[237]*237BUTTLER, J.
In this appeal from the circuit court’s reversal of an agency order entered in a non-contested case, three questions of statutory construction are presented: (1) does the circuit court have jurisdiction to review the state historic preservation officer’s certification of certain real property as historic property under ORS 358.475 et seq.; (2) does a county tax assessor, or the county as an entity, have standing under ORS lSS^SOU)1 to contest that certification order; and (3) under ORS 358.4852 must the property sought to be certified be listed in the National Register of Historic Places at the time an application is made?
BACKGROUND
ORS 358.475 to 358.565 comprise a statutory scheme designed to encourage the maintenance and preservation of properties of Oregon historical significance. Under that scheme, an owner of historic property makes application during the calendar year preceding the first assessment year for which classification is requested. ORS 358.485. If the application is granted, the property is certified as historic and its assessed value for tax purposes is frozen for 15 years, assuming continuing qualification, at its true cash value at the time of application.3 To qualify, [238]*238property must, among other things, be currently listed in the National Register of Historic Places (National Register). The state historic preservation officer (preservation officer) rules on applications and generally administers the Act. The county assessor receives and forwards applications to the preservation officer, effectuates the special assessment if the applications are approved, requests a redetermination from the preservation officer if he thinks certified property no longer qualifies and removes the special assessment and assesses a penalty against property which loses its historic classification within the 15-year period.
Intervenors own a building, the Ambassador Apartment, in downtown Portland. On December 5, 1978, William Rosenfeld (one of the intervenors) submitted an application to the preservation officer requesting that the building be designated as historic property under the Act. At that time the building was not listed in the National Register, although an application for listing was then pending before the United States Department of Interior. The preservation officer, nevertheless, processed the application while waiting for the federal decision.4
The property was actually listed in the National Register on February 26, 1979, and thereafter was certified by the preservation officer on March 30, 1979. After the agency order was entered, Multnomah County and its Director of Assessment and Taxation filed in circuit court a petition for judicial review, seeking reversal of the preservation officer’s certification order. Intervenors intervened [239]*239and, following a trial, the circuit court reversed the agency order. Intervenors appeal.
I
JURISDICTION
Petitioners sought judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), specifically ORS 183.484, which vests jurisdiction in the circuit court for review of agency orders in other than contested cases. Intervenors contend, however, that notwithstanding that statute, jurisdiction is in the tax court by virtue of ORS 305.410,5 which provides that the tax court shall have exclusive jurisdiction, subject to Supreme Court review, over “all questions of law and fact arising under the tax laws of this state.” They argue that ORS 358.475 to 358.565 are tax laws, because they affect real property tax assessments on property classified as “historic property” thereunder; they also point out that those sections are not specifically excluded from the purview of ORS 305.410, whereas some other tax-related statutes are. See n 5, supra.
[240]*240The difficulty with that argument is that ORS 358.495(3)6 expressly provides for circuit court review, at the owner’s instance, of the preservation officer’s decision to deny historic property certification. The legislature’s having provided that appeal of a denial of certification should not be treated as a case arising under the tax laws vesting exclusive jurisdiction in the tax court strongly suggests that the legislature did not consider the Act to be a tax law.7 It further suggests that whatever judicial review is available, whether under the Act or under the APA,8 lies in the circuit court.9 That leaves the question, discussed [241]*241below, of whether anyone other than a disappointed owner may obtain judicial review under the APA of the action taken by the preservation officer when the issue is the validity of the agency order. That question relates to standing, not jurisdiction; the dissenting opinion of Warren, J.,10 confuses those questions by tending to treat them as raising the same issue. They do not.
II
STANDING
The APA provides that, “any person adversely affected or aggrieved by an order” may seek judicial review. ORS 183.480(1). That phrase sets forth the criteria, under the APA, for “standing,” and intervenors contend that neither petitioner satisfies the statutory requirement.
The parties have cited numerous cases articulating the standing “rule”: a plaintiff must show he would be “substantially aggrieved by the enforcement of the rule,” [242]*242Gortmaker v. Seaton, 252 Or 440, 450 P2d 547 (1969); or show a “substantial interest in the matter in controversy,” Ore. Newspaper Pub. v. Peterson, 244 Or 116, 415 P2d 21 (1966); or show “some injury or impact on a legally recognized interest beyond an abstract interest in the correct application * * * of a law.” Budget Rent-A-Car v. Multnomah Co., 287 Or 93, 95, 597 P2d 1232 (1979).
