FEMA flood zone rules in Adams County, CO — also called floodplain regulations or special flood hazard area (SFHA) rules — determine flood insurance requirements and elevation standards for new construction.
Adams County participates in the FEMA National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and administers Flood Control Overlay regulations through Chapter 3 of the Adams County Development Standards. A Floodplain Use Permit is required for any development - including grading, fill, structures, and substantial improvements - within a Special Flood Hazard Area mapped on the FEMA FIRM. Colorado state rules at 2 CCR 408-1 require freeboard of 1 foot above base flood elevation for residential structures.
Adams County is an NFIP-participating community (CID 080007). The county administers floodplain rules through the Flood Control Overlay (FCO) regulations in Chapter 3 of the Adams County Development Standards and Regulations and through Colorado Water Conservation Board rules at 2 CCR 408-1. Any development in a FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Area (Zone A, AE, AO, AH, or floodway) requires a Floodplain Use Permit before a building permit can be issued. Development includes new construction, substantial improvements, fill, grading, stockpiling, and storage of materials. Per Colorado state rule (2 CCR 408-1), residential structures in the SFHA must be elevated with the lowest floor at least 1 foot above the base flood elevation (BFE) - this is the state-mandated freeboard. Non-residential structures may be elevated or dry-floodproofed to 1 foot above BFE. The 'substantial improvement' rule applies when the cost of repair, reconstruction, or improvement equals or exceeds 50% of the structure's pre-improvement market value, triggering full compliance with the floodplain ordinance. Adams County also reviews and forwards FEMA Letters of Map Change (LOMA, LOMR-F). Applications go through the Engineer of the Day at cedd-eng@adamscountyco.gov or 720.523.6800. NFIP federal rules are at 44 CFR Parts 59-60.
Development in a Special Flood Hazard Area without a Floodplain Use Permit can trigger stop-work orders, after-the-fact permitting, structure removal, and corrective action. Substantial-improvement violations can disqualify the property from NFIP flood insurance. Federal penalties under 44 CFR Part 60 may apply if the county is found out of compliance with NFIP standards.
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