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pdfTitle 50: Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 80—ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, PITTMANROBERTSON WILDLIFE RESTORATION AND DINGELLJOHNSON SPORT FISH
RESTORATION ACTS
Subpart J—Real Property
Contents
§80.130 Does an agency have to hold title to real property acquired under a grant?
§80.131 Does an agency have to hold an easement acquired under a grant?
§80.132 Does an agency have to control the land or water where it completes capital improvements?
§80.133 Does an agency have to maintain acquired or completed capital improvements?
§80.134 How must an agency use real property?
§80.135 What if an agency allows a use of real property that interferes with its authorized purpose?
§80.136 Is it a diversion if an agency does not use grantacquired real property for its authorized purpose?
§80.137 What if real property is no longer useful or needed for its original purpose?
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§80.130 Does an agency have to hold title to real property acquired under a grant?
A State fish and wildlife agency must hold title to an ownership interest in real property acquired under a grant to the
extent possible under State law.
(a) Some States do not authorize their fish and wildlife agency to hold the title to real property that the agency manages.
In these cases, the State or one of its administrative units may hold the title to grantfunded real property as long as the
agency has the authority to manage the real property for its authorized purpose under the grant. The agency, the State, or
another administrative unit of State government must not hold title to an undivided ownership interest in the real property
concurrently with a subgrantee or any other entity.
(b) An ownership interest is an interest in real property that gives the person who holds it the right to use and occupy a
parcel of land or water and to exclude others. Ownership interests include fee and leasehold interests but not easements.
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§80.131 Does an agency have to hold an easement acquired under a grant?
A State fish and wildlife agency must hold an easement acquired under a grant, but it may share certain rights or
responsibilities as described in paragraph (b) of this section if consistent with State law.
(a) Any sharing of rights or responsibilities does not diminish the agency's responsibility to manage the easement for its
authorized purpose.
(b) The agency may share holding or enforcement of an easement only in the following situations:
(1) The State or another administrative unit of State government may hold an easement on behalf of its fish and wildlife
agency.
(2) The agency may subgrant the concurrent right to hold the easement to a nonprofit organization or to a local or tribal
government. A concurrent right to hold an easement means that both the State agency and the subgrantee hold the
easement and share its rights and responsibilities.
(3) The agency may subgrant a right of enforcement to a nonprofit organization or to a local or tribal government. This
right of enforcement may allow the subgrantee to have reasonable access and entry to property protected under the
easement for purposes of inspection, monitoring, and enforcement. The subgrantee's right of enforcement must not
supersede and must be concurrent with the agency's right of enforcement.
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§80.132 Does an agency have to control the land or water where it completes capital improvements?
Yes. A State fish and wildlife agency must control the parcel of land and water on which it completes a grantfunded
capital improvement. An agency must exercise this control by holding title to a fee or leasehold interest or through another
legally binding agreement. Control must be adequate for the protection, maintenance, and use of the improvement for its
authorized purpose during its useful life even if the agency did not acquire the parcel with grant funds.
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§80.133 Does an agency have to maintain acquired or completed capital improvements?
Yes. A State fish and wildlife agency is responsible for maintaining capital improvements acquired or completed under a
grant to ensure that each capital improvement continues to serve its authorized purpose during its useful life.
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§80.134 How must an agency use real property?
(a) If a grant funds acquisition of an interest in a parcel of land or water, the State fish and wildlife agency must use it
for the purpose authorized in the grant.
(b) If a grant funds construction of a capital improvement, the agency must use the capital improvement for the purpose
authorized in the grant during the useful life of the capital improvement. The agency must do this even if it did not use grant
funds to:
(1) Acquire the parcel on which the capital improvement is located; or
(2) Build the structure in which the capital improvement is a component.
(c) If a grant funds management, operation, or maintenance of a parcel of land or water, or a capital improvement, the
agency must use it for the purpose authorized in the grant during the grant period. The agency must do this even if it did not
acquire the parcel or construct the capital improvement with grant funds.
(d) A State agency may allow commercial, recreational, and other secondary uses of a grantfunded parcel of land or
water or capital improvement if these secondary uses do not interfere with the authorized purpose of the grant.
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§80.135 What if an agency allows a use of real property that interferes with its authorized purpose?
(a) When a State fish and wildlife agency allows a use of real property that interferes with its authorized purpose under a
grant, the agency must fully restore the real property to its authorized purpose.
(b) If the agency cannot fully restore the real property to its authorized purpose, it must replace the real property using
nonFederal funds.
(c) The agency must determine that the replacement property:
(1) Is of at least equal value at current market prices; and
(2) Has fish, wildlife, and publicuse benefits consistent with the purposes of the original grant.
(d) The Regional Director may require the agency to obtain an appraisal and appraisal review to estimate the value of the
replacement property at current market prices if the agency cannot support its assessment of value.
(e) The agency must obtain the Regional Director's approval of:
(1) Its determination of the value and benefits of the replacement property; and
(2) The documentation supporting this determination.
(f) The agency may have a reasonable time, up to 3 years from the date of notification by the Regional Director, to
restore the real property to its authorized purpose or acquire replacement property. If the agency does not restore the real
property to its authorized purpose or acquire replacement property within 3 years, the Director may declare the agency
ineligible to receive new grants in the program or programs that funded the original acquisition.
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§80.136 Is it a diversion if an agency does not use grantacquired real property for its authorized purpose?
If a State fish and wildlife agency does not use grantacquired real property for its authorized purpose, a diversion
occurs only if both of the following conditions apply:
(a) The agency used license revenue as match for the grant; and
(b) The unauthorized use is for a purpose other than management of the fish and wildliferelated resources for which the
agency has authority under State law.
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§80.137 What if real property is no longer useful or needed for its original purpose?
If the director of the State fish and wildlife agency and the Regional Director jointly decide that grantfunded real property
is no longer useful or needed for its original purpose under the grant, the director of the agency must:
(a) Propose another eligible purpose for the real property under the grant program and ask the Regional Director to
approve this proposed purpose, or
(b) Request disposition instructions for the real property under the process described at 43 CFR 12.71, “Administrative
and Audit Requirements and Cost Principles for Assistance Programs.”
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File Type | application/pdf |
File Modified | 2017-03-13 |
File Created | 2017-03-13 |