Definitions NFIP
National Flood Insurance Program Definitions
1. This list of terms is intended to include those that have
specific meaning to the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)
In a few instances, standard industry terms have been added for
additional focus and emphasis
2. Act--The National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and any
amendments to it
3. Actual Cash Value (ACV)--The replacement cost of an
insured item of property at the time of loss, less the value of
physical depreciation as to the item damaged
4. Adjuster Control Office--An NFIP claims office similar to
a Flood Insurance Claims Office (FICO) with the exception that
the Adjuster Control Office does not house insured files,
maintain a claims examiner staff at the site, or issue claim
payments
5. Anchored--Adequately secured to prevent flotation,
collapse, or lateral movement
6. Application--The statement made and signed by the
prospective policyholder or the agent in applying for an NFIP
flood insurance policy The application gives information used to
determine the eligibility of the risk, the kind of policy to be
issued, and the correct premium payment The application is part
of the flood insurance policy For a policy to be issued, the
correct premium must accompany the application
7. Appurtenant Structure--A detached garage or carport
servicing a 1-4 family dwelling
8. Assignment--The transfer by a policyholder of his/her
legal right or interest in a policy contract to a third party In
the NFIP, written assignment of a policy is permissible upon
transfer of title without the consent of the FIA Administrator,
except in the case where a residential (household) contents-only
policy is involved or a policy was issued to cover a building in
the course of construction
9. Base Flood--The flood having a one percent chance of being
equaled or exceeded in any given year
10. Base Flood Depth (BFD)--The depth shown on the Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) for Zone AO that indicates the depth
of water above highest adjacent grade resulting from a flood
that has a one percent chance of equaling or exceeding that
level in any given year
11. Base Flood Elevation (BFE)--The elevation shown on the
Flood Insurance Rate Map for Zones AE, AH, A1-A30, AR, AR/A,
AR/AE, AR/A1-A30, AR/AH, AR/AO, V1-V30, and VE that indicates
the water surface elevation resulting from a flood that has a
one percent chance of equaling or exceeding that level in any
given year
12. Basement--Any area of the building, including any sunken
room or sunken portion of a room, having its floor below ground
level (subgrade) on all sides
13. Binder--A temporary agreement between company, producer,
and insured that the policy is in effect Binders are not
permitted under the NFIP
14. Blanket Insurance--A single amount of insurance applying
to more than one building and/or contents Blanket insurance is
not permitted under the NFIP
15. Breakaway Wall--A wall that is not part of the structural
support of the building and is intended through its design and
construction to collapse under specific lateral loading forces,
without causing damage to the elevated portion of the building
or supporting foundation system
16. Building-- A structure with two or more outside rigid
walls and a fully secured roof, that is affixed to a permanent
site; or A manufactured home (a "manufactured home," also known
as a mobile home, is a structure built on a permanent chassis,
transported to its site in one or more sections, and affixed to
a permanent foundation); or A travel trailer without wheels,
built on a chassis and affixed to a permanent foundation, that
is regulated under the community's floodplain management and
building ordinances or laws "Building" does not mean a gas or
liquid storage tank or a recreational vehicle, park trailer, or
other similar vehicle, except as described above
17. Building in the Course of Construction--A walled and
roofed building (see page GR 4 of the Flood Insurance Manual for
exception) that is principally above ground and affixed to a
permanent site It does not include building materials or
supplies intended for use in construction, alteration, or repair
unless such materials or supplies are within an enclosed
building on the premises
18. Cancellation--The ending of the insurance coverage
provided by a policy before the expiration date
19. Cistern--Covered cisterns and the water in them are
defined as an integral part of an insurable building, meaning
under the building or above ground and physically attached to a
side of the building with one of the walls of the building and
cistern being common to each other
20. Claims Coordinating Office (CCO)--A clearinghouse for the
