[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 44, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 44CFR209.10]



[Page 543-545]

 

              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE

 

 CHAPTER I--FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND 

                                SECURITY

 

PART 209_SUPPLEMENTAL PROPERTY ACQUISITION AND ELEVATION ASSISTANCE--

Table of Contents

 

Sec.  209.10  Project implementation requirements.



    Subgrantees must enter into an agreement with the State, with the 

written concurrence of the Regional Director, that provides the 

following assurances:

    (a) The subgrantee will administer the grant and implement the 

project in accordance with program requirements, 44 CFR parts 13 and 14, 

the grant agreement, and with applicable Federal, State, and local laws 

and regulations.

    (b) The State and subgrantee will administer the grant in an 

equitable and



[[Page 544]]



impartial manner, without discrimination on the grounds or race, color, 

religion nationality, sex, age, or economic status in compliance with 

section 308 of the Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5151) and Title VI of the 

Civil Rights Act. In implementing the grant, the State and the 

subgrantee will ensure that no discrimination is practiced.

    (c) The State and subgrantee will ensure that projects involving 

alterations to existing structures comply with all applicable State and 

local codes.

    (d) The State and subgrantee will ensure that projects comply with 

applicable State and local floodplain management requirements. 

Structures will be elevated to the Base Flood Elevation.

    (e) Property owners participating in acquisition projects may 

receive assistance up to the pre-event fair market value of their real 

property, except as limited by the eligibility criteria.

    (f) The subgrantee will establish a process, which we must approve, 

whereby property owners participating in acquisition projects may 

request a review of the appraisal for their property, or request a 

second appraisal.

    (g) The State will reduce buyout assistance by any duplication of 

benefits from other sources. Such benefits include, but are not limited 

to, payments made to the homeowner for repair assistance; insurance 

settlements; legal settlements; Small Business Administration loans; and 

any other payments made by any source to address the property loss 

unless the property owner can provide receipts showing that the benefits 

were used for their intended purpose to make repairs to the property.

    (h) Increased Cost of Compliance coverage benefits under the 

National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) may be used to match elevation 

or acquisition and relocation projects. Increased Cost of Compliance 

claims can only be used for NFIP-approved costs; these can then be 

applied to the project grant match. This coverage does not pay for 

property acquisition, but can pay demolition or structure relocation.

    (i) The following restrictive covenants must be conveyed in the deed 

to any property acquired, accepted, or from which structures are removed 

(``the property''):

    (1) The property must be dedicated and maintained in perpetuity for 

uses compatible with open space, recreational, or wetlands management 

practices; and

    (2) No new structure(s) will be built on the property except as 

indicated in this paragraph:

    (A) A public facility that is open on all sides and functionally 

related to a designated open space or recreational use;

    (B) A public rest room; or

    (C) A structure that is compatible with open space, recreational, or 

wetlands management usage and proper floodplain management policies and 

practices, which the Director approves in writing before the 

construction of the structure begins.

    (D) In general, allowable open space, recreational, and wetland 

management uses include parks for outdoor recreational activities, 

nature reserves, cultivation, grazing, camping (except where adequate 

warning time is not available to allow evacuation), temporary storage in 

the open of wheeled vehicles that are easily movable (except mobile 

homes), unimproved, permeable parking lots and buffer zones. Allowable 

uses generally do not include walled buildings, flood reduction levees, 

highways or other uses that obstruct the natural and beneficial 

functions of the floodplain.

    (3) After completing the acquisition project, no application for 

future disaster assistance will be made for any purpose with respect to 

the property to any Federal entity or source, and no Federal entity or 

source will provide such assistance, even for the allowable uses of the 

property described above.

    (4) Any structures built on the property according to paragraph 

(i)(2) of this section, must be: Located to minimize the potential for 

flood damage; floodproofed; or elevated to the Base Flood Elevation plus 

one foot of freeboard.

    (5) The subgrantee or other public property owner will seek the 

approval of the State grantee agency and our Regional Director before 

conveying any interest in the property to any other party. The 

subgrantee or other



[[Page 545]]



public entity or qualified private nonprofit organization must retain 

all development rights to the property. Our Regional Director will only 

approve the transfer of properties that meet the criteria identified in 

this paragraph.

    (6) In order to carry out tasks associated with monitoring, we, the 

subgrantee, or the State have the right to enter the parcel, with notice 

to the parcel owner, to ensure compliance with land use restrictions. 

Subgrantees may identify the open space nature of the property on local 

tax maps to assist with monitoring. Whether the subgrantee obtains full 

title or a conservation easement on the parcel, the State must work with 

subgrantees to ensure that the parcel owner maintains the property in 

accordance with land use restrictions. Specifically, the State may:

    (i) Monitor and inspect the parcel every two years and certify that 

the owner continues to use the inspected parcel for open space or 

agricultural purposes; and

    (ii) Take measures to bring a non-compliant parcel back into 

compliance within 60 days of notice.

    (7) Only as a last resort, we reserve the right to require the 

subgrantee to bring the property back into compliance and transfer the 

title and easement to a qualified third party for future maintenance.

    (8) Every 2 years on October 1st, the subgrantee will report to the 

State, certifying that the property continues to be maintained 

consistent with the provisions of the agreement. The State will report 

the certification to us.