Where a zoning administrator, planning agency or a board of
zoning appeals has already been appointed to administer a zoning ordinance
adopted under § 59.69, § 59.692 or § 62.23(7),
Wis. Stats., these officials shall also administer this chapter.
Advise applicants of the ordinance provisions, assist in preparing
permit applications and appeals, and assure that the regional flood
elevation for the proposed development is shown on all permit applications.
Water surface profiles, floodplain zoning maps and ordinances,
and nonconforming uses and structures, including changes, appeals,
variances and amendments;
Investigate, prepare reports, and report violations of this chapter
to the municipal zoning agency and attorney for prosecution. Copies
of the reports shall also be sent to the Department regional office.
Land use permit. A land use permit shall be obtained before any new
development; repair, modification or addition to an existing structure;
or change in the use of a building or structure, including sewer and
water facilities, may be initiated. Application to the Zoning Administrator
shall include:
The elevation of the lowest floor of proposed buildings and
any fill using the vertical datum from the adopted study, either National
Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD) or North American Vertical Datum (NAVD);
Data sufficient to determine the regional flood elevation in NGVD or NAVD at the location of the development and to determine whether or not the requirements of Article III or Article IV are met; and
Data to determine if the proposed development will cause an obstruction to flow or an increase in regional flood height or discharge according to § 477-6. This may include any of the information noted in § 477-12A.
Hydraulic and hydrologic studies to analyze development. All hydraulic
and hydrologic studies shall be completed under the direct supervision
of a professional engineer registered in the state. The study contractor
shall be responsible for the technical adequacy of the study. All
studies shall be reviewed and approved by the Department.
The appropriate method shall be based on the standards
in § NR 116.07(3), Wis. Admin. Code, Hydrologic Analysis:
Determination of Regional Flood Discharge.
Hydraulic modeling. The regional flood elevation shall be based
on the standards in § NR 116.07(4), Wis. Admin. Code, Hydraulic
Analysis: Determination of Regional Flood Elevation, and the following:
Determination of the required limits of the hydraulic
model shall be based on detailed study information for downstream
structures (dam, bridge, culvert) to determine adequate starting WSEL
for the study.
A maximum distance of 500 feet between cross sections
is allowed in developed areas with additional intermediate cross sections
required at transitions in channel bottom slope, including a survey
of the channel at each location.
Additional cross sections are required at the downstream
and upstream limits of the proposed development and any necessary
intermediate locations based on the length of the reach if greater
than 500 feet.
Standard accepted engineering practices shall be
used when assigning parameters for the base model such as flow, Manning's
N values, expansion and contraction coefficients or effective flow
limits. The base model shall be calibrated to past flooding data such
as high-water marks to determine the reasonableness of the model results.
If no historical data is available, adequate justification shall be
provided for any parameters outside standard accepted engineering
practices.
The model must extend past the upstream limit of
the difference in the existing and proposed flood profiles in order
to provide a tie-in to existing studies. The height difference between
the proposed flood profile and the existing study profiles shall be
no more than 0.00 feet.
Mapping. A work map of the reach studied shall be provided,
showing all cross-section locations, floodway/floodplain limits based
on best available topographic data, geographic limits of the proposed
development and whether the proposed development is located in the
floodway.
If any part of the proposed development is in the
floodway, it must be added to the base model to show the difference
between existing and proposed conditions. The study must ensure that
all coefficients remain the same as in the existing model, unless
adequate justification based on standard accepted engineering practices
is provided.
Hydrology. If the proposed hydrology will change the existing
study, the appropriate method to be used shall be based on § NR
116.07(3), Wis. Admin. Code, Hydrologic Analysis: Determination of
Regional Flood Discharge.
Hydraulic model. The regional flood elevation shall be based
on the standards in § NR 116.07(4), Wis. Admin. Code, Hydraulic
Analysis: Determination of Regional Flood Elevation, and the following:
Duplicate Effective Model. The effective model
shall be reproduced to ensure correct transference of the model data
and to allow integration of the revised data to provide a continuous
FIS model upstream and downstream of the revised reach. If data from
the effective model is available, models shall be generated that duplicate
the FIS profiles and the elevations shown in the Floodway Data Table
in the FIS report to within 0.1 foot.
Corrected Effective Model. The Corrected Effective
Model shall not include any man-made physical changes since the effective
model date, but shall import the model into the most current version
of HEC-RAS for Department review.
Existing (Pre-Project Conditions) Model. The Existing
Model shall be required to support conclusions about the actual impacts
of the project associated with the Revised (Post-Project) Model or
to establish more up-to-date models on which to base the Revised (Post-Project)
Model.
Revised (Post-Project Conditions) Model. The Revised
(Post-Project Conditions) Model shall incorporate the Existing Model
and any proposed changes to the topography caused by the proposed
development. This model shall reflect proposed conditions.
All changes to the Duplicate Effective Model and
subsequent models must be supported by certified topographic information,
bridge plans, construction plans and survey notes.
