Submission of U.S. Nomination to the World Heritage List, 15627-15628 [2015-06663]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: The estimated total number of
respondents for the information
collection I–566 is 5,800 and the
estimated hour burden per response is
1.42 hours.
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: The total estimated annual
hour burden associated with this
collection is 8,236 hours.
(7) An estimate of the total public
burden (in cost) associated with the
collection: The estimated total annual
cost burden associated with this
collection of information is $710,500.
Dated: March 18, 2015.
Laura Dawkins,
Chief, Regulatory Coordination Division,
Office of Policy and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2015–06636 Filed 3–23–15; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–WASO–OIA–17652;
PIN00IO14.XI0000]
Submission of U.S. Nomination to the
World Heritage List
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of the
Interior is submitting a nomination to
the World Heritage List for the ‘‘Key
Works of Modern Architecture by Frank
Lloyd Wright,’’ consisting of 10 separate
properties, located in seven states: Unity
Temple, Oak Park, Illinois; Frederick C.
Robie House, Chicago, Illinois; Taliesin,
Spring Green, Wisconsin; Hollyhock
House, Los Angeles, California;
Fallingwater, Mill Run, Pennsylvania;
Herbert and Katherine Jacobs House,
Madison, Wisconsin; Taliesin West,
Scottsdale, Arizona; Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New York, New
York; Price Tower, Bartlesville,
Oklahoma; and the Marin County Civic
Center, San Rafael, California. This is
the third notice required by the
Department of the Interior’s World
Heritage Program regulations.
DATES: The World Heritage Committee
will likely consider the nomination at
its 40th annual session in mid-2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephen Morris, Chief, Office of
International Affairs at 202–354–1803 or
Jonathan Putnam, International
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SUMMARY:
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Cooperation Specialist at 202–354–
1809. Complete information about U.S.
participation in the World Heritage
Program and the process used to
develop the U.S. World Heritage
Tentative List is posted on the National
Park Service, Office of International
Affairs Web site at: https://www.nps.gov/
oia/topics/worldheritage/
worldheritage.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; Email: april_brooks@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
constitutes the official notice of the
decision by the United States
Department of the Interior to submit on
behalf of the United States, a
nomination to the World Heritage List
for the ‘‘Key Works of Modern
Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright,’’ as
enumerated in the Summary above, and
it is a component of the Third Notice
referred to in 36 CFR 73.7(j) of the
World Heritage Program regulations (36
CFR part 73).
The nomination is being submitted
through the U.S. Department of State to
the World Heritage Centre of the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for
consideration by the World Heritage
Committee, which will likely occur at
the Committee’s 40th annual session in
mid-2016.
This serial nomination has been
selected from the U.S. World Heritage
Tentative List, where it was listed as
‘‘Frank Lloyd Wright Buildings.’’ 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 Frank Lloyd
Wright Buildings nomination on the
Tentative List was subsequently
amended in July 2011 to add the Herbert
and Katherine Jacobs House to the
group. Although the S.C. Johnson & Son,
Inc., Administration Building and
Research Tower in Racine, Wisconsin,
are also included on the Tentative List
under ‘‘Frank Lloyd Wright Buildings,’’
they are not being nominated at this
time, but may be in the future.
The U.S. World Heritage Tentative
List appeared in a Federal Register
notice on December 14, 2010 (73 FR
77901–77903, December 14, 2010), with
a request for public comment on
possible nominations from the then-13
properties on the Tentative List. A
summary of the comments received, the
Department of the Interior’s responses to
them and the Department’s decision to
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15627
request preparation of this nomination
appeared in a subsequent Federal
Register Notice published on July 14,
2011 (76 FR 41517–41521). These are
the First and Second Notices required
by 36 CFR 73.7(c) and (f).
