
published on July 8, 2008 (73 FR 39036–
39039, July 8, 2008). The Department
considered public comments received
during the comment period as well as
the advice of the Federal Interagency
Panel for World Heritage in making the
decisions to submit the two U.S. World
Heritage nominations. Both properties
meet the legal prerequisites for
nomination by the United States to the
World Heritage List. They appear to
meet one or more of the World Heritage
criteria and all owners of the two sites
support the nomination of these
nationally significant properties to the
World Heritage List.
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National
Monument was selected for nomination
in part because it would, as a marine
site and a mixed cultural and natural
site in the Pacific, fill conspicuous gaps
in the U.S. portfolio of World Heritage
Sites. Similar gaps likewise exist in the
World Heritage List as a whole, wherein
few marine, Pacific, or mixed sites are
listed. The State of Hawaii, the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, the three co-stewards of
the Monument, are strongly supportive
of the nomination.
George Washington’s Mount Vernon
likewise would fill a gap in the U.S.
cultural site list and on the World
Heritage List as a whole. It is an
outstanding example of a type of
colonial cultural landscape that was tied
to the plantation economy based on
slavery that prevailed in the American
South during the colonial and early
Federal periods. It is also the primary
illustration of the early historic
preservation movement in the United
States. The Mount Vernon Ladies
Association, the owner, strongly
supports the property’s nomination.
DATES: The World Heritage Committee
will likely consider the nominations at
its 34th annual session in mid-2010.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephen Morris, 202–354–1803 or
Jonathan Putnam, 202–354–1809. For
summary information on the U.S.
Tentative List and how it was
developed, please see the March 19,
2008, Federal Register notice (73 FR
14835–14838, March 19, 2008).
Complete information about U.S.
participation in the World Heritage
Program and the process used to
develop the Tentative List is posted on
the Office of International Affairs Web
site at: https://www.nps.gov/oia/topics/
worldheritage/tentativelist.htm.
To request paper copies of documents
discussed in this notice, please contact
April Brooks, Office of International
Affairs, National Park Service, 1201 Eye
Street, NW., (0050) Washington, DC
20005. E-mail: April_Brooks@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The World Heritage List is an
international list of cultural and natural
properties nominated by the signatories
to the World Heritage Convention
(1972). The United States was the prime
architect of the Convention, an
international treaty for the preservation
of natural and cultural heritage sites of
global significance proposed by
President Richard M. Nixon in 1972,
and the U.S. was the first nation to ratify
it. In 2005, the United States was
elected to a fourth term on the World
Heritage Committee and will serve until
2009. The Committee, composed of
representatives of 21 nations elected as
the governing body of the World
Heritage Convention, makes the final
decisions on which nominations to
accept on the World Heritage List at its
annual meeting each summer.
There are 878 sites in 145 of the 185
signatory countries. Currently there are
20 World Heritage Sites in the United
States already listed.
U.S. participation and the roles of the
Department of the Interior and the
National Park Service are authorized by
Title IV of the Historic Preservation Act
Amendments of 1980 and conducted in
accordance with 36 CFR 73—World
Heritage Convention. The Department of
the Interior has the lead role for the U.S.
Government in the implementation of
the Convention; the National Park
Service serves as the principal technical
agency within the Department for World
Heritage matters and manages all or
parts of 17 of the 20 U.S. World Heritage
Sites currently listed.
A Tentative List is a national list of
natural and cultural properties
appearing to meet the World Heritage
Committee’s eligibility criteria for
E:\FR\FM\30JAN1.SGM
30JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 19 / Friday, January 30, 2009 / Notices
nomination to the World Heritage List.
It is a list of candidate sites which a
country intends to consider for
nomination within a given time period.
A country cannot nominate a property
unless it has been on its Tentative List
for a minimum of a year. Countries also
are limited to nominating no more than
two sites in any given year.
The World Heritage Committee’s
Operational Guidelines ask participating
nations to provide Tentative Lists,
which aid in evaluating properties for
the World Heritage List on a
comparative international basis and
help the Committee to schedule its work
over the long term. The Guidelines
recommend that a nation review its
Tentative List at least once every
decade.
Neither inclusion in the Tentative List
nor inscription as a World Heritage Site
imposes legal restrictions on owners or
neighbors of sites, nor does it give the
United Nations any management
authority or ownership rights in U.S.
World Heritage Sites, which continue to
be subject only to U.S. and local laws.
Inclusion in the Tentative List merely
indicates that the property may be
further examined for possible World
Heritage nomination in the future.
U.S. World Heritage Nominations: 2009
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National
Monument, Hawaii
This 1,200-mile-long string of islands,
atolls, coral reefs and adjacent waters,
running northwest from the main
Hawaiian islands and encompassing
over 89 million acres, is one of the
world’s largest and most significant
marine protected areas. Scattered in the
deep ocean are some 10 small islands
along with extensive reefs and shoals. In
this remote and still relatively pristine
part of the Pacific, marine life
flourishes, and the area is home to a
large number of species found nowhere
else in the world, including a wide array
that are threatened and endangered.
