When
driving past an old beach cottage being taken apart in Wainiha last week, I joked
to my passenger, "So is that another 'unsubstantial improvement' going down?”
By which I meant an obviously substantial reconstruction passed off as less
to skirt the federal flood laws that require elevating the house.
Turns
out it is. A 54-year-old house that looked like this:
Got sold to New Jersey-based Hale Edena LLC:
Then gutted:
Dismantled:
Stripped down to the slab:
And then some:
Now it's being expanded by 120 square feet:
All
by virtue of a $45,200 county building permit that says: ADD
MASTERBED/BATH,LAUNDRY RENO KITHEN [sic].
The building division deemed these upgrades "unsubstantial," meaning the house was not required to be elevated like its stilt-standing neighbor.
This occurred because the county is still up to its old tricks: accepting a high-ball value for the house and a low-ball estimate for the repairs. This allows the owner to claim the improvements are less than 50 percent of the market value, and thus "unsubstantial" and not subject to flood laws.
In this case, the county accepted a $178,050 market value for a 947-square-foot, single-wall-construction, termite-ravaged shack built in 1960. The county real property tax office, meanwhile, assessed the entire property — the house and one-third of an acre in an extremely desirable coastal setting — at $531,800. According to FEMA's guidelines for implementing the federal flood law:
Even if we were to believe that "tropical surf shack" has not experienced any depreciation, and has only appreciated to achieve a $178,050 market value, how can we possibly believe it can somehow be entirely rebuilt, and 120-square-feet added, for just $45,200?
Fake formulas aside, isn't the county also supposed to consider the intent of the federal flood law, which is to keep people safe and reduce flood damage to buildings? And isn't the county zoning ordinance pretty clear that non-conforming uses — unelevated dwellings in a flood zone — aren't supposed to be expanded?
In this case, the county accepted a $178,050 market value for a 947-square-foot, single-wall-construction, termite-ravaged shack built in 1960. The county real property tax office, meanwhile, assessed the entire property — the house and one-third of an acre in an extremely desirable coastal setting — at $531,800. According to FEMA's guidelines for implementing the federal flood law:
The
market value of a structure reflects its original quality, subsequent
improvements [a $7,044 repair job in 1994], physical age of building components and current
condition. For the purposes of determining substantial improvement,
market value pertains only to the structure in question. It does not
pertain to the land, landscaping or detached accessory structures on
the property. Any value resulting from the location of the property
should be attributed to the value of the land, not the building.
Even if we were to believe that "tropical surf shack" has not experienced any depreciation, and has only appreciated to achieve a $178,050 market value, how can we possibly believe it can somehow be entirely rebuilt, and 120-square-feet added, for just $45,200?
Fake formulas aside, isn't the county also supposed to consider the intent of the federal flood law, which is to keep people safe and reduce flood damage to buildings? And isn't the county zoning ordinance pretty clear that non-conforming uses — unelevated dwellings in a flood zone — aren't supposed to be expanded?
As in a larger footprint, a "remodel" that is by all intents and purposes the construction of a brand new home? As FEMA states:
Reconstructions
are cases where an entire structure is destroyed, damaged,
purposefully demolished or razed, and a new structure is built on the
old foundation or slab. The term also applies when an existing
structure is moved to a new site. Reconstructions
are, quite simply, “new construction.” They must be treated as
new buildings.
Can the building division truly say, with a straight face, that this is not a reconstruction?
In the Abuse Chronicles series, I documented several examples of dubious "unsubstantial improvements" that allowed beach shacks to become luxury vacation rentals, with ground floor bedrooms in the flood zone.
In the Abuse Chronicles series, I documented several examples of dubious "unsubstantial improvements" that allowed beach shacks to become luxury vacation rentals, with ground floor bedrooms in the flood zone.
In its subsequent inquiry into TVR irregularities, the County Council focused almost entirely on the planning department, though I urged them twice in public testimony, and numerous times in this blog, to investigate the building and engineering divisions.
Yet somehow they managed to fly beneath the radar, and continue to do the same sketchy stuff that makes a mockery of county and federal laws, as well as construction values.
As FEMA notes:
People who own existing buildings that are being substantially improved will be required to make a major investment in them in order to bring them into compliance with the law. They will not be happy. For these reasons, it is easy to see that this basic rule can be difficult to administer. It is also the one time when your regulatory program can reduce flood damage to existing buildings.
People who own existing buildings that are being substantially improved will be required to make a major investment in them in order to bring them into compliance with the law. They will not be happy. For these reasons, it is easy to see that this basic rule can be difficult to administer. It is also the one time when your regulatory program can reduce flood damage to existing buildings.
Yet for some reason, Kauai County seems unwilling to risk making new owners unhappy. Instead, they are allowed to expand and upgrade houses in a part of the island where floods are a regular occurrence and people have actually died in tsunami waves.
The inevitable unhappiness, it seems, is being deferred to a later day.