(A) Appeal Board.
(1) The Planning Commission, as established by ordinance, shall hear and decide appeals and requests for variances from the requirement of this subchapter.
(2) The City Council shall hear and decide appeals when it is alleged there is an error in any requirement, decision or determination made by the Planning Commission in the enforcement or administration of this subchapter.
(3) Those aggrieved by the decision of the Planning Commission or any taxpayer may appeal such decision to the City Council, as provided in the ordinance.
(4) In passing upon such applications, the City Council shall consider all technical evaluations, all relevant factors, standards specified in other sections of this subchapter, and:
(a) The danger that materials may be swept onto other lands to the injury of others;
(b) The danger to life and property due to flooding or erosion damage;
(c) The susceptibility of the proposed facility and its contents to flood damage and the effect of such damage on the individual owner;
(d) The importance of the services provided by the proposed facility to the community;
(e) The necessity to the facility of a waterfront location, where applicable;
(f) The availability of alternative locations for the proposed use which are not subject to flooding or erosion damage;
(g) The compatibility of the proposed use with existing and anticipated development;
(h) The relationship of the proposed use to the Comprehensive Plan and floodplain management program for that area;
(i) The safety of access to the property in times of flood for ordinary and emergency vehicles;
(j) The expected heights, velocity, duration, rate of rise and sediment transport of the flood waters and the effects of wave action, if applicable, expected at the site; and
(k) The costs of providing governmental services during and after flood conditions, including maintenance and repair of public utilities and facilities, such as sewer, gas, electrical and water systems, and streets and bridges.
(5) Upon consideration of the factors of division (A)(4) above and the purposes of this subchapter, the Planning Commission may attach such conditions to the granting of variances as it deems necessary to further the purposes of this subchapter.
(6) The Planning Commission shall maintain the records of all appeal actions and report any variances to the Federal Insurance Administration upon request.
(B) Conditions for variances.
(1) (a) Generally, the only condition under which a variance from the elevation standard may be issued is for new construction and substantial improvements to be erected on a lot of one-half acre or less in size contiguous to and surrounded by lots with existing structures constructed below the base flood level, providing items(A)(4)(a) through (A)(4)(k) above have been fully considered.
(b) As the lot size increases, the technical justification required for issuing the variance increases.
(2) Variances may be issued for the reconstruction, rehabilitation, or restoration of structures listed on the National Register of Historic Places or the Statewide Inventory of Historic Properties, without regard to the procedures set forth in this section.
(3) Variance shall not be issued within as designated floodway if any increase in flood levels during the base flood discharge would result.
(4) Variances shall only be issued upon a determination that the variance is the minimum necessary, considering the flood hazard, to afford relief.
(5) Variances shall only be issued upon:
(a) A showing of good and sufficient cause;
(b) A determination that failure to grant the variance would result in exceptional hardship to the applicant;
(c) A determination that the granting of a variance will not result in increased flood heights, additional threats to public safety, extraordinary public expense, create nuisances, cause fraud on or victimization of the public as identified in division (A)(4) above, or conflict with existing local laws or ordinances.
(6) (a) Variances as interpreted in the National Flood Insurance Program are based on the general zoning law principle that they pertain to a physical piece or property; they are not personal in nature and do not pertain to the structure, its inhabitants, economic or financial circumstances.
(b) They primarily address small lots in densely populated residential neighborhoods. As such, variances from the flood elevations should be quite rare.
(7) Variance may be issued for nonresidential buildings in very limited circumstances to allow a lesser degree of flood proofing than watertight or dry-flood proofing, where it can be determined that such action will have low damage potential, complies with all other variance criteria except division (B)(1) above and otherwise complies with § 151.121(A) and (B).
(8) Any applicant to whom a variance is granted shall be given written notice that the structure will be permitted to be built with a lowest floor elevation below the base flood elevation and that the cost of flood insurance will be commensurate with the increased risk resulting from the reduced lowest floor elevation.
(Ord. 372, passed 12-8-1997; Ord. 414, passed 1-11-2010; Ord. 421, passed 3-10-2014)