36 C.F.R. PART 401—MONUMENTS AND MEMORIALS


Title 36 - Parks, Forests, and Public Property


Title 36: Parks, Forests, and Public Property

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PART 401—MONUMENTS AND MEMORIALS

Section Contents
§ 401.1   Purpose.
§ 401.2   Applicability and scope.
§ 401.3   Background.
§ 401.4   Responsibility.
§ 401.5   Control and supervision of materials, design, and building.
§ 401.6   Approval by National Commission of Fine Arts.
§ 401.7   Cooperation with other than Government entities.
§ 401.8   Requirement for Commission approval.
§ 401.9   Evaluation criteria.
§ 401.10   Monument Trust Fund Program.
§ 401.11   Demolition criteria.


Authority:  36 U.S.C 2105; 36 U.S.C. 2106

Source:  70 FR 32490, June 3, 2005, unless otherwise noted.

§ 401.1   Purpose.
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This part provides guidance on the execution of the responsibilities given by Congress to the American Battle Monuments Commission (Commission) regarding memorials and monuments commemorating the service of American Armed Forces at locations outside the United States.

§ 401.2   Applicability and scope.
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This part applies to all agencies of the United States Government, State and local governments of the United States and all American citizens, and private and public American organizations that have established or plan to establish any permanent memorial commemorating the service of American Armed Forces at a location outside the United States. This chapter does not address temporary monuments, plaques and other elements that deployed American Armed Forces wish to erect at a facility occupied by them outside the United States. Approval of any such temporary monument, plaque or other element is a matter to be determined by the concerned component of the Department of Defense consistent with host nation law and any other constraints applicable to the presence of American Armed Forces at the overseas location.

§ 401.3   Background.
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Following World War I many American individuals, organizations and governmental entities sought to create memorials in Europe commemorating the service of American Armed Forces that participated in that war. Frequently such well-intended efforts were undertaken without adequate regard for many issues including host nation approvals, design adequacy, and funding for perpetual maintenance. As a result, in 1923 Congress created the American Battle Monuments Commission to generally oversee all memorials created by Americans or American entities to commemorate the service of American Armed Forces at locations outside the United States.

§ 401.4   Responsibility.
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The Commission is responsible for building and maintaining appropriate memorials commemorating the service of American Armed Forces at any place outside the United States where Armed Forces have served since April 6, 1917.

§ 401.5   Control and supervision of materials, design, and building.
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The Commission controls the design and prescribes regulations for the building of all memorial monuments and buildings commemorating the service of American Armed Forces that are built in a foreign country or political division of the foreign country that authorizes the Commission to carry out those duties and powers.

§ 401.6   Approval by National Commission of Fine Arts.
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A design for a memorial to be constructed at the expense of the United States Government must be approved by the National Commission of Fine Arts before the Commission can accept it.

§ 401.7   Cooperation with other than Government entities.
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The Commission has the discretion to cooperate with citizens of the United States, States, municipalities, or associations desiring to build war memorials outside the United States.

§ 401.8   Requirement for Commission approval.
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No administrative agency of the United States Government may give assistance to build a memorial unless the plan for the memorial has been approved by the Commission. In deciding whether to approve a memorial request the Commission will apply the criteria set forth in §401.9.

§ 401.9   Evaluation criteria.
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Commission consideration of a request to approve a memorial will include, but not be limited to, evaluation of following criteria:

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------             Criteria                            Discussion------------------------------------------------------------------------(a) How long has it been since the  Requests made during or immediately events to be honored took place?    after an event are not generally                                     subject to approval. The Commission                                     will not approve a memorial until                                     at least 10 years after the                                     officially designated end of the                                     event. It should be noted that this                                     is the same period of time made                                     applicable to the establishment of                                     memorials in the District of                                     Columbia and its environs by the                                     Commemorative Works Act.(b) How will the perpetual          Available adequate funding or other maintenance of the memorial be      specific arrangements addressing funded?                             perpetual care are a prerequisite                                     to any approval.(c) Has the host nation consented?  Host nation approval is required.(d) Is an overseas site             In many circumstances a memorial appropriate for the proposed        located within the United States permanent memorial?                 will be more appropriate.(e) Is the proposed memorial        Memorials to elements smaller than a intended to honor an individual     division or comparable unit or to or small unit?                      an individual will not be approved                                     unless the services of such unit or                                     individual clearly were of such                                     distinguished character as to                                     warrant a separate memorial.(f) Is the memorial historically    Representations should be supported accurate?                           by objective authorities.(g) Is the proposed memorial        As a general rule, memorials should intended to honor an                be erected to organizations rather organizational element of the       than to troops from a particular American Armed Forces rather than   locality of the United States. soldiers from a geographical area of the United States?(h) Does the contribution of the    The commemoration should normally be element to be honored warrant a     through a memorial that would have separate memorial?                  the affect of honoring all of the                                     American Armed Forces personnel who                                     participated rather than a select                                     segment of the organizational                                     participants.------------------------------------------------------------------------
§ 401.10   Monument Trust Fund Program.
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Pursuant to the provisions of 36 U.S.C. 2106(d), the Commission operates a Monument Trust Fund Program (MTFP) in countries where there is a Commission presence. Under the MTFP, the Commission may assume both the sponsor's legal interests in the monument and responsibility for its maintenance. To be accepted in the Monument Trust Fund Program, an organization must develop an acceptable maintenance plan and transfer sufficient monies to the Commission to fully fund the maintenance plan for at least 30 years. to The Commission will put this money into a trust fund of United States Treasury instruments that earn interest. Prior to acceptance into the MTFP, the sponsor must perform any deferred maintenance necessary to bring the monument up to a mutually agreeable standard. At that time, the Commission may assume the sponsoring organization's interest in the property and responsibility for all maintenance and other decisions concerning the monument. Once accepted into the program, the Commission will provide for all necessary maintenance of the monument and charge the cost to the trust fund. to The sponsoring organization or others interested in the monument may add to the trust fund at any time to insure that adequate funds remain available. to The Commission will maintain the monument for as long a period as the trust fund account permits.

§ 401.11   Demolition criteria.
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As authorized by the provisions of 36 U.S.C. 2106(e), the Commission may take necessary action to demolish any war memorial built outside the United States by a citizen of the United States, a State, a political subdivision of a State, a governmental authority (except a department, agency, or instrumentality of the United States Government), a foreign agency, or a private association and to dispose of the site of the memorial in a way the Commission decides is proper, if—

(a) The appropriate foreign authorities agree to the demolition; and

(b)(1) The sponsor of the memorial consents to the demolition; or

(2) The memorial has fallen into disrepair and a reasonable effort by the Commission has failed—

(i) To persuade the sponsor to maintain the memorial at a standard acceptable to the Commission; or

(ii) To locate the sponsor.

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