During the erection, repair or demolition of buildings, the employees and the public shall be protected against accident or injury as provided by statute or the regulations of any state or municipal department having jurisdiction.
No building material or equipment shall be placed in any public street, including any sidewalks, except to such extent and under such conditions as may be prescribed in the building permit; and for such space as is thus used, the permit holder shall pay a fee set forth by resolution of the Board of Trustees in the Master Fee Schedule, which may be amended from time to time.
A. 
All work shall be properly safeguarded during construction. Fences around building operations may be required by the Inspector when he considers such protection necessary.
B. 
When any part of a building under construction, alteration or demolition, which is more than one story high, shall be within five feet of a street line, a shed shall be provided over the sidewalk for safeguarding pedestrian passage, such shed to sustain any load that may be placed upon it during the construction of the building; and such shed shall be not less than six feet wide and not less than seven feet six inches high in the clear, and shall be kept lighted all night. No rental charge shall be made for space used by the supports of such shed which are placed in a public street.
C. 
No blasting shall be done during any building operation except under authority of the Inspector and the Chief of Police.
D. 
Any building to be demolished shall be taken down story by story. No materials shall be placed on any floor during demolition that would render it unsafe, but all shall be at once lowered to the ground. All combustible material shall be removed or destroyed. No material shall be destroyed by burning on the premises or in the immediate vicinity.
All provisions set forth in Part 1910, Occupational Safety and Health Standards, and Part 1926, Safety and Health Regulations For Construction, of the regulations promulgated by the United States Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, shall apply in connection with this chapter.
No adjacent property shall be damaged by excessive terracing or otherwise. Sheet piling or retaining walls shall be employed in connection with excavations, where necessary for the protection of adjacent property.
A. 
All roofs and impervious surfaces of one- and two-family residences shall be drained to dry wells or other methods to be approved by the Building Inspector of the Village, and to be inspected by him before being covered or concealed.
B. 
In connection with the construction of any new business building or multifamily dwelling, the applicant for a building permit shall submit to the Building Inspector three sets of drainage plans showing in detail the drainage system for all roof or surface water. The Building Inspector shall not issue a certificate of occupancy for any building in either of these classifications until and unless the Village Engineer shall have certified to the Building Inspector in writing that the entire drainage system has been installed in a manner approved by him. The Village Engineer's approval may be noted by his signature upon the drainage plans.
C. 
No drainage system or pipes connecting therewith shall be covered or concealed until they have been inspected and approved by the Village Engineer.