Those cases consider standing in a variety of contexts and under various statutes, but none deals with the situation where, as here, an Oregon public official or governmental entity seeks review under the APA of another agency’s order or rule. They demonstrate, however, that standing requires more than the abstract interest of a busybody in the question presented.
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[237]*237BUTTLER, J.
In this appeal from the circuit court’s reversal of an agency order entered in a non-contested case, three questions of statutory construction are presented: (1) does the circuit court have jurisdiction to review the state historic preservation officer’s certification of certain real property as historic property under ORS 358.475 et seq.; (2) does a county tax assessor, or the county as an entity, have standing under ORS lSS^SOU)1 to contest that certification order; and (3) under ORS 358.4852 must the property sought to be certified be listed in the National Register of Historic Places at the time an application is made?
BACKGROUND
ORS 358.475 to 358.565 comprise a statutory scheme designed to encourage the maintenance and preservation of properties of Oregon historical significance. Under that scheme, an owner of historic property makes application during the calendar year preceding the first assessment year for which classification is requested. ORS 358.485. If the application is granted, the property is certified as historic and its assessed value for tax purposes is frozen for 15 years, assuming continuing qualification, at its true cash value at the time of application.3 To qualify, [238]*238property must, among other things, be currently listed in the National Register of Historic Places (National Register). The state historic preservation officer (preservation officer) rules on applications and generally administers the Act. The county assessor receives and forwards applications to the preservation officer, effectuates the special assessment if the applications are approved, requests a redetermination from the preservation officer if he thinks certified property no longer qualifies and removes the special assessment and assesses a penalty against property which loses its historic classification within the 15-year period.
Intervenors own a building, the Ambassador Apartment, in downtown Portland. On December 5, 1978, William Rosenfeld (one of the intervenors) submitted an application to the preservation officer requesting that the building be designated as historic property under the Act. At that time the building was not listed in the National Register, although an application for listing was then pending before the United States Department of Interior. The preservation officer, nevertheless, processed the application while waiting for the federal decision.4
The property was actually listed in the National Register on February 26, 1979, and thereafter was certified by the preservation officer on March 30, 1979. After the agency order was entered, Multnomah County and its Director of Assessment and Taxation filed in circuit court a petition for judicial review, seeking reversal of the preservation officer’s certification order. Intervenors intervened [239]*239and, following a trial, the circuit court reversed the agency order. Intervenors appeal.
I
JURISDICTION
Petitioners sought judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), specifically ORS 183.484, which vests jurisdiction in the circuit court for review of agency orders in other than contested cases. Intervenors contend, however, that notwithstanding that statute, jurisdiction is in the tax court by virtue of ORS 305.410,5 which provides that the tax court shall have exclusive jurisdiction, subject to Supreme Court review, over “all questions of law and fact arising under the tax laws of this state.” They argue that ORS 358.475 to 358.565 are tax laws, because they affect real property tax assessments on property classified as “historic property” thereunder; they also point out that those sections are not specifically excluded from the purview of ORS 305.410, whereas some other tax-related statutes are. See n 5, supra.
[240]*240The difficulty with that argument is that ORS 358.495(3)6 expressly provides for circuit court review, at the owner’s instance, of the preservation officer’s decision to deny historic property certification. The legislature’s having provided that appeal of a denial of certification should not be treated as a case arising under the tax laws vesting exclusive jurisdiction in the tax court strongly suggests that the legislature did not consider the Act to be a tax law.7 It further suggests that whatever judicial review is available, whether under the Act or under the APA,8 lies in the circuit court.9 That leaves the question, discussed [241]*241below, of whether anyone other than a disappointed owner may obtain judicial review under the APA of the action taken by the preservation officer when the issue is the validity of the agency order. That question relates to standing, not jurisdiction; the dissenting opinion of Warren, J.,10 confuses those questions by tending to treat them as raising the same issue. They do not.