In making the decision to submit this
U.S. World Heritage nomination,
pursuant to 36 CFR 73.7(h) and (i), the
Department’s Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife
and Parks evaluated the draft
nomination and the recommendations
of the Federal Interagency Panel for
World Heritage. He determined that the
property meets the prerequisites for
nomination by the United States to the
World Heritage List that are detailed in
36 CFR part 73. Each property is
nationally significant, having been
designated by the Department of the
Interior as an individual National
Historic Landmark. The owners of the
properties have concurred in writing
with the nomination, and the legal and
other protections for each property are
documented in the nomination. This
nomination appears to meet two of the
World Heritage criteria for cultural
properties.
The ‘‘Key Works of Modern
Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright’’ is
nominated under World Heritage
cultural criteria (i) and (ii), as provided
in 36 CFR 73.9(b)(1), as containing
many of the most iconic, fully realized,
and innovative of the buildings
designed by Wright (1867–1959).
Located in seven states across the
continental United States of America,
they respond to more than fifty years of
dramatic cultural and technological
change with distinctive and highly
original modern forms. Designed for a
range of urban, suburban, and rural
environments and for clients from all
backgrounds and walks of life, these
works, which include a variety of
building types, embody a single-minded
vision of architecture as space created
for human use, rich in emotion and
sensitive to their surroundings. These
masterworks, particular to Wright’s
vision, fused a variety of influences in
a way that made a powerful impact on
global architecture in the 20th century.
The properties, both individually and
as a group, also meet the World Heritage
requirements for integrity and
authenticity and have been determined
to possess adequate legal and
management mechanisms to ensure
their conservation pursuant to 36 CFR
73.9(b)(2).
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
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
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15628
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
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. The World Heritage 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 for inclusion on
the World Heritage List at its annual
meeting each summer. The United
States has served four terms on the
World Heritage Committee, but is not
currently a member.
There are 1,007 World Heritage sites
in 161 of the 191 signatory countries.
The United States has 22 sites inscribed
on the World Heritage List.
U.S. participation and the role of the
Department of the Interior are
authorized by Section 401 of Title IV of
the Historic Preservation Act
Amendments of 1980, (now codified at
54 U.S.C. 307101), and conducted by
the Department through the National
Park Service in accordance with the
regulations at 36 CFR part 73 which
implement the Convention pursuant to
this law. 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 19 of the 22 U.S. World Heritage
Sites.
The World Heritage Committee’s
Operational Guidelines require
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. The current U.S. Tentative List
was transmitted to the UNESCO World
Heritage Centre on January 24, 2008.
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. federal and local
laws, as applicable.
Dated: March 3, 2015.
Michael J. Bean,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish
and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2015–06663 Filed 3–23–15; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–NERO–CHHO–17341; PPNCCHOHS0–
PPMPSPD1Z.YM0000]
Request for Nominations for the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National
Historical Park Commission
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice of request for
nominations.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The National Park Service,
U.S. Department of the Interior, is
seeking nominations for individuals to
be considered for appointment to the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National
Historical Park Commission. The
Commission was established by section
6 of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
Development Act (16 U.S.C. 410y–4),
and terminated January 8, 2011. The
Commission has been extended by
Public Law 113–178 and the new
termination date is September 26, 2024.
DATES: Written nominations must be
received by May 8, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Send nominations to: Kevin
Brandt, Superintendent and Designated
Federal Official, Chesapeake and Ohio
Canal National Historical Park, 1850
Dual Highway, Suite 100, Hagerstown,
Maryland, 21740–6620, or by email
kevin_brandt@nps.gov.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kevin Brandt, Superintendent and
Designated Federal Official, Chesapeake
and Ohio Canal National Historical
Park, 1850 Dual Highway, Suite 100,
Hagerstown, Maryland, 21740–6620, or
by email kevin_brandt@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
purpose of the Commission is to meet
and consult with the Secretary of the
Interior, or the Secretary’s designee, on
general policies and specific matters
related to the administration and
development of the Chesapeake and
Ohio Canal National Historical Park.
