Maine Code § 27-505

Director
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1. Appointment. The Maine Historic Preservation Commission may appoint a director who must
be qualified by special training or experience in the field of historic preservation and who shall also
serve as the State Historic Preservation Officer upon appointment by the Governor and is subject to
removal for cause under the Civil Service Law. The commission shall fix compensation for the director
within salary range 88.
[PL 1991, c. 528, Pt. E, §33 (AMD); PL 1991, c. 528, Pt. RRR (AFF); PL 1991, c. 591, Pt. E,
§33 (AMD).]
2. Duties.
A. The Maine Historic Preservation Commission is under the management and supervision of a
director who may adopt rules pursuant to the Maine Administrative Procedure Act to implement
this section. [PL 1991, c. 824, Pt. A, §56 (RPR).]
B. The director may employ, subject to the personnel laws, such assistants as the business of the
office may require. [PL 1979, c. 21 (NEW).]
C. The director shall, subject to the approval of the commission, accept gifts, devises, bequests and
endowments for purposes, consistent with the purposes of this chapter. Any funds given as an
endowment shall be invested by the Treasurer of State according to the laws governing investment
of trust funds. All gifts, devises, bequests and proceeds of endowment funds shall be used solely to
carry out the purposes for which they were made. [PL 1979, c. 21 (NEW).]
D. The director may administer a program of state financed grants for the preservation and
restoration of historic properties consistent with the following conditions.
(1) An applicant for a grant must be either a governmental or a nonprofit organization.
(2) The historic property that is the subject of the grant application must be listed on the
National Register of Historic Places as authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of
1966 or have been nominated to the register by the commission.
(3) An applicant must provide assurance that public access to the historic property will be
reasonably provided with respect to admission fees, visitation hours and physical accessibility,
while maintaining the historic integrity of the historic property.
(4) Applications must address, to the satisfaction of the commission, the applicant's
organizational and financial capacity to provide long-term maintenance of the historic property
that is the subject of the application.
(5) Grants may not exceed 50% of the total expense of the proposed project, except that grants
to the State may be 100% of the total expense of the proposed project.

(6) All grants are subject to final approval by the commission.
(7) Prior to final approval, the commission may require the applicant to execute a covenant to
secure continued public access to and maintenance of the historic integrity of the historic
property.
With respect to the quality of work to be performed through this grant program, the commission
and the director must be guided by the United States Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the
Treatment of Historic Properties. [PL 2023, c. 9, §1 (AMD).]
[PL 2023, c. 9, §1 (AMD).]

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