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Elevating homes can flood neighbors. Will this move by Miami-Dade fix the problem?

It’s the first step to addressing what floodplain experts call a ‘loophole’ in the building code. The increasing number of new homes being built higher for better flood protection in South Florida, often exacerbating flooding to surrounding homes, draining their runoff onto lower properties. A new code tweak in Miami-Dade, designed to address this issue, requires new roads, canal banks and empty lots to be at least six feet above sea level. The change will add a new layer of review by county officials to ensure this happens, potentially resulting in design changes such as adding low walls between new higher construction and neighbors to retain or direct rainwater. The policy change only applies to unincorporated areas of the county, but officials are working on an overhaul of building codes around flooding that they hope to debut soon.

Elevating homes can flood neighbors. Will this move by Miami-Dade fix the problem?

प्रकाशित : 4 सप्ताह पहले द्वारा Alex Harris में Environment

It’s an increasingly common scene in South Florida: a brand new home, elevated to the newest building standards, rising above its older neighbors, houses that may have been built before flood maps even existed.

The complaint that follows is also happening more often, that the new home built higher for better flood protection is worsening flooding to surrounding homes, draining its runoff onto the lower properties.

A new code tweak in Miami-Dade, plus more to come, is designed to address that growing concern.

The twin drivers of increased flooding from sea level rise and a relentless real estate market have made the ripple effects of raising homes a particularly acute issue in Miami-Dade. New homes can be elevated as much as 10 feet above sea level — and a new push from the county requires new roads, canal banks and empty lots to be at least six feet above sea level.

READ MORE: Florida codes keep new homes ‘high and dry.’ Do they make flooding worse for neighbors?

Building codes, at least on paper, already call for homes to hold onto the rain (also known as stormwater) that falls on their property, but a new tweak to the code will add a new layer of review by county officials intended to ensure it happens.

That could, for instance, result in design changes, such as adding low walls between new higher construction and neighbors to retains or direct rainwater, said Marina Blanco-Pape, director of the county’s water management division.

“The fact that runoff should not be going onto adjacent properties, it’s already been in the code,” she said. “What hadn’t been, sometimes, is an explicit way of how do you get there. Is there an explicit way that can be provided so we’re more clear at how do we arrive at that outcome.”

The new policy, approved by Miami-Dade’s commission on Tuesday, is a first regulatory attempt to address the murky rules around what counts as flooding your neighbors.

In recent decades, Florida has required newly built homes to handle all the rain that falls on their property themselves, a switch from old policies that allowed properties to drain excess rain — or stormwater — into the street. New developments are not allowed to cause “adverse impacts”, like flooding, to their neighbors.

However, floodplain management experts say, that can be tough to avoid in a state where powerful rainstorms, tidal floods and backed-up drainage systems are becoming more common. And, judging from the increasing complaints surrounding new construction in older neighborhoods, builders haven’t always designed site plans that meet the old code.

The problem is basic hydrology. Water flows downhill. When you elevate half the houses on a street, the water that used to settle evenly among them now concentrates on the lower-lying properties. To those residents, that’s flooding caused by new development. But that specific impact isn’t accounted for in building codes.

So far, this policy change only applies to unincorporated Miami-Dade, but Blanco-Pape said her team has been working on an overhaul of the building codes around flooding that they hope to debut soon. Potential changes include the amount of concrete versus green space on properties and how dirty the water pouring into canals and waterways is allowed to be. And, like the county push to elevate new roads and lots, it would apply to a broader swath of Miami-Dade.

“This outcome change today is one step, and what we’re bringing back to the board in hopefully a couple of months is the next one,” she said.

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