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Displaying title 43, up to date as of 4/01/2022. Title 43 was last amended 3/14/2022.
Title 43 - Public Lands: Interior
Subtitle B - Regulations Relating to Public Lands
Chapter II - Bureau of Land Management, Department of the Interior
Subchapter B - Land Resource Management (2000)
ENHANCED CONTENT - TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part 2880
Subpart 2881
§ 2881.2
§ 2881.5
§ 2881.7
§ 2881.9
§ 2881.10
§ 2881.11
§ 2881.12
Subpart 2882
§ 2882.10
Subpart 2883
§ 2883.10
§ 2883.11
§ 2883.12
§ 2883.13
§ 2883.14
Subpart 2884
§ 2884.10
§ 2884.11
§ 2884.12
§ 2884.13
§ 2884.14
§ 2884.15
§ 2884.16
§ 2884.17
§ 2884.18
§ 2884.19
§ 2884.20
§ 2884.21
§ 2884.22
§ 2884.23
§ 2884.24
§ 2884.25
§ 2884.26
§ 2884.27
§ 2884.30
Subpart 2885
Rights-of-Way Under the Mineral Leasing Act
2881.2 – 2888.11
General Information
2881.2 – 2881.12
What is the objective of BLM's right-of-way program?
What acronyms and terms are used in the regulations in this part?
Scope.
Severability.
How do I appeal a BLM decision issued under the regulations in this part?
When do I need a grant from BLM for an oil and gas pipeline?
When do I need a TUP for an oil and gas pipeline?
Lands Available for MLA Grants and TUPs
2882.10
What lands are available for grants or TUPs?
Qualifications for Holding MLA Grants and TUPs
2883.10 – 2883.14
Who may hold a grant or TUP?
Who may not hold a grant or TUP?
How do I prove I am qualified to hold a grant or TUP?
What happens if BLM issues me a grant or TUP and later determines that I am not qualified to hold it?
What happens to my application, grant, or TUP if I die?
Applying for MLA Grants or TUPs
2884.10 – 2884.30
What should I do before I file my application?
What information must I submit in my application?
What is the processing fee for a grant or TUP application?
Who is exempt from paying processing and monitoring fees?
When does BLM reevaluate the processing and monitoring fees?
What is a Master Agreement (Processing Category 5) and what information must I provide to BLM when I request
one?
What provisions do Master Agreements contain and what are their limitations?
How will BLM process my Processing Category 6 application?
What if there are two or more competing applications for the same pipeline?
Where do I file my application for a grant or TUP?
What are the public notification requirements for my application?
How will BLM process my application?
Can BLM ask me for additional information?
Under what circumstances may BLM deny my application?
What fees do I owe if BLM denies my application or if I withdraw my application?
What activities may I conduct on BLM lands covered by my application for a grant or TUP while BLM is processing
my application?
When will BLM issue a grant or TUP when the lands are managed by two or more Federal agencies?
What additional requirement is necessary for grants or TUPs for pipelines 24 or more inches in diameter?
Showing of good cause.
Terms and Conditions of MLA Grants and TUPs
2885.10 – 2885.25
§ 2885.10
§ 2885.11
§ 2885.12
§ 2885.13
§ 2885.14
§ 2885.15
§ 2885.16
§ 2885.17
§ 2885.18
§ 2885.19
§ 2885.20
§ 2885.21
§ 2885.22
§ 2885.23
§ 2885.24
§ 2885.25
Subpart 2886
§ 2886.10
§ 2886.11
§ 2886.12
§ 2886.13
§ 2886.14
§ 2886.15
§ 2886.16
§ 2886.17
§ 2886.18
§ 2886.19
Subpart 2887
§ 2887.10
§ 2887.11
§ 2887.12
Subpart 2888
§ 2888.10
§ 2888.11
When is a grant or TUP effective?
What terms and conditions must I comply with?
What rights does a grant or TUP convey?
What rights does the United States retain?
What happens if I need a right-of-way wider than 50 feet plus the ground occupied by the pipeline and related
facilities?
How will BLM charge me rent?
When do I pay rent?
What happens if I do not pay rents and fees or if I pay the rents or fees late?
When must I make estimated rent payments to BLM?
What is the rent for a linear right-of-way grant?
How will the BLM calculate my rent for linear rights-of-way the Per Acre Rent Schedule covers?
How must I make rental payments for a linear grant or TUP?
How may I make rental payments when land encumbered by my term or perpetual linear grant is being transferred
out of Federal ownership?
How will BLM calculate rent for communication uses ancillary to a linear grant, TUP, or other use authorization?
If I hold a grant or TUP, what monitoring fees must I pay?
When do I pay monitoring fees?
Operations on MLA Grants and TUPs
2886.10 – 2886.19
When can I start activities under my grant or TUP?
Who regulates activities within my right-of-way or TUP area?
When must I contact BLM during operations?
If I hold a grant or TUP, for what am I liable?
As grant or TUP holders, what liabilities do state, tribal, and local governments have?
How is grant or TUP administration affected if the BLM land my grant or TUP encumbers is transferred to another
Federal agency or out of Federal ownership?
Under what conditions may BLM order an immediate temporary suspension of my activities?
Under what conditions may BLM suspend or terminate my grant or TUP?
How will I know that BLM intends to suspend or terminate my grant or TUP?
When my grant or TUP terminates, what happens to any facilities on it?
Amending, Assigning, or Renewing MLA Grants and TUPs
2887.10 – 2887.12
When must I amend my application, seek an amendment of my grant or TUP, or obtain a new grant or TUP?
May I assign or make other changes to my grant or TUP?
How do I renew my grant?
Trespass
2888.10 – 2888.11
What is trespass?
May I receive a grant if I am or have been in trespass?
PART 2880 - RIGHTS-OF-WAY UNDER THE MINERAL LEASING ACT
Authority: 30 U.S.C. 185 and 189, and 43 U.S.C. 1732(b), 1733, and 1740.
Source: 70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart 2881 - General Information
§ 2881.2 What is the objective of BLM's right-of-way program?
It is BLM's objective to grant rights-of-way under the regulations in this part to any qualified individual, business, or government entity and to direct
and control the use of rights-of-way on public lands in a manner that:
(a) Protects the natural resources associated with Federal lands and adjacent lands, whether private or administered by a government entity;
(b) Prevents unnecessary or undue degradation to public lands;
(c) Promotes the use of rights-of-way in common considering engineering and technological compatibility, national security, and land use
plans; and
(d) Coordinates, to the fullest extent possible, all BLM actions under the regulations in this part with state and local governments, interested
individuals, and appropriate quasi-public entities.
§ 2881.5 What acronyms and terms are used in the regulations in this part?
(a) Acronyms. Unless an acronym is listed in this section, the acronyms listed in part 2800 of this chapter apply to this part. As used in this
part:
MLA means the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, as amended (30 U.S.C. 185).
TAPS means the Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline System.
TUP means a temporary use permit.
(b) Terms. Unless a term is defined in this part, the defined terms in part 2800 of this chapter apply to this part. As used in this part, the term:
Act means section 28 of the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, as amended (30 U.S.C. 185).
Actual costs means the financial measure of resources the Federal government expends or uses in processing a right-of-way
application or in monitoring the construction, operation, and termination of a facility authorized by a grant or permit. Actual costs
include both direct and indirect costs, exclusive of management overhead costs.
Casual use means activities ordinarily resulting in no or negligible disturbance of the public lands, resources, or improvements.
Examples of casual use include: Surveying, marking routes, and collecting data to prepare applications for grants or TUPs.
Facility means an improvement or structure, whether existing or planned, that is, or would be, owned and controlled by the grant or
TUP holder within the right-of-way or TUP area.
Federal lands means all lands owned by the United States, except lands:
(1) In the National Park System;
(2) Held in trust for an Indian or Indian tribe; or
(3) On the Outer Continental Shelf.
Grant means any authorization or instrument BLM issues under section 28 of the Mineral Leasing Act, 30 U.S.C. 185, authorizing a
nonpossessory, nonexclusive right to use Federal lands to construct, operate, maintain, or terminate a pipeline. The term includes
those authorizations and instruments BLM and its predecessors issued for like purposes before November 16, 1973, under then
existing statutory authority. It does not include authorizations issued under FLPMA (43 U.S.C. 1761 et seq.).
Monitoring means those actions, subject to § 2886.11 of this part, that the Federal government performs to ensure compliance with
the terms, conditions, and stipulations of a grant or TUP.
(1) For Monitoring Categories 1 through 4, the actions include inspecting construction, operation, maintenance, and termination of
permanent or temporary facilities and protection and rehabilitation activities until the holder completes rehabilitation of the
right-of-way or TUP area and BLM approves it;
(2) For Monitoring Category 5 (Master Agreements), those actions agreed to in the Master Agreement; and
(3) For Monitoring Category 6, those actions agreed to between BLM and the applicant before BLM issues the grant or TUP.
Oil or gas means oil, natural gas, synthetic liquid or gaseous fuels, or any refined product produced from them.
Pipeline means a line crossing Federal lands for transportation of oil or gas. The term includes feeder lines, trunk lines, and related
facilities, but does not include a lessee's or lease operator's production facilities located on its oil and gas lease.
Pipeline system means all facilities, whether or not located on Federal lands, used by a grant holder in connection with the
construction, operation, maintenance, or termination of a pipeline.
Production facilities means a lessee's or lease operator's pipes and equipment used on its oil and gas lease to aid in extracting,
processing, and storing oil or gas. The term includes:
(1) Storage tanks and processing equipment;
(2) Gathering lines upstream from such tanks and equipment, or in the case of gas, upstream from the point of delivery; and
(3) Pipes and equipment, such as water and gas injection lines, used in the production process for purposes other than carrying oil
and gas downstream from the wellhead.
