§ 150.059  STANDARDS FOR IDENTIFIED FLOODWAYS.
   (A)   Located within SFHAs, established in § 150.021, are areas designated as floodways. The floodway is an extremely hazardous area due to the velocity of floodwaters, which carry debris and potential projectiles, and has erosion potential. If the site is in an identified floodway, the Floodplain Administrator shall require the applicant to forward the application, along with all pertinent plans and specifications, to the State Department of Natural Resources, and apply for a permit for construction in a floodway. Under the provisions of I.C. 14-28-1, a permit for construction in a floodway from the State Department of Natural Resources is required prior to the issuance of a local building permit for any excavation, deposit, construction or obstruction activity located in the floodway. This includes land preparation activities, such as filling, grading, clearing, paving and the like, undertaken before the actual start of construction of the structure. However, it does exclude non-substantial additions or improvements to existing (lawful) residences in a non-boundary river floodway. (I.C. 14-28-1-26 allows construction of a non-substantial addition or improvement to a residence in a non-boundary river floodway without obtaining a permit for construction in a floodway from the State Department of Natural Resources. Please note that if fill is needed to elevate an addition above the existing grade, prior approval  for the fill is required from the State Department of Natural Resources.)
   (B)   No action shall be taken by the Floodplain Administrator until a permit (when applicable) has been issued by the State Department of Natural Resources, granting approval for construction in a floodway. Once a permit for construction in a floodway has been issued by the State Department of Natural Resources, the Floodplain Administrator may issue the local floodplain development permit, provided the provisions contained in §§ 150.055 through 150.062 have been met. The floodplain development permit cannot be less restrictive than the permit for construction in a floodway issued by the State Department of Natural Resources. However, a community’s more restrictive regulations (if any) shall take precedence.
   (C)   No development shall be allowed that, acting alone or in combination with existing or future development, will adversely affect the efficiency or unduly restrict the capacity of the floodway. This ADVERSE AFFECT is defined as an increase in the elevation of the regulatory flood of at least 0.15 of one foot, as determined by comparing the regulatory flood elevation under the project condition to that under the natural or pre-floodway condition as proven with hydraulic analyses.
   (D)   For all projects involving channel modifications or fill (including levees), the county shall submit the data and request that the Federal Emergency Management Agency revise the regulatory flood data per mapping standard regulations found at 44 C.F.R. § 65.12.
(Ord. O-C-05-2, passed 9-15-2005; Am. Ord. O-C-15-4, passed 7-6-2015)