Unincorporated Santa Cruz County is a participating NFIP community (CID 060353) governed by Santa Cruz County Code (SCCC) Chapter 16.13 - Floodplain Management Regulations, with the FEMA Flood Insurance Study and Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) adopted by reference. After the catastrophic March 2023 atmospheric rivers (Pajaro River levee breach March 10, 2023; Federal Disaster Declaration DR-4699-CA on April 3, 2023) and major flooding along the San Lorenzo River, Soquel Creek, and Aptos Creek, the County strictly enforces development permits, lowest-floor elevation, and substantial-improvement rules in mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs).
Unincorporated Santa Cruz County participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) under FEMA Community Identification Number (CID) 060353 and enforces floodplain rules through Santa Cruz County Code (SCCC) Chapter 16.13 (Floodplain Management Regulations), which adopts by reference the Santa Cruz County Flood Insurance Study and the accompanying FIRMs. The Planning Director serves as the Floodplain Administrator and may impose permit conditions including project redesign, building-site elimination, building/septic envelope restrictions, and foundation requirements. A floodplain development permit is required for any development within a mapped flood hazard area, including new construction, substantial improvement, fill, grading, manufactured-home placement, and accessory structures. Where field-surveyed topography shows ground elevations below the closest applicable Base Flood Elevation (BFE), the area is treated as a flood hazard area even if not delineated on a FIRM. When BFE data are not provided in the FIS, the Floodplain Administrator must obtain and reasonably utilize the best available base flood data from federal sources. The County also overlays SCCC Chapter 16.10 (Geologic Hazards) and the coastal-zone version, which control bluff retreat, sea-level-rise setbacks, and tsunami-hazard considerations along the Monterey Bay shoreline. Major flood corridors include the Pajaro River (the levee breached on March 10, 2023, flooding Pajaro and surrounding agricultural land), the lower San Lorenzo River through Felton and Santa Cruz, Soquel Creek, Aptos Creek, and the Corralitos Creek system; the 2023 winter storms triggered FEMA Disaster Declaration DR-4699-CA (April 3, 2023) for Santa Cruz County, opening Individual Assistance and Public Assistance for affected residents and infrastructure. The County Planning Department maintains Elevation Certificates for structures built since 1987, repetitive-loss data, dam-inundation areas, and coastal-erosion/tsunami hazards; flood-zone determination letters and detailed property reports are available through the Map Information Service. State law (California Government Code Section 65302(g) and CCR Title 23, Division 2) requires the County to keep its general plan safety element and floodplain ordinance consistent with NFIP minimum standards under 44 CFR 60.3, and the State of California Sea Level Rise Guidance (slr.ca.gov, OPC 2024 update) is referenced in coastal-zone planning decisions.
Construction, substantial improvement, fill, grading, or land disturbance within a Special Flood Hazard Area without a Santa Cruz County floodplain development permit issued under SCCC Chapter 16.13 is a code violation that may require corrective work, removal of unpermitted structures, and elevation of non-compliant buildings before a certificate of occupancy can be issued. Repairs or improvements that meet or exceed the NFIP substantial-improvement / substantial-damage threshold (50% of pre-damage market value) require the entire structure to be brought into full compliance with current floodplain standards. Failure to maintain flood insurance on federally backed mortgages within a mapped SFHA can result in lender force-placed coverage. Persistent or willful violations can jeopardize Santa Cruz County's NFIP standing and the ability of all residents in unincorporated areas to purchase federally backed flood insurance.
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