Related facilities means those structures, devices, improvements, and sites, located on Federal lands, which may or may not be
connected or contiguous to the pipeline, the substantially continuous use of which is necessary for the operation or maintenance of
a pipeline, such as:
(1) Supporting structures;
(2) Airstrips;
(3) Roads;
(4) Campsites;
(5) Pump stations, including associated heliports, structures, yards, and fences;
(6) Valves and other control devices;
(7) Surge and storage tanks;
(8) Bridges;
(9) Monitoring and communication devices and structures housing them;
(10) Terminals, including structures, yards, docks, fences, and storage tank facilities;
(11) Retaining walls, berms, dikes, ditches, cuts and fills; and
(12) Structures and areas for storing supplies and equipment.
Right-of-way means the Federal lands BLM authorizes a holder to use or occupy under a grant.
Substantial deviation means a change in the authorized location or use which requires:
(1) Construction or use outside the boundaries of the right-of-way or TUP area; or
(2) Any change from, or modification of, the authorized use. Examples of substantial deviation include: Adding equipment,
overhead or underground lines, pipelines, structures, or other facilities not included in the original grant or TUP.
Temporary use permit or TUP means a document BLM issues under 30 U.S.C. 185 that is a revocable, nonpossessory privilege to
use specified Federal lands in the vicinity of and in connection with a right-of-way, to construct, operate, maintain, or terminate a
pipeline or to protect the environment or public safety. A TUP does not convey any interest in land.
Third party means any person or entity other than BLM, the applicant, or the holder of a right-of-way authorization.
§ 2881.7 Scope.
(a) What do these regulations apply to? The regulations in this part apply to:
(1) Issuing grants and TUPs for pipelines to transport oil or gas, and administering, amending, assigning, renewing, and terminating
them;
(2) All grants and permits BLM and its predecessors previously issued under section 28 of the Act; and
(3) Pipeline systems, or parts thereof, within a Federal oil and gas lease owned by:
(i)
A party who is not the lessee or lease operator; or
(ii) The lessee or lease operator which are downstream from a custody transfer metering device.
(b) What don't these regulations apply to? The regulations in this part do not apply to:
(1) Production facilities on an oil and gas lease which operate for the benefit of the lease. The lease authorizes these production
facilities;
(2) Pipelines crossing Federal lands under the jurisdiction of a single Federal department or agency other than BLM, including bureaus
and agencies within the Department of the Interior;
(3) Authorizations BLM issues to Federal agencies for oil or gas transportation under § 2801.6 of this chapter; or
(4) Authorizations BLM issues under Title V of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (see part 2800 of this chapter).
(c) Notwithstanding the definition of “grant” in section 2881.5 of this subpart, the regulations in this part apply, consistent with 43 U.S.C.
1652(c), to any authorization issued by the Secretary of the Interior or his or her delegate under 43 U.S.C. 1652(b) for the Trans-Alaska Oil
Pipeline System.
§ 2881.9 Severability.
If a court holds any provisions of the regulations in this part or their applicability to any person or circumstances invalid, the remainder of these
rules and their applicability to other people or circumstances will not be affected.
§ 2881.10 How do I appeal a BLM decision issued under the regulations in this part?
(a) You may appeal a BLM decision issued under the regulations in this part in accordance with part 4 of this title.
(b) All BLM decisions under this part remain in effect pending appeal unless the Secretary of the Interior rules otherwise, or as noted in this
part. You may petition for a stay of a BLM decision under this part with the Office of Hearings and Appeals, Department of the Interior.
Unless otherwise noted in this part, BLM will take no action on your application while your appeal is pending.
§ 2881.11 When do I need a grant from BLM for an oil and gas pipeline?
You must have a BLM grant under 30 U.S.C. 185 for an oil or gas pipeline or related facility to cross Federal lands under:
(a) BLM's jurisdiction; or
(b) The jurisdiction of two or more Federal agencies.
§ 2881.12 When do I need a TUP for an oil and gas pipeline?
You must obtain a TUP from BLM when you require temporary use of more land than your grant authorizes in order to construct, operate, maintain,
or terminate your pipeline, or to protect the environment or public safety.
Subpart 2882 - Lands Available for MLA Grants and TUPs
§ 2882.10 What lands are available for grants or TUPs?
(a) For lands BLM exclusively manages, we use the same criteria to determine whether lands are available for grants or TUPs as we do to
determine whether lands are available for FLPMA grants (see subpart 2802 of this chapter).
(b) BLM may require common use of a right-of-way and may restrict new grants to existing right-of-way corridors where safety and other
considerations allow. Generally, BLM land use plans designate right-of-way corridors.
(c) Where a proposed oil or gas right-of-way involves lands managed by two or more Federal agencies, see § 2884.26 of this part.
Subpart 2883 - Qualifications for Holding MLA Grants and TUPs
§ 2883.10 Who may hold a grant or TUP?
To hold a grant or TUP under these regulations, you must be:
(a)
(1) A United States citizen, an association of such citizens, or a corporation, partnership, association, or similar business entity
organized under the laws of the United States, or of any state therein; or
(2) A state or local government; and
(b) Financially and technically able to construct, operate, maintain, and terminate the proposed facilities.
§ 2883.11 Who may not hold a grant or TUP?
Aliens may not acquire or hold any direct or indirect interest in grants or TUPs, except that they may own or control stock in corporations holding
grants or TUPs if the laws of their country do not deny similar or like privileges to citizens of the United States.
§ 2883.12 How do I prove I am qualified to hold a grant or TUP?
(a) If you are a private individual, BLM requires no proof of citizenship with your application;
(b) If you are a partnership, corporation, association, or other business entity, submit the following information, as applicable, in your
application:
(1) Copies of the formal documents creating the business entity, such as articles of incorporation, and including the corporate bylaws;
(2) Evidence that the party signing the application has the authority to bind the applicant;
(3) The name, address, and citizenship of each participant (e.g., partner, associate, or other) in the business entity;
(4) The name, address, and citizenship of each shareholder owning 3 percent or more of each class of shares, and the number and
percentage of any class of voting shares of the business entity which such shareholder is authorized to vote;
(5) The name and address of each affiliate of the business entity;
(6) The number of shares and the percentage of any class of voting stock owned by the business entity, directly or indirectly, in any
affiliate controlled by the business entity; and
(7) The number of shares and the percentage of any class of voting stock owned by an affiliate, directly or indirectly, in the business
entity controlled by the affiliate.
(c) If you have already supplied this information to BLM and the information remains accurate, you only need to reference the existing or
previous BLM serial number under which it is filed.
§ 2883.13 What happens if BLM issues me a grant or TUP and later determines that I am not qualified to hold it?
If BLM issues you a grant or TUP, and later determines that you are not qualified to hold it, BLM will terminate your grant or TUP under 30 U.S.C.
185(o). You may appeal this decision under § 2881.10 of this part.
§ 2883.14 What happens to my application, grant, or TUP if I die?
(a) If an applicant or grant or TUP holder dies, any inheritable interest in the application, grant, or TUP will be distributed under state law.
(b) If the distributee of a grant or TUP is not qualified to hold a grant or TUP under § 2883.10 of this subpart, BLM will recognize the
distributee as grant or TUP holder and allow the distributee to hold its interest in the grant or TUP for up to two years. During that period,
the distributee must either become qualified or divest itself of the interest.
Subpart 2884 - Applying for MLA Grants or TUPs
§ 2884.10 What should I do before I file my application?
(a) When you determine that a proposed oil and gas pipeline system would cross Federal lands under BLM jurisdiction, or under the
jurisdiction of two or more Federal agencies, you should notify BLM.
(b) Before filing an application with BLM, we encourage you to make an appointment for a preapplication meeting with the appropriate
personnel in the BLM field office nearest the lands you seek to use. During the preapplication meeting BLM can:
(1) Identify potential routing and other constraints;
(2) Determine whether or not the lands are located within a designated or existing right-of-way corridor;
(3) Tentatively schedule the processing of your proposed application;
(4) Provide you information about qualifications for holding grants and TUPs, and inform you of your financial obligations, such as
processing and monitoring costs and rents; and
(5) Identify any work which will require obtaining one or more TUPs.
(c) BLM may share this information with Federal, state, tribal, and local government agencies to ensure that these agencies are aware of any
authorizations you may need from them.
(d) BLM will keep confidential any information in your application that you mark as “confidential” or “proprietary” to the extent allowed by law.
§ 2884.11 What information must I submit in my application?
(a) File your application on Form SF-299 or as part of an Application for Permit to Drill or Reenter (BLM Form 3160-3) or Sundry Notice and
Report on Wells (BLM Form 3160-5), available from any BLM office. Provide a complete description of the project, including:
(1) The exact diameters of the pipes and locations of the pipelines;
(2) Proposed construction and reclamation techniques; and
(3) The estimated life of the facility.
(b) File with BLM copies of any applications you file with other Federal agencies, such as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (see 18
CFR chapter I), for licenses, certificates, or other authorities involving the right-of-way.
(c) BLM may ask you to submit additional information beyond that required in the form to assist us in processing your application. This
information may include:
(1) A list of any Federal and state approvals required for the proposal;
(2) A description of alternative route(s) and mode(s) you considered when developing the proposal;
(3) Copies of, or reference to, all similar applications or grants you have submitted, currently hold, or have held in the past;
(4) A statement of the need and economic feasibility of the proposed project;
(5) The estimated schedule for constructing, operating, maintaining, and terminating the project (a POD). Your POD must be consistent
with the development schedule and other requirements as noted on the POD template for oil and gas pipelines at
http://www.blm.gov;
(6) A map of the project, showing its proposed location and showing existing facilities adjacent to the proposal;
(7) A statement certifying that you are of legal age and authorized to do business in the state(s) where the right-of-way would be
located, and that you have submitted correct information to the best of your knowledge;
(8) A statement of the environmental, social, and economic effects of the proposal;
(9) A statement of your financial and technical capability to construct, operate, maintain, and terminate the project;
(10) Proof that you are a United States citizen; and
(11) Any other information BLM considers necessary to process your application.
