Saturday, November 5, 2011

Scott opened the door to dump property on the Keys

County officials say the county must now amend its code to allow for the new certificate-of-compliance provision. The County Commission is expected to discuss the change at its Nov. 16 meeting at the Murray E. Nelson Government and Cultural Center in Key Largo.

Amplify’d from www.keysnet.com

FEMA OK with county's new request-only inspections


The Federal Emergency Management Agency has given tentative approval to Monroe County's plan to amend the long-derided downstairs-enclosure inspection program.

In an Oct. 14 letter to county Growth Management Director Christine Hurley, FEMA Mitigation Division Director Brad Loar said the agency would support the county's "certificate of compliance program." It would replace the current program that subjects property owners to enclosure inspections when applying for a building permit in a separate area of their home.

Those types of inspections were eliminated when Gov. Rick Scott signed House Bill 407, which bans them, into law in June. Former Lower Keys resident John November drafted the bill, which takes effect this coming June 1.



Enclosure inspections are a local requirement of FEMA's program to find and remove enclosures below the floodplain or built illegally. They're key to the county remaining in FEMA's National Flood Insurance Program, which insures almost all Keys properties.

Under the new compliance program, property owners can request an inspection, even if they've already had one in the past.

County officials say the county must now amend its code to allow for the new certificate-of-compliance provision. The County Commission is expected to discuss the change at its Nov. 16 meeting at the Murray E. Nelson Government and Cultural Center in Key Largo.

Read more at www.keysnet.com
 

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