Unless specifically defined below, words or phrases used in this chapter shall be interpreted so as to give them the meaning they have in common usage and to give this chapter its most reasonable application.
A Zone.See "Special flood hazard area."
"Appeal"means a request for a review of the Floodplain Administrator’s interpretation of any provision of this chapter or decision on a request for a variance.
"Area of shallow flooding"means a designated AO, AH, or VO Zone on the Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM). The base flood depths range from one to three feet; a clearly defined channel does not exist; the path of flooding is unpredictable and indeterminate; and velocity flow may be evident. Such flooding is characterized by ponding or sheet flow.
"As-builts"are a revised set of drawings submitted by a contractor upon completion of a project or a particular job. They reflect all changes made in the specifications and working drawings during the construction process, and show the exact dimensions, geometry, and location of all elements of the work completed under the contract.
"Base flood"means a flood having a one percent chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year (also called the "one hundred (100) year flood").
"Base flood elevation (BFE)"means the elevation above "mean sea level" to which the base flood will rise as determined by FEMA or the Floodplain Administrator. This elevation is shown on the Flood Insurance Rate Map for Zones AE, AH, A1-30, VE, and V1-V30.
"Basement"means any area of the building having its floor subgrade (below ground level) on all sides.
"Breakaway walls"are any type of walls, whether solid or lattice and whether constructed of concrete, masonry, wood, metal, plastic, or any other suitable building material, that are not part of the structural support of the building, and that are designed to break away under abnormally high tides or wave action without causing any damage to the structural integrity of the building on which they are used or any buildings to which they might be carried by flood waters. A breakaway wall shall have a safe design loading resistance of not less than ten (10) and no more than twenty (20) pounds per square foot. Use of breakaway walls must be certified by a registered engineer or architect and shall meet the following conditions:
a. Breakaway wall collapse shall result from a water load less than that which would occur during the base flood; and
b. The elevated portion of the building shall not incur any structural damage due to the effects of wind and water loads acting simultaneously in the event of the base flood.
"Building permit"shall mean a building permit, plumbing permit, electrical permit, or mechanical permit issued by the City of Oakley Building Department.
"Coastal high hazard area"means an area of special flood hazard extending from offshore to the inland limit of a primary frontal dune along an open coast and any other area subject to high velocity wave action from storms or seismic sources. It is the area subject to high velocity waters, including coastal and tidal inundation or tsunamis. The area is designated on a FIRM as Zone V1-V30, VE or V.
"Development"means any manmade change to improved or unimproved real estate, including but not limited to buildings or other structures, mining, dredging, filling, grading, paving, excavation, drilling operations, and storage of equipment or materials.
"Encroachment"means the advance or infringement of uses, fill, excavation, buildings, permanent structures, or development into a floodplain that may impede or alter the flow capacity of a floodplain.
"Existing manufactured home park or subdivision"means a manufactured home park or subdivision for which the construction of facilities for servicing the lot on which the manufactured homes are to be affixed, including, at a minimum, the installation of utilities, either final site grading or the pouring of concrete pads, and the construction of streets are completed on or before the effective date of the ordinance codified in this chapter.
"Expansion to an existing manufactured home park or subdivision"means the preparation of additional sites by the construction of facilities for servicing the lots on which the manufactured homes are to be affixed, including the installation of utilities, either final site grading or pouring of concrete pads, or the construction of streets.
"Flood Boundary and Floodway Map"means the official map described in Section
6.12.114 on which FEMA or the Federal Insurance Administration (FIA) has delineated both the areas of flood hazard and the floodway.
"Flood hazard zone"means an area subject to flooding that is delineated as either a Special Flood Hazard Area (FEMA one hundred (100) year floodplain) or other areas with flood risk, such as the two hundred (200) or five hundred (500) year floodplains, or areas that are at risk of flooding from levee failure. The identification of flood hazard zones does not imply that areas outside the flood hazard zones, or uses permitted within flood hazard zones, will be free from flooding or flood damage.
"Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM)"means the official map described in Section
6.12.114 on which FEMA or FIA has delineated both the special flood hazard areas (SFHAs) and the risk premium zones applicable to the community.
"Flood Insurance Study (FIS)"means the official report described in Section
6.12.114 provided by the FIA that includes flood profiles, the FIRM, the Flood Boundary and Floodway Map, and in some areas, the base flood elevation.