(d) Before BLM reviews your application for a grant, grant amendment, or grant renewal, you must submit the following information and
material to ensure that the facilities will be constructed, operated, and maintained as common carriers under 30 U.S.C. 185(r):
(1) Conditions for, and agreements among, owners or operators to add pumping facilities and looping, or otherwise to increase the
pipeline or terminal's throughput capacity in response to actual or anticipated increases in demand;
(2) Conditions for adding or abandoning intake, offtake, or storage points or facilities; and
(3) Minimum shipment or purchase tenders.
(e) If conditions or information affecting your application change, promptly notify BLM and submit to BLM in writing the necessary changes
to your application. BLM may deny your application if you fail to do so.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92226, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.12 What is the processing fee for a grant or TUP application?
(a) You must pay a processing fee with the application to cover the costs to the Federal Government of processing your application before
the Federal Government incurs them. Subject to applicable laws and regulations, if processing your application will involve Federal
agencies other than the BLM, your fee may also include the reasonable costs estimated to be incurred by those Federal agencies.
Instead of paying the BLM a fee for the estimated work of other Federal agencies in processing your application, you may pay other
Federal agencies directly for the costs estimated to be incurred by them in processing your application. The fees for Processing
Categories 1 through 4 are one-time fees and are not refundable. The fees are categorized based on an estimate of the amount of time
that the Federal Government will expend to process your application and issue a decision granting or denying the application.
(b) There is no processing fee if work is estimated to take 1 hour or less. Processing fees are based on categories. We update the
processing fees for Categories 1 through 4 in the schedule each calendar year, based on the previous year's change in the IPD-GDP, as
measured second quarter to second quarter. We will round these changes to the nearest dollar. We will update Category 5 processing
fees as specified in the Master Agreement. These processing categories and the estimated range of Federal work hours for each
category are:
Processing Categories
Processing category
Federal work hours
involved
(1) Applications for new grants or TUPs, assignments, renewals, and
amendments to existing grants or TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >1 ≤8.
(2) Applications for new grants or TUPs, assignments, renewals, and
amendments to existing grants or TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >8 ≤24.
(3) Applications for new grants or TUPs, assignments, renewals, and
amendments to existing grants or TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >24 ≤36.
(4) Applications for new grants or TUPs, assignments, renewals, and
amendments to existing grants or TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >36 ≤50.
(5) Master Agreements
Varies.
(6) Applications for new grants or TUPs, assignments, renewals, and
amendments to existing grants or TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >50.
(c) You may obtain a copy of the current schedule from any BLM State, district, or field office or by writing: U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Land Management, 20 M Street SE., Room 2134LM, Washington, DC 20003. The BLM also posts the current schedule at
http://www.blm.gov.
(d) After an initial review of your application, BLM will notify you of the processing category into which your application fits. You must then
submit the appropriate payment for that category before BLM begins processing your application. Your signature on a cost recovery
Master Agreement constitutes your agreement with the processing category decision. If you disagree with the category that BLM has
determined for your application, you may appeal the decision under § 2881.10 of this part. If you paid the processing fee and you appeal
a Processing Category 1 through 4 or a Processing Category 6 determination to IBLA, BLM will process your application while the appeal
is pending. If IBLA finds in your favor, you will receive a refund or adjustment of your processing fee.
(e) In processing your application, BLM may determine at any time that the application requires preparing an EIS. If this occurs, BLM will
send you a decision changing your processing category to Processing Category 6. You may appeal the decision under § 2881.10 of this
part.
(f) If you hold an authorization relating to TAPS, BLM will send you a written statement seeking reimbursement of actual costs within 60
calendar days after the close of each quarter. Quarters end on the last day of March, June, September, and December. In processing
applications and administering authorizations relating to TAPS, the Department of the Interior will avoid unnecessary employment of
personnel and needless expenditure of funds.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92226, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.13 Who is exempt from paying processing and monitoring fees?
You are exempt from paying processing and monitoring fees if you are a state or local government or an agency of such a government and BLM
issues the grant for governmental purposes benefitting the general public. If your principal source of revenue results from charges you levy on
customers for services similar to those of a profit-making corporation or business, you are not exempt.
§ 2884.14 When does BLM reevaluate the processing and monitoring fees?
BLM reevaluates the processing and monitoring fees (see § 2885.23 of this part) for each category and the categories themselves within 5 years
after they go into effect and at 10-year intervals after that. When reevaluating processing and monitoring fees, BLM considers all factors that affect
the fees, including, but not limited to, any changes in:
(a) Technology;
(b) The procedures for processing applications and monitoring grants;
(c) Statutes and regulations relating to the right-of-way program; or
(d) The IPD-GDP.
§ 2884.15 What is a Master Agreement (Processing Category 5) and what information must I provide to BLM when I request
one?
(a) A Master Agreement (Processing Category 5) is a written agreement covering processing and monitoring fees (see § 2885.23 of this
part) negotiated between BLM and you that involves multiple BLM grant or TUP approvals for projects within a defined geographic area.
(b) Your request for a Master Agreement must:
(1) Describe the geographic area covered by the Agreement and the scope of the activity you plan;
(2) Include a preliminary work plan. This plan must state what work you must do and what work BLM must do to process your
application. Both parties must periodically update the work plan, as specified in the Agreement, and mutually agree to the changes;
(3) Contain a preliminary cost estimate and a timetable for processing the application and completing the project;
(4) State whether you want the Agreement to apply to future applications in the same geographic area that are not part of the same
project(s); and
(5) Contain any other relevant information that BLM needs to process the application.
§ 2884.16 What provisions do Master Agreements contain and what are their limitations?
(a) A Master Agreement:
(1) Specifies that you must comply with all applicable laws and regulations;
(2) Describes the work you will do and the work BLM will do to process the application;
(3) Describes the method of periodic billing, payment, and auditing;
(4) Describes the processes, studies, or evaluations you will pay for;
(5) Explains how BLM will monitor the grant and how BLM will recover monitoring costs;
(6) Describes existing agreements between the BLM and other Federal agencies for cost reimbursement;
(7) Contains provisions allowing for periodic review and updating, if required;
(8) Contains specific conditions for terminating the Agreement; and
(9) Contains any other provisions BLM considers necessary.
(b) BLM will not enter into any Agreement that is not in the public interest.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.17 How will BLM process my Processing Category 6 application?
(a) For Processing Category 6 applications, you and the BLM must enter into a written agreement that describes how we will process your
application. The final agreement consists of a work plan, a financial plan, and a description of any existing agreements you have with
other Federal agencies for cost reimbursement associated with such application.
(b) In processing your application, BLM will:
(1) Determine the issues subject to analysis under NEPA;
(2) Prepare a preliminary work plan;
(3) Develop a preliminary financial plan, which estimates the actual costs of processing your application and monitoring your project;
(4) Discuss with you:
(i)
The preliminary plans and data;
(ii) The availability of funds and personnel;
(iii) Your options for the timing of processing and monitoring fee payments; and
(iv) Financial information you must submit; and
(5) Complete final scoping and develop final work and financial plans which reflect any work you have agreed to do. BLM will also
present you with the final estimate of the costs you must reimburse the United States, including the cost for monitoring the project.
(c) BLM retains the option to prepare any environmental documents related to your application. If BLM allows you to prepare any
environmental documents and conduct any studies that BLM needs to process your application, you must do the work following BLM
standards. For this purpose, you and BLM may enter into a written agreement. BLM will make the final determinations and conclusions
arising from such work.
(d) BLM will periodically, as stated in the agreement, estimate processing costs for a specific work period and notify you of the amount due.
You must pay the amount due before BLM will continue working on your application. If your payment exceeds the costs that the United
States incurred for the work, BLM will either adjust the next billing to reflect the excess, or refund you the excess under 43 U.S.C. 1734.
You may not deduct any amount from a payment without BLM's prior written approval.
(e) We may collect funds to reimburse the Federal Government for reasonable costs for processing applications and other documents under
this part relating to the Federal lands.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.18 What if there are two or more competing applications for the same pipeline?
(a) If there are two or more competing applications for the same pipeline and your application is in:
(1) Processing Categories 1 through 4. You must reimburse the Federal Government for processing costs as if the other application or
applications had not been filed.
(2) Processing Category 6. You are responsible for processing costs identified in your application. If BLM cannot readily separate costs,
such as costs associated with preparing environmental analyses, you and any competing applicants must pay an equal share or a
proportion agreed to in writing among all applicants and BLM. If you agree to share costs that are common to your application and
that of a competing applicant, and the competitor does not pay the agreed upon amount, you are liable for the entire amount due.
The applicants must pay the entire processing fee in advance. BLM will not process the application until we receive the advance
payments.
(b) Who determines whether competition exists? BLM determines whether the applications are compatible in a single right-of-way or are
competing applications to build the same pipeline.
(c) If we determine that competition exists, we will describe the procedures for a competitive bid through a bid announcement in the Federal
Register and may use other notification methods, such as a newspaper of general circulation or the Internet. We may offer lands through a
competitive process on our own initiative.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.19 Where do I file my application for a grant or TUP?
(a) If BLM has exclusive jurisdiction over the lands involved, file your application with the BLM Field Office having jurisdiction over the lands
described in the application.
(b) If another Federal agency has exclusive jurisdiction over the land involved, file your application with that agency and refer to its
regulations for its requirements.
