Appeal Process

Appeals are administrative reviews, not adjudicative proceedings. Appeal decisions, like all other certification decisions, are based on relevant Secretary of the Interior's Standards: the Standards for Evaluating Significance within Registered Historic Districts for evaluating certifications of significance and the Standards for Rehabilitation for evaluating rehabilitation projects, found in the program regulations 36 CFR Part 67.

The result of an appeal will be one of four decisions. The Chief Appeals Officer's decision may:

(1) reverse the appealed decision;

(2) affirm the appealed decision;
(3) resubmit the matter to Technical Preservation Services for further consideration; or
(4) where appropriate, withhold a decision until issuance of a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service.

Decisions by the Chief Appeals Officer are the final administrative decisions within the Department of the Interior regarding certification for the Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives Program.

The Chief Appeals Officer reviews only a very small number of all National Park Service certification decisions. Usually less than 5 applications for certification of significance (Part 1) and only 20–25 certifications of rehabilitation (Parts 2 and 3) are denied each year out of approximately 1,000–1,300 projects submitted for review. Denials of rehabilitation reviewed on appeal are generally atypical re-use projects or rehabilitations that were completed before a Description of Rehabilitation (Part 2 application) was submitted for review. Therefore, these projects are not representative of all certification decisions.

Appeal decisions are project-specific and are not applicable beyond the facts and circumstances of each case. Additionally, appeal decisions do not make policy for the tax incentives program, either on questions of historic significance or on questions about rehabilitation treatments. NPS regulations clearly state, “Because the circumstances of each rehabilitation project are unique to the particular certified historic structure involved, certifications that may have been granted to other rehabilitations are not specifically applicable and may not be relied on by owners as applicable to other projects.”

Recent Appeal Decisions

Last updated: December 10, 2024