The Old Saybrook Town Engineer is hereby appointed to administer
and implement the provisions of this chapter. The Town Engineer shall
have the responsibility and authority to grant or deny permit applications
for development in special flood hazard areas in accordance with the
provisions of this chapter. The Zoning Enforcement Officer and Building
Official serve as deputies to assist and act for the Town Engineer.
Where required under this chapter, a registered professional
engineer or architect shall certify that the design and methods of
construction are in accordance with accepted standards of practice
for meeting the provisions of this chapter. Such certification must
be provided to the Old Saybrook Town Engineer.
In the administration of this chapter, the Old Saybrook Town
Engineer shall perform the following duties, among others:
A. Application stage.
(1) Review all development permits to assure that the requirements of
this chapter have been satisfied;
(2) Advise the permittee that additional federal or state permits may
be required, and if specific federal or state permit requirements
are known, require that copies of such permits be provided and maintained
on file with the application for certificate of zoning compliance.
Such additional permit requirements may include, but not be limited
to: coastal area management permit, water diversion permit, dam safety
permit, and Corps of Engineers 401 and 404 permits;
(3) Notify adjacent communities and the Department of Environmental Protection,
Inland Water Resources Management Division, prior to any alteration
or relocation of a watercourse, and submit evidence of such notification
to the Federal Emergency Management Agency;
(4) Require, as a condition of any approval, that the flood-carrying
capacity within an altered or relocated portion of any watercourse
is maintained;
(5) Make the necessary interpretation, where needed, as to the exact
location of boundaries of the special flood hazard areas. Any person
contesting the interpretation of the location of a boundary shall
be given a reasonable opportunity to appeal the interpretation as
provided in this chapter;
(6) Require the applicant to provide base flood elevation data for all
proposed development, including manufactured home parks and subdivisions,
which are five acres or 50 lots, whichever occurs first, and are located
in Zone A; and
(7) Obtain, review and reasonably utilize any base flood elevation and floodway data available from a federal, state or other source, including data developed pursuant to §
128-17A(6) of this chapter, in order to administer the provisions of §
128-20, when base flood elevation data or floodway have not been provided in accordance with §
128-8.
B. Construction stage.
(1) Obtain, record and maintain the as-built elevation in relation to
mean sea level of the lowest floor, including basement, of all new
construction, or substantial improvement or repair to a structure
that has sustained substantial damage. The Town Engineer shall require
and maintain elevation certificates provided by the applicant and
prepared by a Connecticut licensed land surveyor, engineer or architect
containing this information;
(2) Obtain, record and maintain the elevation in relation to mean sea
level to which all new construction, substantial improvements or repair
to a structure that has sustained substantial damage has been floodproofed.
The Town Engineer shall require and maintain FEMA floodproofing certificates
for nonresidential structures (FEMA Form 81-65). A floodproofing certificate
shall be provided by the applicant and prepared by a Connecticut licensed
engineer or architect containing this information;
(3) In coastal high-hazard areas, obtain certification from a registered professional engineer or architect that the standard of §
128-20D(2) and
(3) have been met; and
(4) Maintain all records pertaining to the provisions of this chapter.