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the property is available; however, if the existing survey and evaluation is more than five years <br />old, it shall be updated. <br />CUL-2 Use of the Secretary of the Interior's Standards. The Secretary of the Interior's Standards for <br />the Treatment of Historic Properties shall be used to the maximum extent practicable to <br />ensure that projects involving the relocation, conversion, rehabilitation, or alteration of a <br />historical resource and its setting or related new construction will not impair the significance <br />of the historical resource. Use of the Standards shall be overseen by an architectural historian <br />or historic architect meeting the Secretary of the Interior's Professional Qualification <br />Standards. Evidence of compliance with the Standards shall be provided to the City in the <br />form of a report identifying and photographing character -defining features and spaces and <br />specifying how the proposed treatment of character -defining features and spaces and related <br />construction activities will conform to the Standards. The Qualified Professional shall monitor <br />the construction and provide a report to the City at the conclusion of the project. Use of the <br />Secretary's Standards shall reduce the project impacts on historical resources to less than <br />significant. <br />CUL-3 Documentation, Education, and Memorialization. If the City determines that significant <br />impacts to historical resources cannot be avoided, the City shall require, at a minimum, that <br />the affected historical resources be thoroughly documented before issuance of any permits <br />and may also require additional public education efforts and/or memorialization of the <br />historical resource. Though dernolition or alteration of a historical resource such that its <br />significance is materially impaired cannot be mitigated to a less than significant level, <br />recordation of the resource will reduce significant adverse impacts to historical resources to <br />the maximum extent feasible. Such recordation should be prepared under the supervision of <br />an architectural historian, historian, or historic architect meeting the Secretary of the Interior's <br />Professional Qualification Standards and should take the form of Historic American Buildings <br />Survey (NABS) documentation. At a minimum, this recordation should include an <br />architectural and historical narrative; archival photographic documentation; and <br />supplementary information, such as building plans and elevations and/or historic <br />photographs. The documentation package should be reproduced on archival paper and should <br />be made available to researchers and the public through accession by appropriate institutions <br />such as the Santa Ana Library History Room, the South Central Coastal Information Center <br />at California State University, Fullerton, and/or the NABS collection housed in the Library of <br />Congress. Depending on the significance of the adversely affected historical resource, the City, <br />at its discretion, may also require public education about the historical resource in the form <br />of an exhibit, web page, brochure, or other format and/or memorialization of the historical <br />resource on or near the proposed project site. If memorialized, such memorialization shall be <br />a permanent installation, such as a mural, display, or other vehicle that recalls the location, <br />appearance, and historical significance of the affected historical resource, and shall be designed <br />in conjunction with a qualified architectural historian, historian, or historic architect. <br />Resolution No. 2024-072 <br />Page 35 of 67 <br />