 A nomination comes to the National Park Service. We are bound by federal regulation in how we handle nominations. A nomination is date stamped in, and we have 45 days to act upon that nomination. By acting on the nomination, we have a number of things that we can do. We can list the property as submitted. The nomination has come in complete. It has no technical problems. It has a good substantive argument for why the property is important. We list it. We can return the nomination to the nominating authority. If that property, if that nomination itself has technical problems or substantive problems. Let's say they have cited two national register criteria, but only defended one in their nomination narrative. We can send that back. We believe that the nomination or the property is eligible, but the nomination is not adequate. We can reject the nomination. The property that is submitted may not meet the national register criteria. It may not have sufficient historic integrity to reflect its importance. The rejection of nominations is very rare. The nominating authorities, states, federal offices and tribes are very good about weeding out properties that don't obviously meet the national register criteria. So it's very rare for us to outright reject a nomination. The final thing that we can do is determine a property eligible formally. So it is not listed, but the keeper of the national register has said that the property meets the criteria for listing. This often happens when owners or majority of the owners of a property object to its listing. When a nomination is prepared and submitted to a state, all owners are notified of this action and all owners are given an opportunity to comment, concur or object to the listing. If a majority of the private property owners object to the listing of that property, the process continues. We still review the nomination, but we do not list the property. In the future, if new property owners or those objecting property owners lift their objection, the property then can be listed.