(c) If there are no BLM-administered lands involved, but the lands are under the jurisdiction of two or more Federal agencies, you may file
your application at the BLM office in the vicinity of the pipeline. BLM will notify you where to direct future communications about the
pipeline.
(d) If two or more Federal agencies, including BLM, have jurisdiction over the lands in the application, file it at any BLM office having
jurisdiction over a portion of the Federal lands. BLM will notify you where to direct future communications about the pipeline.
§ 2884.20 What are the public notification requirements for my application?
(a) When the BLM receives your application, it will publish a notice in the Federal Register and may use other notification methods, such as a
newspaper of general circulation in the vicinity of the lands involved or the Internet. If we determine the pipeline(s) will have only minor
environmental impacts, we are not required to publish this notice. The notice will, at a minimum, contain:
(1) A description of the pipeline system; and
(2) A statement of where the application and related documents are available for review.
(b) BLM will send copies of the published notice for review and comment to the:
(1) Governor of each state within which the pipeline system would be located;
(2) Head of each local or tribal government or jurisdiction within which the pipeline system would be located; and
(3) Heads of other Federal agencies whose jurisdiction includes lands within which the pipeline system would be located.
(c) If your application involves a pipeline that is 24 inches or more in diameter, BLM will also send notice of the application to the appropriate
committees of Congress in accordance with 30 U.S.C. 185(w).
(d) We may hold public hearings or meetings on your application if we determine that there is sufficient interest to warrant the time and
expense of such hearings or meetings. We will publish a notice in the Federal Register and may use other notification methods, such as a
newspaper of general circulation in the vicinity of the lands involved or the Internet, to announce in advance any public hearings or
meetings.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.21 How will BLM process my application?
(a) BLM will notify you in writing when it receives your application and will identify your processing fee described at § 2884.12 of this
subpart.
(b) The BLM will not process your application if you have any trespass action pending against you for any activity on BLM-administered
lands (see § 2888.11) or have any unpaid debts owed to the Federal Government. The only applications the BLM would process are
those to resolve the trespass with a right-of-way as authorized in this part, or a lease or permit under the regulations found at 43 CFR part
2920, but only after outstanding debts are paid. Outstanding debts are those currently unpaid debts owed to the Federal Government
after all administrative collection actions have occurred, including any appeal proceedings under applicable Federal regulations and the
Administrative Procedure Act.
(c) Customer service standard. BLM will process your completed application as follows:
Processing
category
Processing
time
1-4
60
calendar
days
If processing your application will take longer than 60 calendar days,
BLM will notify you in writing of this fact prior to the 30th calendar
day and inform you of when you can expect a final decision on your
application.
5
As
specified in
the Master
Agreement
BLM will process applications as specified in the Agreement.
6
Over 60
calendar
days
BLM will notify you in writing within the initial 60 day processing
period of the estimated processing time.
Conditions
(d) Before issuing a grant or TUP, BLM will:
(1) Complete a NEPA analysis for the application or approve a NEPA analysis previously completed for the application, as required by
40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508;
(2) Determine whether or not your proposed use complies with applicable Federal and state laws, regulations, and local ordinances;
(3) Consult, as necessary, with other governmental entities;
(4) Hold public meetings, if sufficient public interest exists to warrant their time and expense. The BLM will publish a notice in the
Federal Register and may use other methods, such as a newspaper of general circulation in the vicinity of the lands involved or the
Internet, to announce in advance any public hearings or meetings; and
(5) Take any other action necessary to fully evaluate and decide whether to approve or deny your application.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.22 Can BLM ask me for additional information?
(a) If we ask for additional information, we will follow the procedures in § 2804.25(c) of this chapter.
(b) BLM may also ask other Federal agencies for additional information, for terms and conditions or stipulations which the grant or TUP
should contain, and for advice as to whether or not to issue the grant or TUP.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.23 Under what circumstances may BLM deny my application?
(a) BLM may deny your application if:
(1) The proposed use is inconsistent with the purpose for which BLM or other Federal agencies manage the lands described in your
application;
(2) The proposed use would not be in the public interest;
(3) You are not qualified to hold a grant or TUP;
(4) Issuing the grant or TUP would be inconsistent with the Act, other laws, or these or other regulations;
(5) You do not have or cannot demonstrate the technical or financial capability to construct the pipeline or operate facilities within the
right-of-way or TUP area; or
(6) You do not adequately comply with a deficiency notice (see § 2804.25(c) of this chapter) or with any requests from the BLM for
additional information needed to process the application.
(b) If you are unable to meet any of the requirements in this section you may request an alternative from the BLM (see § 2884.30).
(c) If BLM denies your application, you may appeal the decision under § 2881.10 of this part.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2884.24 What fees do I owe if BLM denies my application or if I withdraw my application?
If BLM denies your application, or you withdraw it, you owe the processing fee set forth at § 2884.12(b) of this subpart, unless you have a
Processing Category 5 or 6 application. Then, the following conditions apply:
(a) If BLM denies your Processing Category 5 or 6 application, you are liable for all actual costs that the United States incurred in processing
it. The money you have not paid is due within 30 calendar days after receiving a bill for the amount due; and
(b) You may withdraw your application in writing before BLM issues a grant or TUP. If you do so, you are liable for all actual processing costs
the United States has incurred up to the time you withdraw the application and for the actual costs of terminating your application. Any
money you have not paid is due within 30 calendar days after receiving a bill for the amount due.
§ 2884.25 What activities may I conduct on BLM lands covered by my application for a grant or TUP while BLM is processing
my application?
(a) You may conduct casual use activities on BLM lands covered by the application, as may any other member of the public. BLM does not
require a grant or TUP for casual use on BLM lands.
(b) For any activities on BLM lands that are not casual use, you must obtain prior BLM approval. To conduct activities on lands administered
by other Federal agencies, you must obtain any prior approval those agencies require.
§ 2884.26 When will BLM issue a grant or TUP when the lands are managed by two or more Federal agencies?
If the application involves lands managed by two or more Federal agencies, BLM will not issue or renew the grant or TUP until the heads of the
agencies administering the lands involved have concurred. Where concurrence is not reached, the Secretary of the Interior, after consultation with
these agencies, may issue or renew the grant or TUP, but not through lands within a Federal reservation where doing so would be inconsistent with
the purposes of the reservation.
§ 2884.27 What additional requirement is necessary for grants or TUPs for pipelines 24 or more inches in diameter?
If an application is for a grant or TUP for a pipeline 24 inches or more in diameter, BLM will not issue or renew the grant or TUP until after we notify
the appropriate committees of Congress in accordance with 30 U.S.C. 185(w).
§ 2884.30 Showing of good cause.
If you are unable to meet any of the processing requirements in this subpart, you may request approval for an alternative requirement from the
BLM. Any such request is not approved until you receive BLM approval in writing. Your request to the BLM must:
(a) Show good cause for your inability to meet a requirement;
(b) Suggest an alternative requirement and explain why that requirement is appropriate; and
(c) Be received in writing by the BLM in a timely manner, before the deadline to meet a particular requirement has passed.
[81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
Subpart 2885 - Terms and Conditions of MLA Grants and TUPs
§ 2885.10 When is a grant or TUP effective?
A grant or TUP is effective after both you and BLM sign it. You must accept its terms and conditions in writing and pay any necessary rent and
monitoring fees as set out in §§ 2885.19 and 2885.23 of this subpart. Your written acceptance constitutes an agreement between you and the
United States that your right to use the Federal lands, as specified in the grant or TUP, is subject to the terms and conditions of the grant or TUP
and applicable laws and regulations.
§ 2885.11 What terms and conditions must I comply with?
(a)
(a) Duration. All grants, except those issued for a term of 3 years or less, will expire on December 31 of the final year of the grant. The
term of a grant may not exceed 30 years, with the initial partial year of the grant considered to be the first year of the term. The term
of a TUP may not exceed 3 years. The BLM will consider the following factors in establishing a reasonable term:
(1) The cost of the pipeline and related facilities you plan to construct, operate, maintain, or terminate;
(2) The pipeline's or related facility's useful life;
(3) The public purpose served; and
(4) Any potentially conflicting land uses; and
(b) Terms and conditions of use. BLM may modify your proposed use or change the route or location of the facilities in your application.
By accepting a grant or TUP, you agree to use the lands described in the grant or TUP for the purposes set forth in the grant or TUP.