"Flood or flooding"means a general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from:
a. The overflow of flood waters; and/or
b. The unusual and rapid accumulation or runoff of surface waters from any source; and/or
c. The collapse or subsidence of land along the shore of a lake or other body of water as a result of erosion or undermining caused by waves or currents of water exceeding anticipated cyclical levels or suddenly caused by an unusually high water level in a natural body of water accompanied by a severe storm or by an unanticipated force of nature such as flash flood or an abnormal tidal surge or by some similarly unusual and unforeseeable event that results in flooding as defined in this definition.
"Flood-related erosion"means the collapse or subsidence of land along the shore of a lake or other body of water as a result of undermining caused by waves or currents of water exceeding anticipated cyclical levels or suddenly caused by an unusually high water level in a natural body of water, accompanied by a severe storm, or by an unanticipated force of nature, such as a flash flood or an abnormal tidal surge, or by some similarly unusual and unforeseeable event which results in flooding.
"Flood-related erosion area management"means the operation of an overall program of corrective and preventive measures for reducing flood-related erosion damage, including but not limited to emergency preparedness plans, flood-related erosion control work, and floodplain management regulations.
"Flood resistant"means any combination of structural and nonstructural additions, changes, or adjustments to structures that reduces flood damage, generally allowing flood waters to enter and exit the building without causing any significant damage to the structures or their contents.
"Flood resistant materials"means any building material capable of withstanding direct and prolonged (at least seventy-two (72) hours) contact with flood waters without sustaining significant damage (any damage requiring more than low-cost cosmetics repairsuch as painting). Acceptable materials are specified in "technical bulletins" and/or as approved by the Floodplain Administrator.
"Floodplain Administrator"is the individual appointed to administer and enforce the floodplain management regulations, including the issuance of floodplain permits. The Floodplain Administrator, as used in this chapter, shall mean the City Engineer or a person under his or her supervision.
"Floodplain management"means the operation of an overall program of corrective and preventive measures for reducing flood damage and preserving and enhancing, where possible, natural resources in the floodplain, including but not limited to emergency preparedness plans, flood control work, and floodplain management regulations.
"Floodplain management regulations"means zoning ordinances, subdivision regulations, building codes, health regulations, special purpose ordinances (such as floodplain ordinance, grading ordinance, and erosion control regulations), and other applications of the police power that control development in floodprone areas. This term describes Federal, State, or local regulations in any combination thereof that provide standards for preventing and reducing flood loss and damage.
"Floodplain permit"means a permit required of all development which occurs in any area designated by FEMA as a SFHA and as required by the Floodplain Administrator.
"Floodproofing"means any combination of structural and nonstructural additions, changes, or adjustments to nonresidential structures that eliminate flood damage to real estate or improved real property, water and sanitary facilities, and nonresidential structures and their contents.
"Floodway"means the channel of a river or other watercourse and the adjacent land areas that must be reserved in order to discharge the base flood without cumulatively increasing the water surface elevation more than one foot. The floodway shall be as designated on the FIRMs and/or as designated by the Floodplain Administrator whether or not a floodplain is shown on the FIRM. Also referred to as "regulatory floodway."
"Floodway fringe"means that area of the floodplain on either side of the "regulatory floodway" where encroachment may be permitted.
"Fraud and victimization,"as related to Sections
6.12.148 through
6.12.152, means that a variance granted must not cause fraud on or victimization of the public. In examining this requirement, the Zoning Administrator will consider the fact that every newly constructed building adds to government responsibilities and remains a part of the community for fifty (50) to one hundred (100) years. Buildings that are permitted to be constructed below the base flood elevation are subject during all those years to increased risk of damage from floods, while future owners of the property and the community as a whole are subject to all the costs, inconvenience, danger, and suffering that those increased flood damages bring. In addition, future owners may purchase the property, unaware that it is subject to potential flood damage, and can be insured only at very high flood insurance rates.
"Freeboard"means a factor of safety usually expressed in feet above a base flood elevation for purposes of floodplain management. "Freeboard" tends to compensate for the many unknown factors that could contribute to flood heights greater than the height calculated for a selected size flood and floodway conditions, such as wave action, bridge openings, and the hydrological effect of urbanization of the watershed.
"Functionally dependent use"means a use that cannot perform its intended purpose unless it is located or carried out in close proximity to water. The term includes only docking facilities, port facilities that are necessary for the loading and unloading of cargo or passengers, and ship building and ship repair facilities; it does not include long-term storage or related manufacturing facilities.
"Governing body"is the local governing unit, i.e., county or municipality, that is empowered to adopt and implement regulations to provide for the public health, safety, and general welfare of its citizenry.
