The Building Official is hereby appointed to administer and
implement these regulations and is referred to herein as the Floodplain
Administrator. The Floodplain Administrator may:
A. Do
the work themselves. In the absence of a designated Floodplain Administrator,
the duties are conducted by Mathews County Chief Executive Officer.
B. Delegate
duties and responsibilities set forth in these regulations to qualified
technical personnel, plan examiners, inspectors, and other employees.
C. Enter
into a written agreement or written contract with another community
or private sector entity to administer specific provisions of these
regulations. Administration of any part of these regulations by another
entity shall not relieve the community of its responsibilities pursuant
to the participation requirements of the National Flood Insurance
Program as set forth in the Code of Federal Regulations at 44 CFR.
59.22.
The duties and responsibilities of the Floodplain Administrator
shall include but are not limited to:
A. Review applications for permits to determine whether proposed activities
will be located in the special flood hazard area (SFHA).
B. Interpret floodplain boundaries and provide available base flood
elevation and flood hazard information.
C. Review applications to determine whether proposed activities will
be reasonably safe from flooding and require new construction and
substantial improvements to meet the requirements of these regulations.
D. Review applications to determine whether all necessary permits have
been obtained from the federal, state or local agencies from which
prior or concurrent approval is required; in particular, permits from
state agencies for any construction, reconstruction, repair, or alteration
of a dam, reservoir, or waterway obstruction (including bridges, culverts,
structures), any alteration of a watercourse, or any change of the
course, current, or cross-section of a stream or body of water, including
any change to the one-hundred-year-frequency floodplain of free-flowing
nontidal waters of the state.
E. Verify that applicants proposing an alteration of a watercourse have
notified adjacent communities, the Department of Conservation and
Recreation (Division of Dam Safety and Floodplain Management), and
other appropriate agencies (VADEQ, USACE) and have submitted copies
of such notifications to FEMA.
F. Advise applicants for new construction or substantial improvement
of structures that are located within an area of the Coastal Barrier
Resources System established by the Coastal Barrier Resources Act that federal flood insurance is not available on such
structures; areas subject to this limitation are shown on Flood Insurance
Rate Maps as coastal barrier resource system areas (CBRS) or otherwise
protected areas (OPA).
G. Approve applications and issue permits to develop in flood hazard
areas if the provisions of these regulations have been met, or disapprove
applications if the provisions of these regulations have not been
met.
H. Inspect or cause to be inspected, buildings, structures, and other
development for which permits have been issued to determine compliance
with these regulations or to determine if noncompliance has occurred
or violations have been committed.
I. Review elevation certificates and require incomplete or deficient
certificates to be corrected.
J. Submit to FEMA, or require applicants to submit to FEMA, data and
information necessary to maintain FIRMs, including hydrologic and
hydraulic engineering analyses prepared by or for Mathews County,
within six months after such data and information becomes available
if the analyses indicate changes in base flood elevations.
K. Maintain and permanently keep records that are necessary for the
administration of these regulations, including:
(1) Flood Insurance Studies, Flood Insurance Rate Maps (including historic
studies and maps and current effective studies and maps) and letters
of map change; and
(2) Documentation supporting issuance and denial of permits, elevation
certificates, documentation of the elevation (in relation to the datum
on the FIRM) to which structures have been floodproofed, other required
design certifications, variances, and records of enforcement actions
taken to correct violations of these regulations.
L. Enforce the provisions of these regulations, investigate violations,
issue notices of violations or stop-work orders, and require permit
holders to take corrective action.
M. Advise the Board of Building Appeals regarding the intent of these
regulations and, for each application for a variance, prepare a staff
report and recommendation.
N. Administer the requirements related to proposed work on existing
buildings:
(1) Make determinations as to whether buildings and structures that are
located in flood hazard areas and that are damaged by any cause have
been substantially damaged.
(2) Make reasonable efforts to notify owners of substantially damaged
structures of the need to obtain a permit to repair, rehabilitate,
or reconstruct, and prohibit the noncompliant repair of substantially
damaged buildings except for temporary emergency protective measures
necessary to secure a property or stabilize a building or structure
to prevent additional damage.
O. Undertake, as determined appropriate by the Floodplain Administrator
due to the circumstances, other actions which may include, but are
not limited to, issuing press releases, public service announcements,
and other public information materials related to permit requests
and repair of damaged structures; coordinating with other federal,
state, and local agencies to assist with substantial damage determinations;
providing owners of damaged structures information related to the
proper repair of damaged structures in special flood hazard areas;
and assisting property owners with documentation necessary to file
claims for increased cost of compliance coverage under NFIP flood
insurance policies.
