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Show Paul . Back in 1999 we submitted a nomination for the Grafton H.D. Marilyn Harper, the reviewer at the time, returned it to us stating that because the cemetery was actually in BLM-controlled land it had to go to them for review (this was my first historic district nomination so I didn't quite understand how this worked). Anyway, Jack Burns of the Rockville CLG, which funded the nomination, said he would work this out with the BLM . 8112 years later he has worked out a management policy for the cemetery between the City of Rockville (where Grafton is located) and the BLM. Bu now he is actually asking that the cemetery be removed from the nomination boundary to avoid a hangup at the BLM and so we can submit this directly to the NR. So, here is my question, of which I think I already know the answer: do we have the board review this again and the SHPO sign it again before we resubmit? Some things have changed within the district: along with changing the boundaries to exclude the cemetery, one house, which was basically a ruin , has since been restored , and the school house has been partially restored as well. How does this work when a returned nomination has sat for so long? Thanks, Cory J. Cory Jensen Architectural Historianl National Register & Survey Coordinator Utah State Historic Preservation Office 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 801/533-3559 FAX 801/533-3503 coryjensen@utah .gov |