The purpose of this district is to protect life,
health, and property; to minimize expenditures of public monies for
costly flood-control projects; to minimize rescue and relief efforts
generally undertaken at the expense of the general public; to minimize
damage to public facilities, such as sewer and water facilities and
streets and bridges; to maintain floodwater storage capacity; and
to discourage the victimization of unwary residents. The standards
set out in this article shall apply in this overlay district.
The degree of flood protection intended to be
provided by this chapter is considered reasonable for regulatory purposes
and is based on engineering and scientific methods of study. Larger
floods may occur on rare occasions or flood height may be increased
by man-made or natural causes, such as ice jams and bridge openings
restricted by debris. This article does not imply that areas outside
floodplain zoning district boundaries or land uses permitted within
such districts will always be totally free from flooding or flood
damages, nor shall this article create liability on the part of or
cause of action against the Tribe or any officer or employee thereof
for any flood damage that may result from reliance of this article.
The floodplain areas within the jurisdiction
of this article shall be one main district titled "general floodplain
district (GFP)" and shall be, as data becomes available, subdivided
into two districts:
B. Flood-fringe district (FF).
The provisions for the general floodplain district
shall apply to all floodplains listed as A Zones on the Official Floodplain
Zoning Map for which regional flood data is not available or where
regional flood data is available but floodways have not been delineated.
As adequate regional flood information becomes available and floodways
are delineated for portions of this district, such portions shall
be placed in the flood-fringe or floodway district, as appropriate.
The following procedure shall be used by the
committee for recommendation to the Tribal Legislature in disputes
of a floodplain zoning district boundary:
A. A flood district boundary is established by flood maps or engineering studies pursuant to §
625-174B; the flood elevation or flood profiles for the point in question shall be the governing factor in locating the district boundary. If no elevation or profiles are available to the committee for recommendation to the Tribal Legislature, any other available evidence may be examined.
B. In all cases, the person contesting the location of the district boundary shall be given a reasonable opportunity to present the case to the committee for recommendation to the Tribal Legislature and, if he so chooses, submit technical evidence. Where it is determined that the district boundary as mapped is incorrect, the committee shall proceed to recommend to the Tribal Legislature a map amendment pursuant to §
625-183.
It is the responsibility of the leaseholder
or leaseholder's agent to secure all other necessary permits from
all appropriate federal, tribal, and local agencies, including those
required under Section 404 of the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act, Amendments of 1972, 33 U.S.C. § 1344.