You also agree to comply with, and be bound by, the following terms and conditions. During construction, operation, maintenance,
and termination of the project you must:
(1) To the extent practicable, comply with all existing and subsequently enacted, issued, or amended Federal laws and regulations,
and state laws and regulations applicable to the authorized use;
(2) Rebuild and repair roads, fences, and established trails destroyed or damaged by constructing, operating, maintaining, or
terminating the project;
(3) Build and maintain suitable crossings for existing roads and significant trails that intersect the project;
(4) Do everything reasonable to prevent and suppress fires on or in the immediate vicinity of the right-of-way or TUP area;
(5) Not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment during any phase of the project because of race, creed,
color, sex, or national origin. You must also require subcontractors to not discriminate;
(6) Pay the rent and monitoring fees described in §§ 2885.19 and 2885.23 of this subpart;
(7) The BLM may require that you obtain, or certify that you have obtained, a performance and reclamation bond or other
acceptable security to cover any losses, damages, or injury to human health, the environment, and property incurred in
connection with your use and occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area, including terminating the grant or TUP, and to secure
all obligations imposed by the grant or TUP and applicable laws and regulations. Your bond must cover liability for damages or
injuries resulting from releases or discharges of hazardous materials. We may require a bond, an increase or decrease in the
value of an existing bond, or other acceptable security at any time during the term of the grant or TUP. This bond is in addition
to any individual lease, statewide, or nationwide oil and gas bonds you may have. All other provisions in§ 2805.12(b) of this
chapter regarding bond requirements for grants and leases issued under FLPMA also apply to grants or TUPs for oil and gas
pipelines issued under this part;
(8) Assume full liability if third parties are injured or damages occur to property on or near the right-of-way or TUP area (see §
2886.13 of this part);
(9) Comply with project-specific terms, conditions, and stipulations, including requirements to:
(i)
Restore, revegetate, and curtail erosion or any other rehabilitation measure BLM determines is necessary;
(ii) Ensure that activities in connection with the grant or TUP comply with air and water quality standards or related facility
siting standards contained in applicable Federal or state law or regulations;
(iii) Control or prevent damage to scenic, aesthetic, cultural, and environmental values, including fish and wildlife habitat, and
to public and private property and public health and safety;
(iv) Protect the interests of individuals living in the general area who rely on the area for subsistence uses as that term is used
in Title VIII of ANILCA (16 U.S.C. 3111 et seq.); and
(v) Ensure that you construct, operate, maintain, and terminate the facilities on the lands in the right-of-way or TUP area in a
manner consistent with the grant or TUP;
(10) Immediately notify all Federal, state, tribal, and local agencies of any release or discharge of hazardous material reportable to
such entity under applicable law. You must also notify BLM at the same time, and send BLM a copy of any written notification
you prepared;
(11) Not dispose of or store hazardous material on your right-of-way or TUP area, except as provided by the terms, conditions, and
stipulation of your grant or TUP;
(12) Certify that your compliance with all requirements of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986, 42
U.S.C. 11001 et seq., when you receive, assign, renew, amend, or terminate your grant or TUP;
(13) Control and remove any release or discharge of hazardous material on or near the right-of-way or TUP area arising in
connection with your use and occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area, whether or not the release or discharge is authorized
under the grant or TUP. You must also remediate and restore lands and resources affected by the release or discharge to
BLM's satisfaction and to the satisfaction of any other Federal, state, tribal, or local agency having jurisdiction over the land,
resource, or hazardous material;
(14) Comply with all liability and indemnification provisions and stipulations in the grant or TUP;
(15) As BLM directs, provide diagrams or maps showing the location of any constructed facility;
(16) Construct, operate, and maintain the pipeline as a common carrier. This means that the pipeline owners and operators must
accept, convey, transport, or purchase without discrimination all oil or gas delivered to the pipeline without regard to where the
oil and gas was produced (i.e., whether on Federal or non-federal lands). Where natural gas not subject to state regulatory or
conservation laws governing its purchase by pipeline companies is offered for sale, each pipeline company must purchase,
without discrimination, any such natural gas produced in the vicinity of the pipeline. Common carrier provisions of this
paragraph do not apply to natural gas pipelines operated by a:
(i)
Person subject to regulation under the Natural Gas Act (15 U.S.C. 717 et seq.); or
(ii) Public utility subject to regulation by state or municipal agencies with the authority to set rates and charges for the sale of
natural gas to consumers within the state or municipality.
(17) Within 30 calendar days after BLM requests it, file rate schedules and tariffs for oil and gas, or derivative products, transported
by the pipeline as a common carrier with the agency BLM prescribes, and provide BLM proof that you made the required filing;
(18) With certain exceptions (listed in the statute), not export domestically produced crude oil by pipeline without Presidential
approval (see 30 U.S.C. 185(u) and (s) and 50 U.S.C. App. 2401);
(19) Not exceed the right-of-way width that is specified in the grant without BLM's prior written authorization. If you need a right-ofway wider than 50 feet plus the ground occupied by the pipeline and related facilities, see § 2885.14 of this subpart;
(20) Not use the right-of-way or TUP area for any use other than that authorized by the grant or TUP. If you require other pipelines,
looping lines, or other improvements not authorized by the grant or TUP, you must first secure BLM's written authorization;
(21) Not use or construct on the land in the right-of-way or TUP area until:
(i)
BLM approves your detailed plan for construction, operation, and termination of the pipeline, including provisions for
rehabilitation of the right-of-way or TUP area and environmental protection; and
(ii) You receive a Notice to Proceed for all or any part of the right-of-way or TUP area. In certain situations BLM may waive
this requirement in writing; and
(22) Comply with all other stipulations that BLM may require.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 73 FR 65073, Oct. 31, 2008; 81 FR 92227, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.12 What rights does a grant or TUP convey?
The grant or TUP conveys to you only those rights which it expressly contains. BLM issues it subject to the valid existing rights of others, including
the United States. Rights which the grant or TUP conveys to you include the right to:
(a) Use the described lands to construct, operate, maintain, and terminate facilities within the right-of-way or TUP area for authorized
purposes under the terms and conditions of the grant or TUP;
(b) Allow others to use the land as your agent in the exercise of the rights that the grant or TUP specifies;
(c) Do minor trimming, pruning, and removing of vegetation to maintain the right-of-way or TUP area or facility;
(d) Use common varieties of stone and soil which are necessarily removed during construction of the pipeline, without additional BLM
authorization or payment, in constructing the pipeline within the authorized right-of-way or TUP area; and
(e) Assign the grant or TUP to another, provided that you obtain the BLM's prior written approval, unless your grant or TUP specifically states
that such approval is unnecessary.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 73 FR 65073, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2885.13 What rights does the United States retain?
The United States retains and may exercise any rights the grant or TUP does not expressly convey to you. These include the United States' right to:
(a) Access the lands covered by the grant or TUP at any time and enter any facility you construct on the right-of-way or TUP area. BLM will
give you reasonable notice before it enters any facility on the right-of-way or TUP area;
(b) Require common use of your right-of-way or TUP area, including subsurface and air space, and authorize use of the right-of-way or TUP
area for compatible uses. You may not charge for the use of the lands made subject to such additional right-of-way grants;
(c) Retain ownership of the resources of the land covered by the grant or TUP, including timber and vegetative or mineral materials and any
other living or non-living resources. You have no right to use these resources, except as noted in § 2885.12 of this subpart;
(d) Determine whether or not your grant is renewable; and
(e) Change the terms and conditions of your grant or TUP as a result of changes in legislation, regulation, or as otherwise necessary to
protect public health or safety or the environment.
§ 2885.14 What happens if I need a right-of-way wider than 50 feet plus the ground occupied by the pipeline and related
facilities?
(a) You may apply to BLM at any time for a right-of-way wider than 50 feet plus the ground occupied by the pipeline and related facilities. In
your application you must show that the wider right-of-way is necessary to:
(1) Properly operate and maintain the pipeline after you have constructed it;
(2) Protect the environment; or
(3) Provide for public safety.
(b) BLM will notify you in writing of its finding(s) and its decision on your application for a wider right-of-way. If the decision is adverse to you,
you may appeal it under § 2881.10 of this part.
§ 2885.15 How will BLM charge me rent?
(a) BLM will charge rent beginning on the first day of the month following the effective date of the grant or TUP through the last day of the
month when the grant or TUP terminates. Example: If a grant or TUP becomes effective on January 10 and terminates on September 16,
the rental period would be February 1 through September 30, or 8 months.
(b) There are no reductions or waivers of rent for grants or TUPs, except as provided under § 2885.20(b).
(c) BLM will set or adjust the annual billing periods to coincide with the calendar year by prorating the rent based on 12 months.
(d) If you disagree with the rent that BLM charges, you may appeal the decision under § 2881.10 of this part.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.16 When do I pay rent?
(a) You must pay rent for the initial rental period before we issue you a grant or TUP. We prorate the initial rental amount based on the
number of full months left in the calendar year after the effective date of the grant or TUP. If your grant qualifies for annual payments, the
initial rent consists of the remaining partial year plus the next full year. If your grant or TUP allows for multi-year payments, your initial
rent payment may be for the full term of the grant or TUP. See § 2885.21 for additional information on payment of rent.
(b) You make all other rental payments according to the payment plan described in § 2885.21 of this subpart.
(c) After the first rental payment, all rent is due on January 1 of the first year of each succeeding rental period for the term of your grant.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.17 What happens if I do not pay rents and fees or if I pay the rents or fees late?
(a) If BLM does not receive the rent payment within 15 calendar days after the rent was due under § 2885.16 of this subpart, BLM will charge
you a late payment fee of $25.00 or 10 percent of the rent you owe, whichever is greater, not to exceed $500 per authorization.
(b) If BLM does not receive your rent payment and late payment fee within 30 calendar days after rent was due, BLM may collect other
administrative fees provided by statute.
(c) If BLM does not receive your rent, late payment fee, and any administrative fees within 90 calendar days after the rent was due, BLM may
terminate your grant under § 2886.17 of this part and you may not remove any facility or equipment without BLM's written permission.
The rent due, late payment fees, and any administrative fees remain a debt that you owe to the United States.
(d) If you pay the rent, late payment fees, and any administrative fees after BLM has terminated the grant, BLM does not automatically
reinstate the grant. You must file a new application with BLM. BLM will consider the history of your failure to timely pay rent in deciding
whether to issue you a new grant.
(e) We will retroactively bill for uncollected or under-collected rent, including late payment and administrative fees, upon discovery if:
(1) A clerical error is identified;
(2) An adjustment to rental schedules is not applied; or
(3) An omission or error in complying with the terms and conditions of the authorized right-of-way is identified.
(f) You may appeal any adverse decision BLM takes against your grant or TUP under § 2881.10 of this part.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.18 When must I make estimated rent payments to BLM?
To expedite the processing of your application for a grant or TUP, BLM may estimate rent payments and require you to pay that amount when it
issues the grant or TUP. The rent amount may change once BLM determines the actual rent of the grant or TUP. BLM will credit you any rental
overpayment, and you are liable for any underpayment. This section does not apply to rent payments made under the rent schedule in this part.
