Taking matters into your own hands

Download Report

Transcript Taking matters into your own hands

TAKING MATTERS INTO YOUR OWN
HANDS
The Story of Floodplain Remapping in Springfield, Missouri
Todd Wagner, P.E., CFM, CSM
Principal Stormwater Engineer
[email protected]
&
Errin Kemper, P.E., CFM, CSM
Professional Engineer
[email protected]
Stormwater Engineering Division
Dept of Public Works
City of Springfield, Missouri
www.Springfieldmo.gov/stormwater
FLOODING IN SPRINGFIELD
FLOOD INSURANCE STATISTICS
There are currently 1068 structures located in
the 100yr floodplain.
As of 2008, the NFIP has 200+ active flood
insurance policies in Springfield.
1993
2000
2000
2008
2008
THE REMAPPING PROCESS
TIMELINE OF REMAPPING
1968 – National Flood Insurance Program
established nationwide
 1978 – FEMA issues first Flood Insurance Rate
maps for Greene County
 1989 – City of Springfield enters NFIP (using
1978 maps)
 1995 – US Army Corps of Engineers (under
FEMA direction) produces updated flood maps
for Springfield.

PROPOSED 1995 MAPPING
TAKING MATTERS INTO OUR OWN HANDS
TIMELINE CONTINUED…

1999 – Met with FEMA. City receives permission
from FEMA to hire a consultant and resubmit flood
study

July 2000– 6-8” in 6hr.
 Reported
damages in
excess of $2M.
 At least 124 homes
damaged.

2001 – City submits revised mapping
2001-2005
New nationwide mapping contractor(s)
 The City’s review gets delayed
 City & County become a Cooperating Technical
Partner (CTP)
 In 2005, in an effort to complete the Greene
County maps, FEMA notifies the City that it
must submit new mapping or the previous
1996 study will have to be made effective

REMAPPING…PART 2
2005-2008
City works to convert previous submittal to new
mapping standards.
 All flood hazard information converted to GIS
format
 Redelineated several additional streams
 Worked with FEMA mapping contractor to
address review comments

PRELIMINARY MAPS ISSUED 2008
PUBLIC REVIEW
PUBLIC OUTREACH
•Press Conference
•5 mass mailings to all affected properties
•3 press releases
ELEVATION DATA COLLECTION
•
•
•
City identified over 800 Residential Structures impacted by the
new mapping
Two consulting firms were hired to collect all information needed
to complete an elevation certificate and LOMA. Cost: $115 per
home
Data was used to prioritize stormwater management decisions
FLOODPLAIN ORDINANCE

FEMA’s model ordinance with two exceptions:
 2-foot
freeboard
 Existing
floodplain storage areas will be
“grandfathered”
FINALLY…..ACCEPTANCE