This chapter’s protection standard is the regulatory flood. The best available regulatory flood data is listed below. Whenever a party disagrees with the best available data, the party submitting the detailed engineering study needs to replace existing data with better data and submit it to the state’s Department of Natural Resources for review and approval.
(A) The regulatory flood elevation, floodway and fringe limits for the studied SFHAs within the jurisdiction of the town shall be as delineated on the 1% annual chance flood profiles in the “Flood Insurance Study of Marshall County and Incorporated Areas,” dated November 16, 2011, and the corresponding flood insurance rate map prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and dated November 16, 2011.
(B) The regulatory flood elevation, floodway and fringe limits for each of the SFHAs within the jurisdiction of the town, delineated as an “A Zone” on the flood insurance rate map prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and dated November 16, 2011, shall be according to the best data available as provided by the state’s Department of Natural Resources, provided the upstream drainage area from the subject site is greater than one square mile.
(C) In the absence of a published FEMA map, or absence of identification on a FEMA map, the regulatory flood elevation, floodway and fringe limits of any watercourse in the community’s known flood-prone areas shall be according to the best data available as provided by the state’s Department of Natural Resources, provided the upstream drainage area from the subject site is greater than one square mile.
(Ord. 4-2011, passed 9-12-2011)