[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: 44CFR59.30]



[Page 249-250]

 

              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE

 

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

                                SECURITY

 

PART 59_GENERAL PROVISIONS--Table of Contents

 

                   Subpart C_Pilot Inspection Program

 

Sec.  59.30  A pilot inspection procedure.





    (a) Purpose. This section sets forth the criteria for implementing a 

pilot inspection procedure in Monroe County and the Village of 

Islamorada, Florida. Areas within Monroe County that become communities 

by incorporating on or after January 1, 1999, are required to implement 

the pilot inspection procedure as a condition of participating in the 

NIP. The criteria will also be used to implement the pilot inspection 

procedure in these communities. The purpose of this inspection procedure 

is to provide the communities participating in the pilot inspection 

procedure with an additional means to identify whether structures built 

in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs) after the effective date of the 

initial Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) comply with the community's 

floodplain management regulations. The pilot inspection procedure will 

also assist FEMA in verifying that structures insured under the National 

Flood Insurance Program's Standard Flood Insurance Policy are properly 

rated. FEMA will publish notices in the Federal Register when 

communities in Monroe County incorporate, agree to implement the pilot 

inspection procedure, and become eligible for the sale of flood 

insurance.

    (b) Procedures and requirements for implementation. Each community 

must establish procedures and requirements for implementing the pilot 

inspection procedure consistent with the criteria established in this 

section.

    (c) Inspection procedure--(1) Starting and termination dates. The 

Associate Director for Mitigation and the Federal Insurance 

Administrator will establish the starting date and the termination date 

for implementing the pilot inspection procedure upon the recommendation 

of the Regional Director. The Regional Director will consult with each 

community.

    (2) Extension. The Associate Director for Mitigation and the Federal 

Insurance Administrator may extend the implementation of the inspection 

procedure with a new termination date upon the recommendation of the 

Regional Director. The Regional Director will consult with the 

community. An extension will be granted based on good cause.

    (3) Notices. Before the starting date of the inspection procedure, 

each community must publish a notice in a prominent local newspaper and 

publish other notices as appropriate. The Associate Director for 

Mitigation and the Federal Insurance Administrator will publish a notice 

in the Federal Register that the community will undertake an inspection 

procedure. Published notices will include the purpose for implementing 

the inspection procedure and the effective period of time that the 

inspection procedure will cover.

    (4) Community reviews. The communities participating in the pilot 

inspection procedure must review a list of all



[[Page 250]]



pre-FIRM and post-FIRM flood insurance policies in SFHAs to confirm that 

the start of construction or substantial improvement of insured pre-FIRM 

buildings occurred on or before December 31, 1974, and to identify 

possible violations of insured post-FIRM buildings. The community will 

provide to FEMA a list of insured buildings incorrectly rated as pre-

FIRM and a list of insured post-FIRM buildings that the community 

identifies as possible violations.

    (5) SFIP endorsement. In the communities that undertake the pilot 

inspection procedure, all new and renewed flood insurance policies that 

become effective on and after the date that we and the community 

establish for the start of the inspection procedure will contain an 

endorsement to the Standard Flood Insurance Policy that an inspection 

may be necessary before a subsequent policy renewal [see Part 61, 

Appendices A(4), (5), and (6)].

    (6) Notice from insurer. For a building identified as a possible 

violation under paragraph (c)(4) of this section, the insurer will send 

a notice to the policyholder that an inspection is necessary in order to 

renew the policy and that the policyholder must submit a community 

inspection report as part of the policy renewal process, which includes 

the payment of the premium. The insurer will send this notice about 6 

months before the Standard Flood Insurance Policy expires.

    (7) Conditions for renewal. If a policyholder receives a notice 

under paragraph (c)(6) of this section that an inspection is necessary 

in order to renew the Standard Flood Insurance Policy the following 

conditions apply:

    (i) If the policyholder obtains an inspection from the community and 

the policyholder sends the community inspection report to the insurer as 

part of the renewal process, which includes the payment of the premium, 

the insurer will renew the policy and will verify the flood insurance 

rate, or

    (ii) If the policyholder does not obtain and submit a community 

inspection report the insurer will not renew the policy.

    (8) Community responsibilities. For insured post-FIRM buildings that 

the community inspects and determines to violate the community's 

floodplain management regulations, the community must demonstrate to 

FEMA that the community is undertaking measures to remedy the violation 

to the maximum extent possible. Nothing in this section modifies the 

community's responsibility under the NFIP to enforce floodplain 

management regulations adequately that meet the minimum requirements in 

Sec.  60.3 for all new construction and substantial improvements within 

the community's SFHAs. The community's responsibility also includes the 

insured buildings where the policyholder did not obtain an inspection 

report, and non-insured buildings that this procedure does not cover.

    (d) Restoration of flood insurance coverage. Insurers will not 

provide new flood insurance on any building if a property owner does not 

obtain a community inspection report or if the property owner obtains a 

community inspection report but does not submit the report with the 

renewal premium payment. Flood insurance policies sold on a building 

ineligible in accordance with paragraph (c)(6)(ii) of this section are 

void under the Standard Flood Insurance Policy inspection endorsements 

[44 CFR part 61, Appendices (A)(4), (A)(5), and (A)(6)]. When the 

property owner applies for a flood insurance policy and submits a 

completed community inspection report by the community with an 

application and renewal premium payment, the insurer will issue a flood 

insurance policy.



(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under Control Number 

3067-0275)



[65 FR 39748, June 27, 2000, as amended at 67 FR 10633, Mar. 8, 2002]