§ 2885.19 What is the rent for a linear right-of-way grant?
(a) The BLM will use the Per Acre Rent Schedule (see paragraph (b) of this section) to calculate the rent. Counties (or other geographical
areas) are assigned to a County Zone Number and Per Acre Zone Value based upon 80 percent of their average per acre land and
building value published in the NASS Census. The initial assignment of counties to the zones in the Per Acre Rent Schedule for the 5-year
period from 2006 to 2010 is based upon data contained in the most recent NASS Census (2002). Subsequent assignments of counties
will occur every 5 years following the publication of the NASS Census. The Per Acre Rent Schedule is also adjusted periodically as
follows:
(1) Each calendar year the BLM will adjust the per acre rent values in §§ 2806.20 and 2885.19(b) for all types of linear right-of-way
facilities in each zone based on the average annual change in the IPD-GDP for the 10-year period immediately preceding the year
that the NASS Census data becomes available. For example, the average annual change in the IPD-GDP from 1994 to 2003 (the 10year period immediately preceding the year (2004) that the 2002 NASS Census data became available) is 1.9 percent. This annual
adjustment factor is applied to years 2006 through 2015 of the Per Acre Rent Schedule. Likewise, the average annual change in the
IPD-GDP from 2004 to 2013 (the 10-year period immediately preceding the year (2014) when the 2012 NASS Census data will
become available) will be applied to years 2016 through 2025 of the Per Acre Rent Schedule.
(2) The BLM will review the NASS Census data from the 2012 NASS Census, and each subsequent 10-year period, and as appropriate,
revise the number of county zones and the per acre zone values. Any revision must include 100 percent of the number of counties
and listed geographical areas for all states and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and must reasonably reflect the increases or
decreases in the average per acre land and building values contained in the NASS Census.
(b) You may obtain a copy of the current Per Acre Rent Schedule from any BLM State, district, or field office or by writing: U.S. Department of
the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, 20 M Street SE., Room 2134LM, Washington, DC 20003. The BLM also posts the current rent
schedule at http://www.blm.gov.
[73 FR 65073, Oct. 31, 2008, as amended at 81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.20 How will the BLM calculate my rent for linear rights-of-way the Per Acre Rent Schedule covers?
(a) Except as provided by § 2885.22, the BLM calculates your rent by multiplying the rent per acre for the appropriate county (or other
geographical area) zone from the current schedule by the number of acres (as rounded up to the nearest tenth of an acre) in the right-ofway or TUP area that fall in each zone and multiplying the result by the number of years in the rental payment period (the length of time
for which the holder is paying rent).
(b) Phase-in provisions. If, as the result of any revisions made to the Per Acre Rent Schedule under § 2885.19(a)(2), the payment of your new
annual rental amount would cause you undue hardship, you may qualify for a 2-year phase-in period if you are a small business entity as
that term is defined in Small Business Administration regulations and if it is in the public interest. We will require you to submit
information to support your claim. If approved by the BLM State Director, payment of the amount in excess of the previous year's rent
may be phased-in by equal increments over a 2-year period. In addition, the BLM will adjust the total calculated rent for year 2 of the
phase-in period by the annual index provided by § 2885.19(a)(1).
(c) If the BLM has not previously used the rent schedule to calculate your rent, we may do so after giving you reasonable written notice.
[73 FR 65073, Oct. 31, 2008, as amended at 81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.21 How must I make rental payments for a linear grant or TUP?
(a) Term grants or TUPs. For TUPs you must make a one-time nonrefundable payment for the term of the TUP. For grants, except those that
have been issued in perpetuity, you must make either nonrefundable annual payments or a nonrefundable payment for more than 1 year,
as follows:
(1) One-time payments. You may pay in advance the total rent amount for the entire term of the grant or any remaining years.
(2) Multiple payments. If you choose not to make a one-time payment, you must pay according to one of the following methods:
(i)
Payments by individuals. If your annual rent is $100 or less, you must pay at 10-year intervals not to exceed the term of the
grant. If your annual rent is greater than $100, you may pay annually or at 10-year intervals, not to exceed the term of the grant.
For example, if you have a grant with a remaining term of 30 years, you may pay in advance for 10 years, 20 years, or 30 years,
but not any other multi-year period.
(ii) Payments by all others. If your annual rent is $500 or less, you must pay rent at 10-year intervals, not to exceed the term of the
grant. If your annual rent is greater than $500, you may pay annually or at 10-year intervals, not to exceed the term of the grant.
(b) Perpetual grants issued prior to November 16, 1973. Except as provided by § 2885.22(a), you must make either nonrefundable annual
payments or a nonrefundable payment for more than 1 year, as follows:
(1) Payments by individuals. If your annual rent is $100 or less, you must pay at 10-year intervals, not to exceed 30 years. If your annual
rent is greater than $100, you may pay annually or at 10-year intervals, not to exceed 30 years.
(2) Payments by all others. If your annual rent is $500 or less, you must pay rent at 10-year intervals, not to exceed 30 years. If your
annual rent is greater than $500, you may pay annually or at 10-year intervals, not to exceed 30 years.
(c) Proration of payments. The BLM considers the first partial calendar year in the initial rental payment period (the length of time for which
the holder is paying rent) to be the first year of the term. The BLM prorates the first year rental amount based on the number of months
left in the calendar year after the effective date of the grant.
[73 FR 65074, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2885.22 How may I make rental payments when land encumbered by my term or perpetual linear grant is being
transferred out of Federal ownership?
(a) One-time payment option for existing perpetual grants issued prior to November 16, 1973. If you have a perpetual grant and the land your
grant encumbers is being transferred out of Federal ownership, you may choose to make a one-time rental payment. The BLM will
determine the one-time payment for perpetual right-of-way grants by dividing the current annual rent for the subject property by an overall
capitalization rate calculated from market data, where the overall capitalization rate is the difference between a market yield rate and a
percent annual rent increase as described in the formula in paragraphs (a)(1), (2), and (3) of this section. The formula for this calculation
is: One-time Payment = Annual Rent/(Y−CR), where:
(1) Annual Rent = Current Annual Rent Applicable to the Subject Property from the Per Acre Rent Schedule;
(2) Y = Yield Rate from the Per Acre Rent Schedule (5.27 percent); and
(3) CR = Annual Percent Change in Rent as Determined by the Most Recent 10-Year Average of the difference in the IPD-GDP Index from
January of one year to January of the following year.
(b) In paragraph (a) of this section, the annual rent is determined from the Per Acre Rent Schedule (see § 2885.19(b)), as updated under §
2885.19(a)(1) and(2). However, the per acre zone value and zone number used in this annual rental determination will be based on the
per acre land value from acceptable market information or an appraisal report, if any, for the land transfer action and not the county
average per acre land and building value from the NASS Census. You may also submit an appraisal report on your own initiative in
accordance with § 2806.25(d) of this chapter.
(c) When no acceptable market information is available and no appraisal report has been completed for the land transfer action, or when the
BLM requests it, you must prepare an appraisal report as required under § 2806.25(d) of this chapter.
(d) Term Grant. If the land your grant encumbers is being transferred out of Federal ownership, you may pay in advance the total rent amount
for the entire term of the grant or any remaining years. The BLM will use the annual rent calculated from the Per Acre Rent Schedule
multiplied by the number of years in the rent payment period (the length of time for which the holder is paying rent) to determine the onetime rent. However, this amount must not exceed the one-time rent payment for a perpetual grant as determined under paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section.
[73 FR 65074, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2885.23 How will BLM calculate rent for communication uses ancillary to a linear grant, TUP, or other use authorization?
When a communication use is ancillary to, and authorized by BLM under, a grant or TUP for a linear use, or some other type of authorization (e.g., a
mineral lease or sundry notice), BLM will determine the rent using the linear rent schedule (see § 2885.19 of this subpart) or rent scheme
associated with the other authorization, and not the communication use rent schedule (see § 2806.30 of this chapter).
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005. Redesignated at 73 FR 65074, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2885.24 If I hold a grant or TUP, what monitoring fees must I pay?
(a) Monitoring fees. Subject to § 2886.11, you must pay a fee to the BLM for any costs the Federal Government incurs in inspecting and
monitoring the construction, operation, maintenance, and termination of the pipeline and protection and rehabilitation of the affected
public lands your grant or TUP covers. We update the monitoring fees for Categories 1 through 4 in the schedule each calendar year,
based on the previous year's change in the IPD-GDP, as measured second quarter to second quarter. We will round these changes to the
nearest dollar. We will update Category 5 monitoring fees as specified in the Master Agreement. We categorize the monitoring fees
based on the estimated number of work hours necessary to monitor your grant or TUP. Monitoring fees for Categories 1 through 4 are
one-time fees and are not refundable. These monitoring categories and the estimated range of Federal work hours for each category are:
Monitoring Categories
Monitoring category
Federal work hours
involved
(1) Inspecting and monitoring of new grants and TUPs, assignments,
renewals, and amendments to existing grants and TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >1 ≤8.
(2) Inspecting and monitoring of new grants and TUPs, assignments,
renewals, and amendments to existing grants and TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >8 ≤24.
(3) Inspecting and monitoring of new grants and TUPs, assignments,
renewals, and amendments to existing grants and TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours are >24 ≤36.
(4) Inspecting and monitoring of new grants and TUPs, assignments,
renewals, and amendments to existing grants and TUPS
Estimated Federal work
hours are >36 ≤50.
(5) Master Agreements
Varies.
(6) Inspecting and monitoring of new grants and TUPs, assignments,
renewals, and amendments to existing grants and TUPs
Estimated Federal work
hours >50.