Large populations of seabirds nest on
isolated sandy shores and the waters
harbor impressive numbers of large
predatory fish. The geology of the
islands is also highly significant—the
chain represents the longest, clearest,
and oldest example of island formation
and atoll evolution in the world.
Native Hawaiians reached these
islands at least 1,000 years before any
other people and established
settlements on some of them. The
islands, along with their significant
archeological sites, retain great cultural
and spiritual significance to Native
Hawaiians.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:54 Jan 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
Mount Vernon, Virginia
George Washington’s long-time home,
with its associated gardens and grounds,
forms a remarkably well-preserved and
extensively documented example of a
plantation landscape of the 18th-century
American South. It was based on
English models but modified and
adapted to its American context, which
included slave labor as an economic
basis. There is a core of 14 surviving
18th-century structures set in a
landscape of gardens, fences, lanes,
walkways, and other features, situated
along the Potomac River, that changed
and developed over many years in
Washington’s family. The Mount
Vernon Ladies’ Association has owned
and maintained the property for 150
years.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 470a–1, a–2, d; 36
CFR 73.
Dated: January 16, 2009.
Lyle Laverty,
Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and
Parks.
[FR Doc. E9–2044 Filed 1–29–09; 8:45 am]
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5677
established a schedule for the conduct
of the final phase of the subject
investigations (73 FR 67545, November
14, 2008). As a result of subsequent
events, however, the Commission is
revising its schedule.
The Commission’s new schedule for
the investigations is as follows: The
Commission will make its final release
of information on March 30, 2009; and
final party comments are due on April
1, 2009.
For further information concerning
these investigations see the
Commission’s notice cited above and
the Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure, part 201, subparts A through
E (19 CFR part 201), and part 207,
subparts A and C (19 CFR part 207).
Authority: These investigations are being
conducted under authority of title VII of the
Tariff Act of 1930; this notice is published
pursuant to section 207.21 of the
Commission’s rules.
By order of the Commission.
Issued: January 15, 2009.
Marilyn R. Abbott,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. E9–1977 Filed 1–29–09; 8:45 am]
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[Investigation Nos. 731–TA–1146–1147
(Final)]
1–Hydroxyethylidene-1,1–
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and India
United States International
Trade Commission.
ACTION: Revised schedule for the subject
investigations.
AGENCY:
DATES:
Effective Date: January 15, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nathanael Comly (202–205–3174),
Office of Investigations, U.S.
International Trade Commission, 500 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20436.
Hearing-impaired persons can obtain
information on this matter by contacting
the Commission’s TDD terminal on 202–
205–1810. Persons with mobility
impairments who will need special
assistance in gaining access to the
Commission should contact the Office
of the Secretary at 202–205–2000.
General information concerning the
Commission may also be obtained by
accessing its internet server (https://
www.usitc.gov). The public record for
these investigations may be viewed on
the Commission’s electronic docket
(EDIS) at https://edis.usitc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Effective
October 21, 2008, the Commission
PO 00000
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[OMB Number 1125–0005]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
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E:\FR\FM\30JAN1.SGM
30JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 19 (Friday, January 30, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5676-5677]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-2044]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Submission of U.S. Nominations to the World Heritage List
AGENCY: Department of the Interior, National Park Service.
ACTION: Notice of Decision To Submit Nominations to the World Heritage
List.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice constitutes the official publication of the
decision to submit nominations to the World Heritage List for
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, Hawaii, and Mount Vernon,
Virginia, and serves as the Third Notice referred to in Sec. 73.7(j) of
the World Heritage Program regulations (36 CFR part 73).
The nominations are being submitted through the Department of State
for consideration by the World Heritage Committee, which will likely
occur at the Committee's 34th annual session in mid-2010.
These two properties have been selected from the U.S. World
Heritage Tentative List. The Tentative List consists of properties that
appear to qualify for World Heritage status and which may be considered
for nomination by the United States to the World Heritage List. The
current U.S. Tentative List was transmitted to the UNESCO World
Heritage Centre on January 24, 2008.
The new U.S. Tentative List appeared in a Federal Register notice
on March 19, 2008 (73 FR 14835-14838, March 19, 2008) with a request
for public comment on possible initial nominations from the 14 sites on
the U.S. Tentative List, particularly for the two sites named above.
The comments received and the Department of the Interior's
responses to them as well as the Department's decision to request
preparation of these two nominations appeared in a subsequent Federal
Register Notice published on July 8, 2008 (73 FR 39036-39039, July 8,
2008). The Department considered public comments received during the
comment period as well as the advice of the Federal Interagency Panel
for World Heritage in making the decisions to submit the two U.S. World
Heritage nominations. Both properties meet the legal prerequisites for
nomination by the United States to the World Heritage List. They appear
to meet one or more of the World Heritage criteria and all owners of
the two sites support the nomination of these nationally significant
properties to the World Heritage List.
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument was selected for
nomination in part because it would, as a marine site and a mixed
cultural and natural site in the Pacific, fill conspicuous gaps in the
U.S. portfolio of World Heritage Sites. Similar gaps likewise exist in
the World Heritage List as a whole, wherein few marine, Pacific, or
mixed sites are listed. The State of Hawaii, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the
three co-stewards of the Monument, are strongly supportive of the
nomination.
