Intermediate

The views of the public are essential to informed federal decision making in the Section 106 process. The level and type of public involvement in a case will vary depending upon specific factors and should be integrated with other environmental review processes like NEPA. Program Analysts Christopher Daniel and Chris Wilson will review the requirements and considerations in the Section 106 regulations and explain examples of best practices. Participants will identify appropriate public involvement techniques in case scenarios.

Intermediate

The views of the public are essential to informed federal decision making in the Section 106 process. The level and type of public involvement in a case will vary depending upon specific factors and should be integrated with other environmental review processes like NEPA. Program Analysts Christopher Daniel and Chris Wilson will review the requirements and considerations in the Section 106 regulations and explain examples of best practices. Participants will identify appropriate public involvement techniques in case scenarios.

Intermediate

Experienced Section 106 practitioners will benefit from this opportunity to explore the steps necessary to make a reasonable effort to identify historic properties for a specific undertaking and to carry out such identification efforts in good faith. Join Tom McCulloch, Senior Archaeologist and Assistant Director in the Office of Federal Agency Programs, and Kelly Fanizzo, Associate General Counsel, to learn about this regulatory standard while practicing its application to case scenarios.

Intermediate

Experienced Section 106 practitioners will benefit from this opportunity to explore the steps necessary to make a reasonable effort to identify historic properties for a specific undertaking and to carry out such identification efforts in good faith. Join Tom McCulloch, Senior Archaeologist and Assistant Director in the Office of Federal Agency Programs, and Kelly Fanizzo, Associate General Counsel, to learn about this regulatory standard while practicing its application to case scenarios.

Click here to register.

The ACHP will meet for its next business meeting October 4, 2018, with committee meetings taking place on Wednesday, October 3, at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. Click here to read the agendas.

The Association for the Study of African American Life and History will hold its annual conference, with a theme of "African Americans in Times of War." ACHP member Robert G. Stanton will present a panel during the conference. Check back for details.

Click here for more information on the conference.

Check back for details of Advocacy Week 2019.

Each year ACRA presents a dynamic and multifaceted convention to bring together CRM practitioners and those in related fields. The annual meeting is a venue to exchange ideas and meet new colleagues.This year’s conference theme—Local Voices, National Trends: Heritage Transforming Communities—highlights Cincinnati’s place as a national leader in historic preservation at the local level and places a focus on Section 106 and CRM bringing local voices into the federal process. 

Click here for more information.

The National Alliance of Preservation Commissions is bringing its biennial FORUM to Des Moines, Iowa.  FORUM 2018 includes dozens of educational sessions and discussion panels, mobile workshops and tours, and five days of non-stop networking for commission staff and volunteers representing local, state, and national organizations, and government agencies.

Click here for more information.

PastForward, the National Preservation Conference, is an educational and networking event for those in the business of saving places.

Click here for more information.