(b) The current monitoring cost schedule is available from any BLM State, district, or field office or by writing: U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Land Management, 20 M Street SE., Room 2134LM, Washington, DC 20003. The BLM also posts the current schedule at
http://www.blm.gov.
[81 FR 92228, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2885.25 When do I pay monitoring fees?
(a) Monitoring Categories 1 through 4. Unless BLM otherwise directs, you must pay monitoring fees when you submit to BLM your written
acceptance of the terms and conditions of the grant or TUP.
(b) Monitoring Category 5. You must pay the monitoring fees as specified in the Master Agreement. BLM will not issue your grant or TUP
until it receives the required payment.
(c) Monitoring Category 6. BLM may periodically estimate the costs of monitoring your use of the grant or TUP. BLM will include this fee in
the costs associated with processing fees described at § 2884.12 of this part. If BLM has underestimated the monitoring costs, we will
notify you of the shortfall. If your payments exceed the actual costs that Federal employees incurred for monitoring, BLM will either
reimburse you the difference, or adjust the next billing to reflect the overpayment. Unless BLM gives you written authorization, you may
not offset or deduct the overpayment from your payments.
(d) Monitoring Categories 1-4 and 6. If you disagree with the category BLM has determined for your application, you may appeal the decision
under § 2881.10 of this part.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005. Redesignated at 73 FR 65074, Oct. 31, 2008]
Subpart 2886 - Operations on MLA Grants and TUPs
§ 2886.10 When can I start activities under my grant or TUP?
(a) When you can start depends on the terms of your grant or TUP. You can start activities when you receive the grant or TUP you and BLM
signed, unless the grant or TUP includes a requirement for BLM to provide a written Notice to Proceed. If your grant or TUP contains a
Notice to Proceed requirement, you may not initiate construction, operation, maintenance, or termination until BLM issues you a Notice
to Proceed.
(b) Before you begin operating your pipeline or related facility authorized by a grant or TUP, you must certify in writing to BLM that the
pipeline system:
(1) Has been constructed and tested according to the terms of the grant or TUP; and
(2) Is in compliance with all required plans, specifications, and Federal and state laws and regulations.
§ 2886.11 Who regulates activities within my right-of-way or TUP area?
After BLM has issued the grant or TUP, the head of the agency having administrative jurisdiction over the Federal lands involved will regulate your
grant or TUP activities in conformance with the Act, appropriate regulations, and the terms and conditions of the grant or TUP. BLM and the other
agency head may reach another agreement under 30 U.S.C. 185(c).
§ 2886.12 When must I contact BLM during operations?
You must contact BLM:
(a) At the times specified in your grant or TUP;
(b) When your use requires a substantial deviation from the grant or TUP. You must seek an amendment to your grant or TUP under §
2887.10 and obtain our approval before you begin any activity that is a substantial deviation;
(c) When there is a change affecting your application, grant, or TUP including, but not limited to changes in:
(1) Mailing address;
(2) Partners;
(3) Financial conditions; or
(4) Business or corporate status; and
(d) Whenever site-specific circumstances or conditions arise that result in the need for changes to an approved right-of-way grant or TUP,
POD, site plan, mitigation measures, or construction, operation, or termination procedures that are not substantial deviations in location
or use authorized by a right-of-way grant or TUP. Changes for authorized actions, project materials, or adopted mitigation measures
within the existing, approved right-of-way or TUP area must be submitted to the BLM for review and approval;
(e) To identify and correct discrepancies or inconsistencies;
(f) When you submit a certification of construction, if the terms of your grant require it. A certification of construction is a document you
submit to the BLM after you have finished constructing a facility, but before you begin operating it, verifying that you have constructed
and tested the facility to ensure that it complies with the terms of the grant and with applicable Federal and State laws and regulations;
and
(g) When BLM requests it, such as to update information or confirm that information you submitted before is accurate.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92229, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2886.13 If I hold a grant or TUP, for what am I liable?
(a) If you hold a grant or TUP, you are liable to the United States and to third parties for any damage or injury they incur in connection with
your use and occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area.
(b) You are strictly liable for any activity or facility associated with your right-of-way or TUP area which BLM determines presents a
foreseeable hazard or risk of damage or injury to the United States. BLM will specify in the grant or TUP any activity or facility posing
such hazard or risk, and the financial limitations on damages commensurate with such hazard or risk.
(1) BLM will not impose strict liability for damage or injury resulting primarily from an act of war or the negligence of the United States,
except as otherwise provided by law.
(2) As used in this section, strict liability extends to costs incurred by the Federal government to control or abate conditions, such as
fire or oil spills, which threaten life, property, or the environment, even if the threat occurs to areas that are not under Federal
jurisdiction. This liability is separate and apart from liability under other provisions of law.
(3) You are strictly liable to the United States for damage or injury up to $2 million for any one incident. BLM will update this amount
annually to adjust for changes in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, U.S. City Average (CPI-U) as of July of each
year (difference in CPI-U from July of one year to July of the following year), rounded to the nearest $1,000. This financial limitation
does not apply to the release or discharge of hazardous substances on or near the grant or TUP area, or where liability is otherwise
not subject to this financial limitation under applicable law.
(4) BLM will determine your liability for any amount in excess of the $2 million strict liability limitation (as adjusted) through the
ordinary rules of negligence.
(5) The rules of subrogation apply in cases where a third party caused the damage or injury.
(c) If you cannot satisfy claims for injury or damage, all owners of any interests in, and all affiliates or subsidiaries of any holder of, a grant or
TUP, except for corporate stockholders, are jointly and severally liable to the United States.
(d) If BLM issues a grant or TUP to more than one holder, each is jointly and severally liable.
(e) By accepting the grant or TUP, you agree to fully indemnify or hold the United States harmless for liability, damage, or claims arising in
connection with your use and occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area.
(f) We address liability of state, tribal, and local governments in § 2886.14 of this subpart.
(g) The provisions of this section do not limit or exclude other remedies.
§ 2886.14 As grant or TUP holders, what liabilities do state, tribal, and local governments have?
(a) If you are a state, tribal, or local government or its agency or instrumentality, you are liable to the fullest extent law allows at the time that
BLM issues your grant or TUP. If you do not have the legal power to assume full liability, you must repair damages or make restitution to
the fullest extent of your powers.
(b) BLM may require you to provide a bond, insurance, or other acceptable security to:
(1) Protect the liability exposure of the United States to claims by third parties arising out of your use and occupancy of the right-of-way
or TUP area;
(2) Cover any losses, damages, or injury to human health, the environment, and property incurred in connection with your use and
occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area; and
(3) Cover any damages or injuries resulting from the release or discharge of hazardous materials incurred in connection with your use
and occupancy of the right-of-way or TUP area.
(c) Based on your record of compliance and changes in risk and conditions, BLM may require you to increase or decrease the amount of your
bond, insurance, or security.
(d) The provisions of this section do not limit or exclude other remedies.
§ 2886.15 How is grant or TUP administration affected if the BLM land my grant or TUP encumbers is transferred to
another Federal agency or out of Federal ownership?
(a) If there is a proposal to transfer the BLM land your grant or TUP encumbers to another Federal agency, BLM may, after reasonable notice
to you, transfer administration of your grant or TUP, for the lands BLM formerly administered, to another Federal agency, unless doing so
would diminish your rights. If BLM determines your rights would be diminished by such a transfer, BLM can still transfer the land, but
retain administration of your grant or TUP under existing terms and conditions.
(b) The BLM will provide reasonable notice to you if there is a proposal to transfer the BLM land your grant or TUP encumbers out of Federal
ownership. If you request, the BLM will negotiate new grant or TUP terms and conditions with you. This may include increasing the term
of your grant to a 30-year term or replacing your TUP with a grant. These changes, if any, become effective prior to the time the land is
transferred out of Federal ownership. The BLM may then, in conformance with existing policies and procedures:
(1) Transfer the land subject to your grant or TUP. In this case, administration of your grant or TUP for the lands BLM formerly
administered is transferred to the new owner of the land;
(2) Transfer the land, but BLM retains administration of your grant or TUP; or
(3) Reserve to the United States the land your grant or TUP encumbers, and BLM retains administration of your grant or TUP.
(c) You and the new land owner may agree to negotiate new grant or TUP terms and conditions any time after the land encumbered by your
grant or TUP is transferred out of Federal ownership.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 73 FR 65074, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2886.16 Under what conditions may BLM order an immediate temporary suspension of my activities?
(a) Subject to § 2886.11, BLM can order an immediate temporary suspension of grant or TUP activities within the right-of-way or TUP area to
protect public health or safety or the environment. BLM can require you to stop your activities before holding an administrative
proceeding on the matter and may order immediate remedial action.
(b) BLM may issue the immediate temporary suspension order orally or in writing to you, your contractor or subcontractor, or to any
representative, agent, or employee representing you or conducting the activity. BLM may take this action whether or not any action is
being or has been taken by other Federal or state agencies. When you receive the order, you must stop the activity immediately. BLM will,
as soon as practical, confirm an oral order by sending or hand delivering to you or your agent at your address a written suspension order
explaining the reasons for it.
(c) You may file a written request for permission to resume activities at any time after BLM issues the order. In the request, give the facts
supporting your request and the reasons you believe that BLM should lift the order. BLM must grant or deny your request within 5
business days after receiving it. If BLM does not respond within 5 business days, BLM has denied your request. You may appeal the
denial under § 2881.10 of this part.
(d) The immediate temporary suspension order is effective until you receive BLM's written notice to proceed with your activities.
§ 2886.17 Under what conditions may BLM suspend or terminate my grant or TUP?
(a) Subject to § 2886.11, BLM may suspend or terminate your grant if you do not comply with applicable laws and regulations or any terms,
conditions, or stipulations of the grant, or if you abandon the right-of-way.
