WAC 173-158-076
Substantially damaged residential dwellings
other than farmhouses. For all substantially damaged residential
structures, other than farmhouses, located in a designated
floodway, the department, at the request of the local government,
is authorized to assess the risk of harm to life and property
posed by the specific conditions of the floodway. Based upon
scientific analysis of depth, velocity, flood-related erosion and
debris load potential, the department may exercise best
professional judgment in recommending to the local permitting
authority repair, replacement or relocation of a substantially
damaged structure. The property owner shall be responsible for
submitting to local government any information necessary to
complete the assessment required by this section when such
information is not otherwise available.
(1) Recommendation to repair or replace a substantially
damaged residential structure located in the regulatory floodway
shall be based on the flood characteristics at the site. In
areas of the floodway that are subject to shallow and low
velocity flooding, low flood-related erosion potential, and
adequate flood warning time to ensure evacuation, the department
may recommend the replacement or repair of the damaged structure.
Any substantially damaged residential structure located in the
regulatory floodway in a high risk zone based on the flood
characteristics will not be recommended to be repaired or
replaced. Flood warning times must be twelve hours or greater,
except if the local government demonstrates that it has a flood
warning system and/or emergency plan in operation. For purposes
of this paragraph flood characteristics must include:
(a) Flood depths can not exceed more than three feet; flood
velocities cannot exceed more than three feet per second.
(b) No evidence of flood-related erosion. Flood erosion
will be determined by location of the project site in
relationship to channel migration boundaries adopted by the local
government. Absent channel migration boundaries, flood erosion
will be determined by evidence of existing overflow channels and
bank erosion.
At the request of local government, the department will
prepare a report of findings and recommendations for local
government concurrence on repair or replacement of substantially
damaged residential structures located in the regulatory
floodway.
Without a recommendation from the department for the repair
or replacement of a substantially damaged residential structure
located in the regulatory floodway, no repair or replacement is
allowed per WAC 173-158-070(1).
(2) Before the repair, replacement, or reconstruction is
started, all requirements of the National Flood Insurance
Program, the state requirements adopted pursuant to RCW 86.16.031(8), and all applicable local regulations must be
satisfied. In addition the following conditions must be met:
(a) There is no potential safe building location for the
replacement residential structure on the same property outside
the regulatory floodway.
(b) A replacement residential structure is a residential
structure built as a substitute for a previously existing
residential structure of equivalent use and size.
(c) Repairs or reconstruction or replacement of a
residential structure shall not increase the total square footage
of floodway encroachment.
(d) The elevation of the lowest floor of the substantially
damaged or replacement residential structure is a minimum of one
foot higher than the base flood elevation.
(e) New and replacement water supply systems are designed to
eliminate or minimize infiltration of flood water into the
system.
(f) New and replacement sanitary sewerage systems are
designed and located to eliminate or minimize infiltration of
flood water into the system and discharge from the system into
the flood waters.
(g) All other utilities and connections to public utilities
are designed, constructed, and located to eliminate or minimize
flood damage.
[Statutory Authority: Chapter 86.16 RCW. 02-15-093 (Order
00-26), § 173-158-076, filed 7/16/02, effective 8/16/02.]