A. No manufactured structure shall be set, placed, installed or moved in unincorporated Bonner County without first procuring a building location permit from the Bonner County planning department. Applications for such permit shall be made on forms provided by the planning department.
B. As of the effective date hereof, mobile homes as evidenced by proof of title constructed prior to June 15, 1976 (pre-HUD code), must meet the following rehabilitation requirements prior to obtaining a building location permit: (Ord. 535, 4-2-2014)
1. A smoke detector (which may be a single station alarm device) shall be installed on any wall in a hallway or space communicating with each bedroom area and the living area on the living area side and, when located in a hallway, the detector shall be between the return air intake and the living area. Each smoke detector shall be installed in accordance with its listing and the top of the detector shall be located on a wall four inches (4") to twelve inches (12") below the ceiling. The detector may be battery powered or may be connected to an electrical outlet box by a permanent wiring method into a general electrical branch circuit, without any switch between the over current protection device protecting the branch circuit and the detector.
2. The walls, ceilings and doors of each compartment containing a gas fired furnace or water heater shall be lined with five-sixteenths inch (5/16") gypsum board, unless the door opens to the exterior of the home, in which case, the door may be all metal construction. All exterior compartments shall seal to the interior of the mobile home.
3. Each room designated expressly for sleeping purposes shall have an exterior exit door or at least one outside egress window or other approved exit device with a minimum clear dimension of twenty two inches (22") and a minimum clear opening of five (5) square feet. The bottom of the exit shall not be more than thirty six inches (36") above the floor.
4. All electrical systems shall be tested for continuity to assure that metallic parts are properly bonded, tested for operation to demonstrate that all equipment is connected and in working order, and given a polarity check to determine that connections are proper. The electrical system shall be properly protected for the required amperage load. If the unit wiring is of aluminum conductors, all receptacles and switches rated twenty (20) amperes or less directly connected to the aluminum conductors shall be marked CO/ALR. Exterior receptacles other than heat tape receptacles shall be of the ground fault circuit interrupter (GFI) type. Conductors of dissimilar metals (copper/aluminum or copper clad aluminum) must be connected in accordance with section 110-14 of the National Electrical Code.
5. The mobile home's gas piping shall be tested with the appliance valves removed from the piping system and piping capped at those areas. The piping system shall withstand a pressure of at least six inch (6") mercury or three (3) psi gauge for a period of not less than ten (10) minutes without showing any drop in pressure. Pressure shall be measured with a mercury manometer or a slope gauge calibrated so as to read in increments of not greater than one-tenth (1/10) pound or an equivalent device. The source of normal operating pressure shall be isolated before the pressure test is made. After the appliance connections are reinstalled, the piping system and connections shall be tested with line pressure of not less than ten inches (10") nor more than fourteen inches (14") water column air pressure. The appliance connections shall be tested for leakage with soapy water or a bubble solution. All gas furnaces and water heaters shall be vented to the exterior in accordance with chapter 9 of the Uniform Mechanical Code.
6. A full water or air pressure test will be performed on the mobile home's water and sewer system.
a. Water piping shall be tested and proven tight under a water pressure not less than the working pressure under which it is to be used. The water used for tests shall be obtained from a potable source of supply. A fifty (50) pound per square inch (344.5 kPa) air pressure may be substituted for the water test. In either method of test, the piping shall withstand a test without leaking for a period of not less than fifteen (15) minutes.
b. A water test shall be applied to the drainage and vent system either in its entirety or in sections. If applied to the entire system, all openings in the piping shall be tightly closed, except at the highest opening, and the system filled with water to the point of overflow. If the system is tested in sections, each opening shall be tightly plugged except the highest opening of the section under the test and each section shall be filled with water, but no section shall be tested with less than a ten foot (10') (3 m) head of water. In testing successive sections, at least the upper ten feet (10') (3 m) of the next preceding section shall be tested, so that no joint or pipe in the structure, except the uppermost ten feet (10') (3 m) of the system, shall have been submitted to a test of less than a ten foot (10') (3 m) head of water. The water shall be kept in the system or in the portion under testing for at least fifteen (15) minutes before inspection starts. The system shall be tight at all points. (Ord. 425, 6-4-2002; amd. Ord. 535, 4-2-2014)
7. Proof of compliance shall be provided by an ICBO certified building inspector, gas utility provider, licensed electrical contractor or licensed plumbing contractor on a mobile home rehabilitation certificate form provided by the Planning Department, or proof of compliance shall be provided as specified on a "certificate of compliance" issued by the Administrator of the Division of Building Safety of the State of Idaho. (Ord. 427, 7-2-2002; amd. Ord. 535, 4-2-2014)