The City already has laws on the books for “red lots” or lots with drainage and flooding problems, but an amended ordinance will be considered for the first time since 2015.
Permits for developing on red lots require more engineering at the owners’ cost.
The amended law does not make clear what is being added, since new sections are not in red. Sections being deleted are made clear with strike-out lines.
It appears “designation criteria” is being added, which includes whether it is in a flood or erosion zone, soil quality, distance from natural drainage channels, lack of vegetation, impact on adjacent lots, private and public drainage studies and what the City’s 2004 Drainage Master Plan has to say about the lot.
Designation must also be done by the City Council passing a resolution, with updates to the Comprehensive Plan and Planning and Code Enforcement Department maps following.
The “City Floodplain Administrator” will enforce the Red Lot law.
The amendments include strike-out of a section targeting single-family homes. Evidently all zones in the City are subject to extra engineering before a permit for building will be issued, if at all.
The City Council will also consider whether to amend or adopt as-is the governing body’s rules of procedure. The rules are supposed to be adopted yearly, but haven’t since 2016.