
From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Laws in effect as of January 2, 2001]
[Document not affected by Public Laws enacted between
  January 2, 2001 and January 28, 2002]
[CITE: 16USC410jj-4]

 
                         TITLE 16--CONSERVATION
 
   CHAPTER 1--NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES
 
          SUBCHAPTER LIX-H--KALAUPAPA NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
 
Sec. 410jj-4. Administration


(a) Laws governing

    The Secretary shall administer the park in accordance with the 
provisions of sections 1, 2, 3, and 4 of this title, and sections 461 to 
467 of this title, and the provisions of this Act.

(b) Emergency, temporary, and interim activities; cooperative 
        agreements; expenditures; rehabilitation projects

    (1) With the approval of the owner thereof, the Secretary may 
undertake critical or emergency stabilization of utilities and historic 
structures, develop and occupy temporary office space, and conduct 
interim interpretive and visitor services on non-Federal property within 
the park.
    (2) The Secretary shall seek and may enter into cooperative 
agreements with the owner or owners of property within the park pursuant 
to which the Secretary may preserve, protect, maintain, construct, 
reconstruct, develop, improve, and interpret sites, facilities, and 
resources of historic, natural, architectural, and cultural 
significance. Such agreements shall be of not less than twenty years 
duration, may be extended and amended by mutual agreement, and shall 
include, without limitation, provisions that the Secretary shall have 
the right of access at reasonable times to public portions of the 
property for interpretive and other purposes, and that no changes or 
alterations shall be made in the property except by mutual agreement. 
Each such agreement shall also provide that the owner shall be liable to 
the United States in an amount equal to the fair market value of any 
capital improvements made to or placed upon the property in the event 
the agreement is terminated prior to its natural expiration, or any 
extension thereof, by the owner, such value to be determined as of the 
date of such termination, or, at the election of the Secretary, that the 
Secretary be permitted to remove such capital improvements within a 
reasonable time of such termination. Upon the expiration of such 
agreement, the improvements thereon shall become the property of the 
owner, unless the United States desires to remove such capital 
improvements and restore the property to its natural state within a 
reasonable time for such expiration.
    (3) Except for emergency, temporary, and interim activities as 
authorized in paragraph (1) of this subsection, no funds appropriated 
pursuant to this Act shall be expended on non-Federal property unless 
such expenditure is pursuant to a cooperative agreement with the owner.
    (4) The Secretary may stabilize and rehabilitate structures and 
other properties used for religious or sectarian purposes only if such 
properties constitute a substantial and integral part of the historical 
fabric of the Kalaupapa settlement, and only to the extent necessary and 
appropriate to interpret adequately the nationally significant 
historical features and events of the settlement for the benefit of the 
public.

(Pub. L. 96-565, title I, Sec. 105, Dec. 22, 1980, 94 Stat. 3322.)

                       References in Text

    This Act, referred to in subsecs. (a) and (b)(3), is Pub. L. 96-565, 
Dec. 22, 1980, 94 Stat. 3321, which enacted this subchapter and 
provisions set out as a note under section 2991a of Title 42, The Public 
Health and Welfare. For complete classification of this Act to the Code, 
see Tables.
