§ 154.270 GENERAL STANDARDS FOR FLOOD HAZARD REDUCTION.
   (A)   General standards. In all areas of special flood hazards, the following provisions are required for all new construction and substantial improvements.
      (1)   All new construction or substantial improvements shall be designed (or modified) and adequately anchored to prevent flotation, collapse, or lateral movement of the structure resulting from hydrodynamic and hydrostatic loads, including the effects of buoyancy.
      (2)   All new construction or substantial improvements shall be constructed by methods and practices that minimize flood damage.
      (3)   All new construction or substantial improvements shall be constructed with materials resistant to flood damage.
      (4)   All new construction or substantial improvements shall be constructed with electrical, heating, ventilation, plumbing, and air conditioning equipment and other service facilities that are designed and/or located so as to prevent water from entering or accumulating within the components during conditions of flooding.
      (5)   All new and replacement water supply systems shall be designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into the system.
      (6)   New and replacement sanitary sewage systems shall be designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into the system and discharge from the systems into floodwaters.
      (7)   On-site waste disposal systems shall be designed or located to avoid impairment to them or contamination from them during flooding.
   (B)   Substantial improvement. Any combination of repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition, or improvement of a building or structure, if the cumulative cost of the entire project equals or exceeds 50% of the market value of the structure only (not of the structure and land value combined) before the improvement or repair is started then the work shall be considered as substantial improvement. If the structure has sustained substantial damage, any repairs are considered substantial improvements regardless of the actual repair work performed. For substantial damage, refer to division (C) below. The term does not, however, include either:
      (1)   Any project for improvement of a building required to correct existing health, sanitary, or safety code violations identified by the building official and that are the minimum necessary to assure safe living conditions; or
      (2)   Any alteration of a historic structure provided that the alteration will not preclude the structure’s continued designation as a historic structure.
   (C)   Substantial damage. Substantial damage means damage of any origin sustained by a structure whereby the cost of restoring the structure to its pre-damaged condition would equal or exceed 50% of the market value of the structure only before the damage occurred. This term also applies to structures which have incurred any damage that equals or exceeds 50% of the structure’s market value regardless of the actual repair work performed. When a structure or building has been determined as substantially damaged, any work or repair on said structure or building will be considered as substantial improvement and will be required to meet the development requirements set forth within this chapter for substantial improvement.
   (D)   Substantial improvement and substantial damage determination. For applications for building permits to improve buildings and structures, including alterations, movement, enlargement, replacement, repair, change of occupancy, additions, rehabilitations, renovations, and any other improvement of or work on such buildings and structures, the Floodplain Administrator, in coordination with the applicable community officials and staff, shall:
      (1)   Estimate the market value or require the applicant to obtain an appraisal of the market value prepared by a qualified independent appraiser, of the building or structure only, not of land and building, before the start of construction of the proposed work. In the case of repair, the market value of the building or structure shall be the market value before the damage occurred and before any repairs are made;
      (2)   Compare the cost to perform the improvement, the cost to repair a damaged building to its pre-damaged condition, or the combined costs of improvements and repairs, if applicable, to the market value of the building or structure;
      (3)   Determine and document whether the proposed work constitutes substantial improvement or repair of substantial damage; the determination requires evaluation of previous permits issued for improvements and repairs as specified in division (B) above;
      (4)   Utilize FEMA’s Substantial Improvement/Substantial Desk Reference when making any determination on substantial improvement and/or substantial damage;
      (5)   The substantial improvement regulations apply to all of the work that is proposed as the improvement, even if multiple permits are issued. Therefore, the determination of the cost of the improvement should consider all costs of all phases of the work before issuance of the first permit; and
      (6)   Notify the applicant that if it is determined that the work constitutes substantial improvement or repair of substantial damage, that compliance with the floodplain management ordinance is required.
(Ord. 842, passed 3-14-2022)