"Hardship,"as used in the definition of "variance" herein, means the exceptional hardship that would result from a failure to grant the requested variance. The City requires that the variance be exceptional, unusual, and peculiar to the property involved. Mere economic or financial hardship alone is not exceptional. Inconvenience, aesthetic considerations, physical handicaps, personal preferences, or the disapproval of one’s neighbors likewise cannot, as a rule, qualify as an exceptional hardship. All of these problems can be resolved through other means without granting a variance, even if the alternative is more expensive, or requires the property owner to build elsewhere or put the parcel to a different use than originally intended.
"Highest adjacent grade"means the highest natural (i.e., undisturbed) elevation of the ground surface prior to construction next to the proposed walls of a structure.
"Historic structure"means any structure that is:
a. Listed individually in the National Register of Historic Places or preliminarily determined by the Secretary of the Interior as meeting the requirements for individual listing in the National Register;
b. Certified or preliminarily determined by the Secretary of the Interior as contributing to the historical significance of a registered historic district or a district preliminarily determined by the Secretary of the Interior to qualify as a registered historic district;
c. Individually listed on a State inventory of historic places in states with historic preservation programs which have been approved by the Secretary of the Interior; or
d. Individually listed on a local inventory of historic places in communities with historic preservation programs that have been certified either by an approved State program as determined by the Secretary of the Interior or directly by the Secretary of the Interior in states with approved programs.
"Levee"means a man-made structure, usually an earthen embankment, designed and constructed in accordance with sound engineering practices to contain, control, or divert the flow of water so as to provide protection from temporary flooding.
"Levee system"means a flood protection system which consists of a levee, or levees, and associated structures, such as closure and drainage devices, which are constructed and operated in accord with sound engineering practices.
"Lowest floor"means the lowest floor of the lowest enclosed area, including basement. An unfinished or flood resistant enclosure, usable solely for parking of vehicles, building access, or storage in an area other than a basement area is not considered a building’s lowest floor; provided, that such enclosure is not built so as to render the structure in violation of the applicable nonelevation design requirements of this chapter. This definition allows attached garages to be built at grade (with adequate venting). Below grade garages and storage areas are not allowed as they are considered to be basements.
"Manufactured home"means a structure, transportable in one or more sections, that is built on a permanent chassis and is designed for use with or without a permanent foundation when connected to the required utilities. For floodplain management purposes the term "manufactured home" also includes park trailers, travel trailers, and other similar vehicles placed on a site for greater than one hundred eighty (180) consecutive days and neither continuously licensed nor "road ready."
"Market value"shall be determined by estimating the cost to replace the structure in new condition and adjusting that cost figure by the amount of depreciation which has accrued since the structure was constructed. The cost of replacement of the structure shall be based on a square foot cost factor determined by reference to a building cost estimating guide recognized by the building construction industry. The amount of depreciation shall be determined by taking into account the age and physical condition but shall not include economic or other forms of external obsolescence. Use of replacement costs or accrued depreciation factors different from those contained in recognized building cost estimating guides may be considered only if such factors are included in a report prepared by an independent professional appraiser and supported by a written explanation of the differences.
"Mean sea level"means, for purposes of the NFIP, the National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD) of 1929 or other datum, to which base flood elevations shown on a community’s FIRM are referenced.
"New construction,"for floodplain management purposes, means structures for which the "start of construction" commenced on or after June 26, 2000, the effective date of the City of Oakley’s floodplain management ordinance, and includes any subsequent improvements to such structures.
"Obstruction"includes but is not limited to any dam, wall, wharf, embankment, levee, dike, pile, abutment, protection, excavation, channelization, bridge, conduit, culvert, building, wire, fence, rock, gravel, refuse, fill, structure, vegetation, or other material that may alter, impede, retard, or change the direction and/or velocity of the flow of water because of (a) its location in, along, across, or projecting into any watercourse, (b) its propensity to snare or collect debris carried by the flow of water, or (c) its likelihood of being carried downstream.
"Person"means an individual or his or her agent, firm, partnership, association, or corporation, or any agent of the aforementioned groups, or this State or its agencies or its political subdivisions.
"Public safety and nuisance,"as related to the issuance of variances under this chapter, means that the granting of a variance must not result in anything that is injurious to safety or health of an entire community or neighborhood, or any considerable number of persons, or unlawfully obstructs the free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any navigable lake or river, bay, stream, canal, or basin.