Nominations should describe and
document the proposed member’s
qualifications for membership to the
Commission, and include a resume
listing his or her full name, title,
address, telephone, email, and fax
number.
The Commission shall be composed
of 19 members appointed by the
Secretary for 5-year terms as follows: (1)
Eight members to be appointed from
recommendations submitted by the
boards of commissioners or the county
councils, as the case may be, of
Montgomery, Frederick, Washington,
and Allegany Counties, Maryland, of
which two members shall be appointed
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from recommendations submitted by
each such board or council, as the case
may be; (2) Eight members to be
appointed from recommendations
submitted by the Governor of the State
of Maryland, the Governor of the State
of West Virginia, the Governor of the
Commonwealth of Virginia, and the
Commissioner of the District of
Columbia, of which two members shall
be appointed from recommendations
submitted by each such Governor or
Commissioner, as the case may be; and
(3) Three members to be appointed by
the Secretary, one of whom shall be
designated Chairman of the Commission
and two of who shall be members of
regularly constituted conservation
organizations.
Some Commissioners may serve as
Special Governmental Employees,
which may include the completion of an
annual financial disclosure report and
annual ethics training.
Members of the Commission will
receive no pay, allowances, or benefits
by reason of their service on the
Commission. However, while away from
their homes or regular places of
business in the performance of services
for the Commission as approved by the
Designated Federal Officer (DFO),
members may be allowed travel
expenses, including per diem in lieu of
subsistence, in the same manner as
persons employed intermittently in
Government service are allowed such
expenses under section 5703 of title 5 of
the United State Code.
Individuals who are Federally
registered lobbyists are ineligible to
serve on all FACA and non-FACA
boards, committees, or councils in an
individual capacity. The term
‘‘individual capacity’’ refers to
individuals who are appointed to
exercise their own individual best
judgment on behalf of the government,
such as when they are designated
Special Government Employees, rather
than being appointed to represent a
particular interest.
Seeking Nominations for Membership
We are seeking nominations for
commission members in the following
category: Three members to be
appointed by the Secretary, one of
whom shall be designated Chairman of
the Commission and two of whom shall
be members of regularly constituted
conservation organizations.
Nominations should include a resume
providing an adequate description of the
nominee’s qualifications, including
information that would enable the
Department of the Interior to make an
informed decision regarding meeting the
membership requirements of the
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 56 (Tuesday, March 24, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15627-15628]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06663]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS-WASO-OIA-17652; PIN00IO14.XI0000]
Submission of U.S. Nomination to the World Heritage List
AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of the Interior is submitting a nomination to
the World Heritage List for the ``Key Works of Modern Architecture by
Frank Lloyd Wright,'' consisting of 10 separate properties, located in
seven states: Unity Temple, Oak Park, Illinois; Frederick C. Robie
House, Chicago, Illinois; Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin; Hollyhock
House, Los Angeles, California; Fallingwater, Mill Run, Pennsylvania;
Herbert and Katherine Jacobs House, Madison, Wisconsin; Taliesin West,
Scottsdale, Arizona; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, New York;
Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma; and the Marin County Civic Center,
San Rafael, California. This is the third notice required by the
Department of the Interior's World Heritage Program regulations.
DATES: The World Heritage Committee will likely consider the nomination
at its 40th annual session in mid-2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen Morris, Chief, Office of
International Affairs at 202-354-1803 or Jonathan Putnam, International
Cooperation Specialist at 202-354-1809. Complete information about U.S.
participation in the World Heritage Program and the process used to
develop the U.S. World Heritage Tentative List is posted on the
National Park Service, Office of International Affairs Web site at:
https://www.nps.gov/oia/topics/worldheritage/worldheritage.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; Email:
april_brooks@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This constitutes the official notice of the
decision by the United States Department of the Interior to submit on
behalf of the United States, a nomination to the World Heritage List
for the ``Key Works of Modern Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright,'' as
enumerated in the Summary above, and it is a component of the Third
Notice referred to in 36 CFR 73.7(j) of the World Heritage Program
regulations (36 CFR part 73).