II
STANDING
The APA provides that, “any person adversely affected or aggrieved by an order” may seek judicial review. ORS 183.480(1). That phrase sets forth the criteria, under the APA, for “standing,” and intervenors contend that neither petitioner satisfies the statutory requirement.
The parties have cited numerous cases articulating the standing “rule”: a plaintiff must show he would be “substantially aggrieved by the enforcement of the rule,” [242]*242Gortmaker v. Seaton, 252 Or 440, 450 P2d 547 (1969); or show a “substantial interest in the matter in controversy,” Ore. Newspaper Pub. v. Peterson, 244 Or 116, 415 P2d 21 (1966); or show “some injury or impact on a legally recognized interest beyond an abstract interest in the correct application * * * of a law.” Budget Rent-A-Car v. Multnomah Co., 287 Or 93, 95, 597 P2d 1232 (1979).
Those cases consider standing in a variety of contexts and under various statutes, but none deals with the situation where, as here, an Oregon public official or governmental entity seeks review under the APA of another agency’s order or rule. They demonstrate, however, that standing requires more than the abstract interest of a busybody in the question presented. A basic element of the policy underlying the standing requirement was stated by the United States Supreme Court in Flast v. Cohen, 392 US 83, 99, 88 S Ct 1942, 20 L Ed 2d 947 (1968)11:
“* * * The ‘gist of the question of standing’ is whether the party seeking relief has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of difficult constitutional questions.’ * * *”
See also, Gortmaker v. Seaton, supra, 252 Or at 444.
Here, the substantive question is whether the preservation officer correctly applied the statutory provisions insofar as he treated the application as having been made in 1978. The answer affects the duty of the county assessor in fixing the assessed value of the Ambassador Apartment. The county assessor is an integral part of the statutory scheme. Not only is the assessor the person to whom applications for classification are made (ORS 358.485), that officer must be notified of the historic certification within ten days after it is made, and he must enter that fact on the assessment and tax roll each year the property is so classified. ORS 358.495. The assessor must, for 15 consecutive assessment years, assess the property at its true cash value at the time application was made. ORS 358.505(1). [243]*243He also has the duty, if he has reason to believe that property ceases to qualify as historic property, to request that the preservation officer determine if the property continues to qualify; when so requested, the preservation officer must take whatever steps are necessary to make that determination and to notify the assessor thereof within 120 days after the request is received. ORS 358.509. When and if the property becomes disqualified, the assessor has a statutory duty to determine and collect a penalty to be added to the tax on the property. ORS 358.525.
Clearly, the assessor is not a disinterested bystander. He has a statutorily imposed involvement under the legislative scheme. In particular, we believe he has a legally cognizable interest in assuring that the date as of which the assessed value of classified property is frozen is correctly determined. That interest is an adversary one in this case. In fact, the assessor may be the most vigorous, and perhaps the only, challenger in this kind of case, because the interest of an individual county taxpayer, who, intervenors argue, would have standing, may be too insubstantial to satisfy the standing requirement; it may also be unrealistic to expect an individual taxpayer to challenge, or even to be aware of, the order involved here.12 Both the assessor and the county may properly assert the position that the effective operation of county government requires that the assessed value of real property within its taxing authority be as accurate as possible in order that property taxes be imposed equitably. Both have a substantial interest in correcting a determination which will result in an assessment which is improper as a matter of law, as contended here.
This conclusion is supported by cases from other jurisdictions. Cases which have denied standing to a tax assessor to challenge an agency decision favorable to a taxpayer (few involved a political subdivision as an entity), [244]*244have usually involved a subordinate seeking review of the decision of a superior agency which overruled him.13 Therefore, apart from the subordinate’s mere “pride of opinion,” both parties represent “identical interests,” so there is insufficient adversity. But where one government agency has challenged the actions of another government agency, see, e.g., United States v. I.C.C., 337 US 426, 69 S Ct 1410, 93 L Ed 1451 (1949); or where there are “conflicting geographic loyalties of disputing public administrative bodies,” Davis, Standing of a Public Official to Challenge Agency Decisions: A Unique Problem of State Administrative Law, 16 Admin L Rev 163, 173 (1964); or where there is no statutory relationship of superiority and the challenging official is outside the decisional process, Iowa Dept. of Revenue v. Iowa St. Bd. of Tax Review, 267 NW2d 675 (Iowa 1978), genuine adversity is reasonably assured, and standing has generally been allowed.