(b) Subject to § 2886.11, BLM may suspend or terminate your TUP if you do not comply with applicable laws and regulations or any terms,
conditions, or stipulations of the TUP, or if you abandon the TUP area.
(c) A grant or TUP also terminates when:
(1) The grant or TUP contains a term or condition that has been met that requires the grant or TUP to terminate;
(2) BLM consents in writing to your request to terminate the grant or TUP; or
(3) It is required by law to terminate.
(d) Your failure to use your right-of-way for its authorized purpose for any continuous 2-year period creates a presumption of abandonment.
BLM will notify you in writing of this presumption. You may rebut the presumption of abandonment by proving that you used the right-ofway or that your failure to use the right-of-way was due to circumstances beyond your control, such as acts of God, war, or casualties not
attributable to you.
(e) You may appeal a decision under this section under § 2881.10 of this part.
§ 2886.18 How will I know that BLM intends to suspend or terminate my grant or TUP?
(a) Grants. When BLM determines that it will suspend or terminate your grant under § 2886.17 of this subpart, it will send you a written
notice of this determination. The determination will provide you a reasonable opportunity to correct the violation, start your use, or
resume your use of the right-of-way, as appropriate. In the notice BLM will state the date by which you must correct the violation or start
or resume use of the right-of-way.
(1) If you have not corrected the violation or started or resumed use of the right-of-way by the date specified in the notice, BLM will refer
the matter to the Office of Hearings and Appeals. An ALJ in the Office of Hearings and Appeals will provide an appropriate
administrative proceeding under 5 U.S.C. 554 and determine whether grounds for suspension or termination exist. No
administrative proceeding is required where the grant by its terms provides that it terminates on the occurrence of a fixed or agreed
upon condition, event, or time.
(2) BLM will suspend or terminate the grant if the ALJ determines that grounds exist for suspension or termination and the suspension
or termination is justified.
(b) TUPs. When BLM determines that it will suspend or terminate your TUP, it will send you a written notice and provide you a reasonable
opportunity to correct the violation or start or resume use of the TUP area. The notice will also provide you information on how to file a
written request for reconsideration.
(1) You may file a written request with the BLM office that issued the notice, asking for reconsideration of the determination to suspend
or terminate your TUP. BLM must receive this request within 10 business days after you receive the notice.
(2) BLM will provide you with a written decision within 20 business days after receiving your request for reconsideration. The decision
will include a finding of fact made by the next higher level of authority than that who made the suspension or termination
determination. The decision will also inform you whether BLM suspended or terminated your TUP or cancelled the notice made
under paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) If the decision is adverse to you, you may appeal it under § 2881.10 of this part.
§ 2886.19 When my grant or TUP terminates, what happens to any facilities on it?
(a) Subject to § 2886.11, after your grant or TUP terminates, you must remove any facilities within the right-of-way or TUP area within a
reasonable time, as determined by BLM, unless BLM instructs you otherwise in writing, or termination is due to non-payment of rent (see
§ 2885.17(c) of this part).
(b) After removing the facilities, you must remediate and restore the right-of-way or TUP area to a condition satisfactory to BLM, including
the removal and clean-up of any hazardous materials.
(c) If you do not remove all facilities within a reasonable period, as determined by BLM, BLM may declare them to be the property of the
United States. However, you are still liable for the costs of removing them and for remediating and restoring the right-of-way or TUP area.
Subpart 2887 - Amending, Assigning, or Renewing MLA Grants and TUPs
§ 2887.10 When must I amend my application, seek an amendment of my grant or TUP, or obtain a new grant or TUP?
(a) You must amend your application or seek an amendment of your grant or TUP when there is a proposed substantial deviation in location
or use.
(b) The requirements to amend an application or a grant or TUP are the same as those for a new application, including paying processing
and monitoring fees and rent according to §§ 2884.12, 2885.23, 2885.19, and 2886.11 of this part.
(c) Any activity not authorized by your grant or TUP may subject you to prosecution under applicable law and to trespass charges under
subpart 2888 of this part.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, if you hold a pipeline grant issued before November 16, 1973, and there is a proposed
substantial deviation in location or use of the right-of-way, you must apply for a new grant.
(e) BLM may ratify or confirm a grant that was issued before November 16, 1973, if we can modify the grant to comply with the Act and
these regulations. BLM and you must jointly agree to any modification of a grant made under this paragraph.
§ 2887.11 May I assign or make other changes to my grant or TUP?
(a) With the BLM's approval, you may assign, in whole or in part, any right or interest in a grant or TUP. Assignment actions that may require
BLM approval include, but are not limited to, the following:
(1) The transfer by the holder (assignor) of any right or interest in the grant or TUP to a third party (assignee); and
(2) Changes in ownership or other related change in control transactions involving the BLM right-of-way grant holder or TUP holder and
another business entity (assignee), including corporate mergers or acquisitions, but not transactions within the same corporate
family.
(b) The BLM may require a grant or lease holder to file new or revised information in some circumstances that do not constitute an
assignment (see subpart 2883 and §§ 2884.11(c) and 2886.12). Circumstances that would not constitute an assignment but may
necessitate this filing include, but are not limited to:
(1) Transactions within the same corporate family;
(2) Changes in the holder's name only (see paragraph (h) of this section); and
(3) Changes in the holder's articles of incorporation.
(c) In order to assign a grant or TUP, the proposed assignee, subject to § 2886.11, must file an application and follow the same procedures
and standards as for a new grant or TUP, including paying processing fees (see § 2884.12).
(d) The assignment application must also include:
(1) Documentation that the assignor agrees to the assignment; and
(2) A signed statement that the proposed assignee agrees to comply with and to be bound by the terms and conditions of the grant or
TUP that is being assigned and all applicable laws and regulations.
(e) Your assignment is not recognized until the BLM approves it in writing. We will approve the assignment if doing so is in the public
interest. The BLM may modify the grant or TUP or add bonding and other requirements, including terms and conditions, to the grant or
TUP when approving the assignment. If we approve the assignment, the benefits and liabilities of the grant or TUP apply to the new grant
or TUP holder.
(f) The processing time and conditions described at § 2884.21 apply to assignment applications.
(g) Only interests in issued right-of-way grants and TUPs are assignable. Pending right-of-way and TUP applications do not create any
property rights or other interest and may not be assigned from one entity to another, except that an entity with a pending application may
continue to pursue that application even if that entity becomes a wholly owned subsidiary of a new third party.
(h) Change in name only of holder. Name-only changes are made by individuals, partnerships, corporations, and other right-of-way and TUP
holders for a variety of business or legal reasons. To complete a change in name only, (i.e., when the name change in question is not the
result of an underlying change in control of the right-of-way grant or TUP), the following requirements must be met:
(1) The holder must file an application requesting a name change and follow the same procedures as for a new grant or TUP, including
paying processing fees (see subpart 2884 of this part). The name change request must include:
(i)
If the name change is for an individual, a copy of the court order or other legal document effectuating the name change; or
(ii) If the name change is for a corporation, a copy of the corporate resolution(s) proposing and approving the name change, a
copy of the filing/acceptance of the change in name by the State or territory in which it is incorporated, and a copy of the
appropriate resolution(s), order(s), or other documentation showing the name change.
(2) In connection with processing of a name change only, the BLM retains the authority under § 2885.13(e) to modify the grant or TUP,
or add bonding and other requirements, including additional terms and conditions, to the grant or TUP.
(3) Your name change is not recognized until the BLM approves it in writing.
[81 FR 92229, Dec. 19, 2016]
§ 2887.12 How do I renew my grant?
(a) You must apply to BLM to renew the grant at least 120 calendar days before your grant expires. BLM will renew the grant if the pipeline is
being operated and maintained in accordance with the grant, these regulations, and the Act. If your grant has expired or terminated, you
must apply for a new grant under subpart 2884 of this part.
(b) BLM may modify the terms and conditions of the grant at the time of renewal, and you must pay the processing fees (see § 2884.12 of
this part) in advance.
(c) The time and conditions for processing applications for rights-of-way, as described at § 2884.21 of this part, apply to applications for
renewals.
(d) If you make a timely and sufficient application for a renewal of your existing grant or for a new grant in accordance with this section, the
existing grant does not expire until we have issued a decision to approve or deny the application.
(e) If we deny your application, you may appeal the decision under § 2881.10.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 81 FR 92230, Dec. 19, 2016]
Subpart 2888 - Trespass
§ 2888.10 What is trespass?
(a) Trespass is using, occupying, or developing the public lands or their resources without a required authorization or in a way that is beyond
the scope and terms and conditions of your authorization. Trespass is a prohibited act.
(b) Trespass includes acts or omissions causing unnecessary or undue degradation to the public lands or their resources. In determining
whether such degradation is occurring, BLM may consider the effects of the activity on resources and land uses outside the area of the
activity.
(c) The BLM will administer trespass actions for grants and TUPs as set forth in §§ 2808.10(c), and 2808.11 of this chapter.
(d) Other Federal agencies will address trespass on non-BLM lands under their respective laws and regulations.
[70 FR 21078, Apr. 22, 2005, as amended at 73 FR 65075, Oct. 31, 2008]
§ 2888.11 May I receive a grant if I am or have been in trespass?
Until you satisfy your liability for a trespass, BLM will not process any applications you have pending for any activity on BLM-administered lands. A
history of trespass will not necessarily disqualify you from receiving a grant. In order to correct a trespass, you must apply under the procedures
described at subpart 2884 of this part. BLM will process your application as if it were a new use. Prior unauthorized use does not create a
preference for receiving a grant.
File Type | application/pdf |
File Modified | 2022-04-05 |
File Created | 2022-04-05 |