The nomination is being submitted through the U.S. Department of
State to the World Heritage Centre of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for consideration by the
World Heritage Committee, which will likely occur at the Committee's
40th annual session in mid-2016.
This serial nomination has been selected from the U.S. World
Heritage Tentative List, where it was listed as ``Frank Lloyd Wright
Buildings.'' 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 Frank
Lloyd Wright Buildings nomination on the Tentative List was
subsequently amended in July 2011 to add the Herbert and Katherine
Jacobs House to the group. Although the S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc.,
Administration Building and Research Tower in Racine, Wisconsin, are
also included on the Tentative List under ``Frank Lloyd Wright
Buildings,'' they are not being nominated at this time, but may be in
the future.
The U.S. World Heritage Tentative List appeared in a Federal
Register notice on December 14, 2010 (73 FR 77901-77903, December 14,
2010), with a request for public comment on possible nominations from
the then-13 properties on the Tentative List. A summary of the comments
received, the Department of the Interior's responses to them and the
Department's decision to request preparation of this nomination
appeared in a subsequent Federal Register Notice published on July 14,
2011 (76 FR 41517-41521). These are the First and Second Notices
required by 36 CFR 73.7(c) and (f).
In making the decision to submit this U.S. World Heritage
nomination, pursuant to 36 CFR 73.7(h) and (i), the Department's
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks
evaluated the draft nomination and the recommendations of the Federal
Interagency Panel for World Heritage. He determined that the property
meets the prerequisites for nomination by the United States to the
World Heritage List that are detailed in 36 CFR part 73. Each property
is nationally significant, having been designated by the Department of
the Interior as an individual National Historic Landmark. The owners of
the properties have concurred in writing with the nomination, and the
legal and other protections for each property are documented in the
nomination. This nomination appears to meet two of the World Heritage
criteria for cultural properties.
The ``Key Works of Modern Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright'' is
nominated under World Heritage cultural criteria (i) and (ii), as
provided in 36 CFR 73.9(b)(1), as containing many of the most iconic,
fully realized, and innovative of the buildings designed by Wright
(1867-1959). Located in seven states across the continental United
States of America, they respond to more than fifty years of dramatic
cultural and technological change with distinctive and highly original
modern forms. Designed for a range of urban, suburban, and rural
environments and for clients from all backgrounds and walks of life,
these works, which include a variety of building types, embody a
single-minded vision of architecture as space created for human use,
rich in emotion and sensitive to their surroundings. These masterworks,
particular to Wright's vision, fused a variety of influences in a way
that made a powerful impact on global architecture in the 20th century.
The properties, both individually and as a group, also meet the
World Heritage requirements for integrity and authenticity and have
been determined to possess adequate legal and management mechanisms to
ensure their conservation pursuant to 36 CFR 73.9(b)(2).
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
[[Page 15628]]
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. The World Heritage 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 for inclusion on the World Heritage List at its
annual meeting each summer. The United States has served four terms on
the World Heritage Committee, but is not currently a member.
There are 1,007 World Heritage sites in 161 of the 191 signatory
countries. The United States has 22 sites inscribed on the World
Heritage List.
U.S. participation and the role of the Department of the Interior
are authorized by Section 401 of Title IV of the Historic Preservation
Act Amendments of 1980, (now codified at 54 U.S.C. 307101), and
conducted by the Department through the National Park Service in
accordance with the regulations at 36 CFR part 73 which implement the
Convention pursuant to this law. 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 19 of the 22 U.S. World Heritage Sites.
The World Heritage Committee's Operational Guidelines require
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. The
current U.S. Tentative List was transmitted to the UNESCO World
Heritage Centre on January 24, 2008.
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. federal and local laws, as applicable.
Dated: March 3, 2015.
Michael J. Bean,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2015-06663 Filed 3-23-15; 8:45 am]
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