"Reconstruction"means to perform major construction or modifications to an existing structure that makes the existing structure like or better than new. Reconstruction does not cover normal or routine maintenance unless otherwise specified in the definition of "historical structures" herein.
"Recreational vehicle"means a vehicle that is:
a. Built on a single chassis;
b. Four hundred (400) square feet or less when measured at the largest horizontal projection;
c. Designed to be self-propelled or permanently towable by a light duty truck; and
d. Designed primarily not for use as a permanent dwelling but as temporary living quarters for recreational, camping, travel, or seasonal use.
"Regulatory floodway"means the channel of a river or other watercourse and the adjacent land areas that must be reserved to discharge the base flood without cumulatively increasing the water surface elevation more than one foot.
"Remedy a violation"means to bring a structure or other development into compliance with State or local floodplain management regulations, or if that is not possible, to reduce the impacts of its noncompliance. Ways that impacts may be reduced include protecting the structure or other affected development from flood damages, implementing the enforcement provisions of this chapter or otherwise deterring future similar violations, or reducing Federal financial exposure with regard to the structure or other development.
"Riverine"means relating to, formed by, or resembling a river (including tributaries), stream, brook, etc.
"Sand dunes"means naturally occurring accumulations of sand in ridges or mounds landward of the beach.
"Start of construction"includes substantial improvement and means the date the building permit was issued, if the actual start of construction, repair, reconstruction, placement, or other improvement was within one hundred eighty (180) days of the permit date. The actual start means either (a) the first placement of permanent construction of a structure on a site, such as the pouring of slab or footings, the installation of piles, the construction of columns, or any work beyond the stage of excavation or (b) the placement of a manufactured home on a foundation. Permanent construction does not include land preparation, such as clearing, grading, and filling; the installation of streets and/or walkways; excavation for a basement, foundations, footings, or piers or the erection of temporary forms; and installation on the property of accessory buildings, such as garages or sheds not occupied as dwelling units or not part of the main structure. For a substantial improvement, the actual start of construction means the first alteration of any wall, ceiling, floor, or other structural part of a building, whether or not that alteration affects the external dimensions of the building.
"Structure"means a walled and roofed building or manufactured home, including a gas or liquid storage tank, that is principally above ground.
"Substantial damage"means damage of any origin sustained by a structure sufficiently extensive that the cost of restoring the structure to its before-damaged condition would equal or exceed fifty percent (50%) of the market value of the structure before the damage occurred.
"Substantial improvement"means any reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition, or improvement of a structure, the cost of which equals or exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the market value of the structure before the "start of construction" of the improvement. The term includes structures that have incurred "substantial damage," regardless of the actual repair work performed.
The percentage figure shall be added to any successive building permits that may be issued or have been issued within a contiguous ten (10) year span. "Substantial improvement" is considered to occur when the first alteration of any wall, ceiling, floor, or other structural part of the building commences, whether or not that alteration affects the external dimensions of the structure. The term does not, however, include either: |
a. | Any project for improvement of a structure, not required because of flood damage, that is necessary to comply with existing State or local health, sanitary, or safety code specifications that are the minimum necessary to assure safe living conditions; or |
b. | Any alteration of an "historic structure," if the alteration will not preclude the structure’s continued designation as an "historic structure." |
"Technical bulletin"means bulletins developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the California Department of Water Resources (CA DWR), or the Floodplain Administrator. Bulletins clarify specific requirements of Federal, State, or local laws pertaining to floodplain management.
"Urban level of flood protection"means the level of protection that is necessary to withstand flooding that has a one in two hundred (200) chance of occurring in any given year using criteria consistent with, or developed by, the California Department of Water Resources. "Urban level of flood protection" shall not mean shallow flooding or flooding from local drainage that meets the criteria of the national FEMA standard of flood protection.
"Variance"means a grant of relief from the requirements of this chapter that permits construction in a manner that would otherwise be prohibited by this chapter.
"Violation"means the failure of a structure or other development to comply with this chapter. A structure or other development without an elevation certificate, other certifications, or other evidence of compliance required in this chapter is presumed to be in violation until such time as that documentation is provided.
"Water surface elevation"means the height, in relation to the National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD) of 1929 or other datum, where specified, of floods of various magnitudes and frequencies in the floodplains of coastal or riverine areas.
"Watercourse"means a lake, river, creek, stream, wash, arroyo, channel, or other topographic feature on or over which waters flow at least periodically. Watercourse includes specifically designated areas in which substantial flood damage may occur.
(Ord. 11-14, 9/10/2014; Ord. 14-16, 7/12/2016)