P. Notify the Federal Emergency Management Agency when the corporate
boundaries of Mathews County have been modified and:
(1) Provide a map that clearly delineates the new corporate boundaries
or the new area for which the authority to regulate pursuant to these
regulations has either been assumed or relinquished through annexation;
and
(2) If the FIRM for any annexed area includes special flood hazard areas
that have flood zones that have regulatory requirements that are not
set forth in these regulations, prepare amendments to these regulations
to adopt the FIRM and appropriate requirements, and submit the amendments
to the governing body for adoption; such adoption shall take place
at the same time as or prior to the date of annexation, and a copy
of the amended regulations shall be provided to Department of Conservation
and Recreation (Division of Dam Safety and Floodplain Management)
and FEMA.
Q. Upon the request of FEMA, complete and submit a report concerning
participation in the NFIP which may request information regarding
the number of buildings in the SFHA, number of permits issued for
development in the SFHA, and number of variances issued for development
in the SFHA.
R. It is the duty of the Floodplain Administrator to take into account
flood, mudslide and flood-related erosion hazards, to the extent that
they are known, in all official actions relating to land management
and use throughout the entire jurisdictional area of the community,
whether or not those hazards have been specifically delineated geographically
(e.g., via mapping or surveying).
The Floodplain Administrator shall make interpretations, where
needed, as to the exact location of special flood hazard areas, floodplain
boundaries, and floodway boundaries. The following shall apply to
the use and interpretation of FIRMs and data:
A. Where field surveyed topography indicates that adjacent ground elevations:
(1) Are below the base flood elevation, even in areas not delineated
as a special flood hazard area on a FIRM, the area shall be considered
as special flood hazard area and subject to the requirements of these
regulations;
(2) Are above the base flood elevation, the area shall be regulated as
special flood hazard area unless the applicant obtains a letter of
map change that removes the area from the SFHA.
B. In FEMA-identified special flood hazard areas where base flood elevation
and floodway data have not been identified and in areas where FEMA
has not identified SFHAs, any other flood hazard data available from
a federal, state, or other source shall be reviewed and reasonably
used.
C. Base flood elevations and designated floodway boundaries on FIRMs
and in FISs shall take precedence over base flood elevations and floodway
boundaries by any other sources if such sources show reduced floodway
widths and/or lower base flood elevations.
D. Other sources of data shall be reasonably used if such sources show
increased base flood elevations and/or larger floodway areas than
are shown on FIRMs and in FISs.
E. If a Preliminary Flood Insurance Rate Map and/or a Preliminary Flood
Insurance Study has been provided by FEMA:
(1) Upon the issuance of a letter of final determination by FEMA, the
preliminary flood hazard data shall be used and shall replace the
flood hazard data previously provided from FEMA for the purposes of
administering these regulations.
(2) Prior to the issuance of a letter of final determination by FEMA, the use of preliminary flood hazard data shall be deemed the best available data pursuant to §
63-15B and used where no base flood elevations and/or floodway areas are provided on the effective FIRM.
(3) Prior to issuance of a letter of final determination by FEMA, the
use of preliminary flood hazard data is permitted where the preliminary
base flood elevations or floodway areas exceed the base flood elevations
and/or designated floodway widths in existing flood hazard data provided
by FEMA. Such preliminary data may be subject to change and/or appeal
to FEMA.
The delineation of any of the floodplain districts may be revised
by Mathews County where natural or man-made changes have occurred
and/or where more detailed studies have been conducted or undertaken
by the United States Army Corps of Engineers or other qualified agency,
or an individual documents the need for such change. However, prior
to any such change, approval must be obtained from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
Initial interpretations of the boundaries of the Floodplain
Districts shall be made by the Floodplain Administrator. Should a
dispute arise concerning the boundaries of any of the districts, the
Board of Building Appeals shall make the necessary determination.
The person questioning or contesting the location of the district
boundary shall be given a reasonable opportunity to present his case
to the Board and to submit his own technical evidence if he so desires.
A community's base flood elevations may increase or decrease
resulting from physical changes affecting flooding conditions. As
soon as practicable, but not later than six months after the date
such information becomes available, a community shall notify the Federal
Emergency Management Agency of the changes by submitting technical
or scientific data. Such a submission is necessary so that upon confirmation
of those physical changes affecting flooding conditions, risk premium
rates and floodplain management requirements will be based upon current
data.
When development in the floodplain causes a change in the base
flood elevation, the applicant, including state agencies, must notify
FEMA by applying for a conditional letter of map revision or a letter
of map revision. Examples:
A. Any development that causes a rise in the base flood elevations within
the floodway.
B. Any development occurring in Zone AE without a designated floodway,
which will cause a rise of more than one foot in the base flood elevation.
C. Alteration or relocation of a stream (including but not limited to
installing culverts and bridges) 44 Code of Federal Regulations 65.3
and 65.6(a)(12).