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Administrative Draft Environmental Impact Report <br /> Gill Medical Center Project <br /> Register Bulletin 38 presented guidelines for evaluating traditional cultural significance as a kind of <br /> cultural significance for which historic properties can be found eligible for inclusion in the NRHP using <br /> established criteria (Parker and King 1990; revised in 1992 and 1998).The process for considering TCPs is <br /> situated within the framework of the NRHP as the preservation of tangible cultural properties that have <br /> historical and ongoing significance to living communities, as evidenced in their traditional cultural <br /> practices, values, beliefs, and identity. <br /> The criteria for listing in the NRHP include resources that: <br /> a) are associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad <br /> patterns of history; <br /> b) are associated with the lives of persons significant in our past; <br /> C) embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or <br /> that represent the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or that represent <br /> a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; <br /> or, <br /> d) have yielded or may likely yield information important in prehistory or history. <br /> Additionally, the NRHP guidelines describe a type of cultural significance for which properties may be <br /> eligible for inclusion in the NRHP.A property with traditional cultural significance will be found eligible for <br /> the NRHP because it is associated with cultural practices or beliefs of a living community that: <br /> a) are rooted in that community's history, and, <br /> b) are important in maintaining the continuity of the cultural identity of the community. <br /> This type of significance is grounded in the cultural patterns of thought and behavior of a living <br /> community and refers specifically to the association between their cultural traditions and a historic <br /> property. <br /> 4.20.2.2 State <br /> Assembly Bill 52 <br /> Effective July 1, 2015, Assembly Bill 52 (AB 52) amended CEQA to require that: 1) a lead agency provide <br /> notice to those California Native American tribes that requested notice of projects proposed by the lead <br /> agency; and 2) for any tribe that responded to the notice within 30 days of receipt with a request for <br /> consultation, the lead agency must consult with the tribe.Topics that may be addressed during <br /> consultation include TCRs, the potential significance of project impacts, type of environmental document <br /> that should be prepared, and possible mitigation measures and project alternatives. <br /> Pursuant to AB 52, Section 21073 of the Public Resources Code defines California Native American tribes <br /> as "a Native American tribe located in California that is on the contact list maintained by the NAHC for the <br /> Tribal Cultural Resources 4.20-3 October 2021 <br />