Here the various exceptions come together: petitioners and the preservation officer represent different interests (taxation versus historical preservation) and have conflicting geographic loyalties; there is no statutory relationship of superiority of one over the other, and neither petitioner had any part in the agency’s decisional process.
Intervenors argue, however, that apart from whether petitioners satisfy ORS 183.480(1), the legislature’s failure to provide expressly for the review of a grant of historic status, coupled with an express provision for review of the denial of historic status, evidences the legislature’s intention that petitioners should not have “standing” to contest the certification order. That argument, however, goes less to the question of standing than it does to whether an order granting historic status is reviewable at all. In any event, considering the paramount interest of government at all levels in the equitable distribution of the tax burden, the duties of the assessor to insure that owners of historic property comply with the Act, and the undesirability of lodging unreviewable power in one official to [245]*245bestow a substantial tax benefit, we would require an indication of legislative intent clearer than mere silence before we would foreclose “standing” to litigants where standing is otherwise proper under the APA.
Ill
THE MERITS
ORS 358.485 provides that: “An owner of historic property desiring classification and assessment under ORS 358.475 to 358.545 shall make application to the county assessor * * *,” (emphasis supplied) who, in turn, refers the application to the preservation officer for processing and decision. ORS 358.490(1). “ ‘Historic property’ means real property that is currently listed in the National Register of Historic Places * * (Emphasis supplied.) ORS 358.480(1). If the application is approved, the property is assessed for the next 15 years at its true cash value “at the time application under ORS 358.485 was made.” ORS 358.505(1).14
The question is whether the preservation officer had statutory authority to treat the application as being made at a time when the property was not listed in the National Register, but became listed before certification, or whether the application may not be treated as made until the property is listed in the National Register. That question is important, because the answer determines when an application is made for purposes of determining the date as of which the assessed valuation is frozen under ORS 358.505(1). Here, intervenors submitted an application in 1978 for special assessment treatment commencing in 1979, but the property was not listed in the National Register until February 1979. Whether the application was “made” within the meaning of the statute in 1978 or in 1979 will determine the date as of which the assessment is frozen.
Petitioners argue, and we agree, that the meaning of ORS 358.485 is clear on its face: property is not “historic [246]*246property” within the meaning of the statute unless it is currently listed in the National Register. It must not only be listed, but must be listed at the time in question in order for the owner of the property to be an owner of “historic property” for the purpose of making an application. Intervenors attempt to introduce ambiguity by focusing solely on the definition contained in ORS 358.480(1) and arguing that one does not know whether “currently listed” means listed at the time of passage of the statute, at the time of application, or at the time of certification. In the abstract, there are other possibilities, as well. However, we do not treat the definition in the abstract; we consider it in the context of the statutory scheme to which it applies. In that context, whenever the phrase “historic property” is used, it means property then listed in the National Register, e.g., at the time application is made, at the time certification is granted, and prior to July 1 of each of the 15 years during which special assessment is sought. ORS 358.505(2); 358.515(3).15
Intervenors’ arguments to the contrary would not only fly in the face of what we believe to be the clear meaning of the statutes, but would result in an open-ended application process which would encounter problems with the provisions of ORS 358.495(1), which provides:
“(1) The state historic preservation officer shall immediately notify the county assessor and the applicant of his approval or disapproval of the application which shall in no event be later than April 1 of the year following the year of receipt of the application. An application not denied by April 1 shall be deemed approved, and the property which is the subject of the application shall be considered [247]*247to be historic property which qualifies under ORS 358.475 to 358.545.”
To avoid the problem of an automatic granting of historic property status to property not listed by April 1 of the year following the year in which the application is submitted, intervenors urge that we imply an automatic denial of the application if the property is not listed by that date. However, the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous and we may not add language that is not there. ORS 174.010.16
In sum, we agree with the trial court that the preservation officer misinterpreted and, therefore, misapplied, the statutes in determining the effective date of the application, which, in turn, determines the date as of which the tax assessment is frozen. The trial court order reversing the agency order is affirmed. ORS 183.484(4)(a).17
Affirmed.