Changes to the hydraulic models shall be limited
to the stream reach for which the revision is being requested. Cross
sections upstream and downstream of the revised reach shall be identical
to those in the effective model and result in water surface elevations
and top widths computed by the revised models matching those in the
effective models upstream and downstream of the revised reach as required.
The Effective Model shall not be truncated.
Consistency between the revised hydraulic models,
the revised floodplain and floodway delineations, the revised flood
profiles, topographic work map, annotated FIRMs and/or Flood Boundary
Floodway Maps (FBFMs), construction plans, and bridge plans.
Certified topographic map of suitable scale, contour
interval, and a planimetric map showing the applicable items. If a
digital version of the map is available, it may be submitted in order
that the FIRM may be more easily revised.
If an annotated FIRM and/or FBFM and digital mapping
data (GIS or CADD) are used then all supporting documentation or metadata
must be included with the data submission along with the Universal
Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection and State Plane Coordinate System
in accordance with FEMA mapping specifications.
All cross sections from the effective model shall
be labeled in accordance with the effective map and a cross section
lookup table shall be included to relate to the model input numbering
scheme.
Expiration. All permits issued under the authority of this chapter
shall expire no more than 180 days after issuance. The permit may
be extended for a maximum of 180 days for good and sufficient cause.
Certificate of compliance. No land shall be occupied or used, and
no building which is hereafter constructed, altered, added to, modified,
repaired, rebuilt or replaced shall be occupied, until a certificate
of compliance is issued by the Zoning Administrator, except where
no permit is required, subject to the following provisions:
The certificate of compliance shall show that the building or premises
or part thereof, and the proposed use, conform to the provisions of
this chapter;
If all provisions of this chapter are met, the certificate of compliance
shall be issued within 10 days after written notification that the
permitted work is completed;
The applicant shall submit a certification signed by a registered professional engineer, architect or land surveyor that the fill, lowest floor and floodproofing elevations are in compliance with the permit issued. Floodproofing measures also require certification by a registered professional engineer or architect that the requirements of § 477-28 are met.
Other permits. Prior to obtaining a floodplain development permit,
the applicant must secure all necessary permits from federal, state,
and local agencies, including but not limited to those required by
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers under Section 404 of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act, Amendments of 1972, 33 U.S.C. § 1344.
The Board of Zoning Appeals, created under § 62.23(7)(e),
Wis. Stats., for cities or villages, is hereby authorized or shall
be appointed to act for the purposes of this chapter. The Board shall
exercise the powers conferred by Wisconsin Statutes and adopt rules
for the conduct of business. The Zoning Administrator shall not be
the Secretary of the Board.
Appeals: hear and decide appeals where it is alleged there is
an error in any order, requirement, decision or determination made
by an administrative official in the enforcement or administration
of this chapter;
Appeals to the Board may be taken by any person aggrieved, or
by any officer or department of the municipality affected by any decision
of the Zoning Administrator or other administrative officer. Such
appeal shall be taken within 30 days unless otherwise provided by
the rules of the Board, by filing with the official whose decision
is in question, and with the Board, a notice of appeal specifying
the reasons for the appeal. The official whose decision is in question
shall transmit to the Board all records regarding the matter appealed.
Either affirm, reverse, vary or modify the order, requirement,
decision or determination appealed, in whole or in part, dismiss the
appeal for lack of jurisdiction or grant or deny the variance application;
and
Include the reasons for granting an appeal, describing the hardship
demonstrated by the applicant in the case of a variance, clearly stated
in the recorded minutes of the Board proceedings.
If a floodplain district boundary is established by approximate
or detailed floodplain studies, the flood elevations or profiles shall
prevail in locating the boundary. If none exist, other evidence may
be examined;
If the boundary is incorrectly mapped, the Board should inform the Zoning Committee or the person contesting the boundary location to petition the governing body for a map amendment according to Article VIII, Amendments.
The hardship is due to adoption of the floodplain ordinance
and unique property conditions not common to adjacent lots or premises.
In such case, the ordinance or map must be amended;
Variances shall only be granted upon a showing of good and sufficient
cause, shall be the minimum relief necessary, shall not cause increased
risks to public safety or nuisances, shall not increase costs for
rescue and relief efforts and shall not be contrary to the purpose
of the chapter.
When a floodplain variance is granted, the Board shall notify
the applicant in writing that it may increase risks to life and property,
and flood insurance premiums could increase up to $25 per $100 of
coverage. A copy shall be maintained with the variance record.
Uphold the denial where the Board agrees with the data showing an increase in flood elevation. Increases may only be allowed after amending the flood profile and map and all appropriate legal arrangements are made with all adversely affected property owners as per the requirements of Article VIII, Amendments; and
Grant the appeal where the Board agrees that the data properly demonstrates
that the project does not cause an increase, provided no other reasons
for denial exist.
No permit or variance shall be issued for a nonresidential structure
designed to be watertight below the regional flood elevation until
the applicant submits a plan certified by a registered professional
engineer or architect that the floodproofing measures will protect
the structure or development to the flood protection elevation and
submits a FEMA floodproofing certificate.
Openings may be equipped with screens, louvers, valves, or other
coverings or devices, provided that they permit the automatic entry
and exit of floodwaters.