George Washington's Mount Vernon likewise would fill a gap in the
U.S. cultural site list and on the World Heritage List as a whole. It
is an outstanding example of a type of colonial cultural landscape that
was tied to the plantation economy based on slavery that prevailed in
the American South during the colonial and early Federal periods. It is
also the primary illustration of the early historic preservation
movement in the United States. The Mount Vernon Ladies Association, the
owner, strongly supports the property's nomination.
DATES: The World Heritage Committee will likely consider the
nominations at its 34th annual session in mid-2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen Morris, 202-354-1803 or
Jonathan Putnam, 202-354-1809. For summary information on the U.S.
Tentative List and how it was developed, please see the March 19, 2008,
Federal Register notice (73 FR 14835-14838, March 19, 2008). Complete
information about U.S. participation in the World Heritage Program and
the process used to develop the Tentative List is posted on the Office
of International Affairs Web site at: https://www.nps.gov/oia/topics/
worldheritage/tentativelist.htm.
To request paper copies of documents discussed in this notice,
please contact April Brooks, Office of International Affairs, National
Park Service, 1201 Eye Street, NW., (0050) Washington, DC 20005. E-
mail: April_Brooks@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The World Heritage List is an international list of cultural and
natural properties nominated by the signatories to the World Heritage
Convention (1972). The United States was the prime architect of the
Convention, an international treaty for the preservation of natural and
cultural heritage sites of global significance proposed by President
Richard M. Nixon in 1972, and the U.S. was the first nation to ratify
it. In 2005, the United States was elected to a fourth term on the
World Heritage Committee and will serve until 2009. The Committee,
composed of representatives of 21 nations elected as the governing body
of the World Heritage Convention, makes the final decisions on which
nominations to accept on the World Heritage List at its annual meeting
each summer.
There are 878 sites in 145 of the 185 signatory countries.
Currently there are 20 World Heritage Sites in the United States
already listed.
U.S. participation and the roles of the Department of the Interior
and the National Park Service are authorized by Title IV of the
Historic Preservation Act Amendments of 1980 and conducted in
accordance with 36 CFR 73--World Heritage Convention. The Department of
the Interior has the lead role for the U.S. Government in the
implementation of the Convention; the National Park Service serves as
the principal technical agency within the Department for World Heritage
matters and manages all or parts of 17 of the 20 U.S. World Heritage
Sites currently listed.
A Tentative List is a national list of natural and cultural
properties appearing to meet the World Heritage Committee's eligibility
criteria for
[[Page 5677]]
nomination to the World Heritage List. It is a list of candidate sites
which a country intends to consider for nomination within a given time
period. A country cannot nominate a property unless it has been on its
Tentative List for a minimum of a year. Countries also are limited to
nominating no more than two sites in any given year.
The World Heritage Committee's Operational Guidelines ask
participating nations to provide Tentative Lists, which aid in
evaluating properties for the World Heritage List on a comparative
international basis and help the Committee to schedule its work over
the long term. The Guidelines recommend that a nation review its
Tentative List at least once every decade.
Neither inclusion in the Tentative List nor inscription as a World
Heritage Site imposes legal restrictions on owners or neighbors of
sites, nor does it give the United Nations any management authority or
ownership rights in U.S. World Heritage Sites, which continue to be
subject only to U.S. and local laws. Inclusion in the Tentative List
merely indicates that the property may be further examined for possible
World Heritage nomination in the future.
U.S. World Heritage Nominations: 2009
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, Hawaii
This 1,200-mile-long string of islands, atolls, coral reefs and
adjacent waters, running northwest from the main Hawaiian islands and
encompassing over 89 million acres, is one of the world's largest and
most significant marine protected areas. Scattered in the deep ocean
are some 10 small islands along with extensive reefs and shoals. In
this remote and still relatively pristine part of the Pacific, marine
life flourishes, and the area is home to a large number of species
found nowhere else in the world, including a wide array that are
threatened and endangered. Large populations of seabirds nest on
isolated sandy shores and the waters harbor impressive numbers of large
predatory fish. The geology of the islands is also highly significant--
the chain represents the longest, clearest, and oldest example of
island formation and atoll evolution in the world.
Native Hawaiians reached these islands at least 1,000 years before
any other people and established settlements on some of them. The
islands, along with their significant archeological sites, retain great
cultural and spiritual significance to Native Hawaiians.
Mount Vernon, Virginia
George Washington's long-time home, with its associated gardens and
grounds, forms a remarkably well-preserved and extensively documented
example of a plantation landscape of the 18th-century American South.
It was based on English models but modified and adapted to its American
context, which included slave labor as an economic basis. There is a
core of 14 surviving 18th-century structures set in a landscape of
gardens, fences, lanes, walkways, and other features, situated along
the Potomac River, that changed and developed over many years in
Washington's family. The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association has owned and
maintained the property for 150 years.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 470a-1, a-2, d; 36 CFR 73.
Dated: January 16, 2009.
Lyle Laverty,
Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. E9-2044 Filed 1-29-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312-52-P