various insurers who are responding to a multi-peril catastrophe
Through voluntary participation, all losses are reported to the
Claims Coordinating Office and are processed to locate address
matches among the reported claims The interest of each carrier
is protected as the Claims Coordinator maintains sole control
over the policy and loss information If a match is found,
special care is taken to direct the assigned adjuster(s) to a
mutually agreeable adjustment or to have one adjuster surrender
his/her loss with the assurance that every effort will be made
to replace it
21. Closed Basin Lake--A natural lake from which water leaves
primarily through evaporation and whose surface area exceeds or
has exceeded one square mile at any time in the recorded past
NFIP-insured buildings that are subject to continuous lake
flooding from a closed basin lake are covered under the
provisions of Standard Flood Insurance Policy
22. Coastal Barrier--A naturally occurring island, sandbar,
or other strip of land, including coastal mainland, that
protects the coast from severe wave wash
23. Coastal Barrier Improvement Act of 1990 (CBIA)--Enacted
on November 16, 1990, the Act greatly expanded the identified
land in the Coastal Barrier Resources System established
pursuant to the Coastal Barrier Resources Act of 1982
24. Coastal Barrier Resources Act of 1982 (CBRA)--For the
purposes of the NFIP, the Coastal Barrier Resources Act of 1982
designated certain portions of the Gulf and East Coasts as
undeveloped coastal barriers These areas are shown on
appropriate flood insurance map panels and have certain coverage
restrictions
25. Coastal Barrier Resources System (CBRS)--Communities,
coastal barriers, and other protected areas identified by the
Department of the Interior legislation defined above
26. Coastal High Hazard Areas--Special Flood Hazard Areas
along the coasts that have additional hazards due to wind and
wave action These areas are identified on Flood Insurance Rate
Maps as Zones V, V1-V30, and VE
27. Coinsurance--A penalty imposed on the loss payment unless
the amount of insurance carried on the damaged building is at
least 80 percent of its replacement cost or the maximum amount
of insurance available for that building under the NFIP,
whichever is less Coinsurance applies only to building coverage
under the Residential Condominium Building Association Policy
28. Community--A political entity that has the authority to
adopt and enforce floodplain ordinances for the area under its
jurisdiction
29. Community Number--A 6-digit designation identifying each
NFIP community The first two numbers are the state code The next
four are the FIA-assigned community number An alphabetical
suffix is added to a community number to identify revisions in
the Flood Insurance Rate Map for that community
30. Community Rating System (CRS)--A program developed by FIA
to provide incentives for those communities in the Regular
Program that have gone beyond the minimum floodplain management
requirements to develop extra measures to provide protection
from flooding
31. Condominium--That form of ownership of real property in
which each unit owner has an undivided interest in common
elements
32. Condominium Association--The entity made up of the unit
owners responsible for the maintenance and operation of:Common
elements owned in undivided shares by unit owners; Other real
property in which the unit owners have use rights;where
membership in the entity is a required condition of unit
ownership
33. Countywide Map--A Flood Insurance Rate Map that shows
flooding information for the entire geographic area of a county,
including the incorporated communities within the county
34. Date of Construction--The date that the building permit
was issued provided the actual start of construction, repair,
reconstruction, or improvement was within 180 days of the permit
date
35. Declarations Page--A computer-generated summary of
information provided by the prospective policyholder in the
application for flood insurance The Declarations Page also
describes the term of the policy and the limits of coverage and
displays the premium and the insurer's name The Declarations
Page is a part of the flood insurance policy
36. Deductible Buyback--The option whereby, for an additional
premium, policyholders who wish to reduce their deductibles from
the standard deductibles of $1000 per building loss and per
contents loss for Pre-FIRM risks may purchase separate $500
deductibles for building and contents coverages
37. Described Location--The location where the insured
building or personal property is found The described location is
shown on the Declarations Page
38. Diagram Number--Any of the numbers used in the
instructions to the FEMA Elevation Certificate to identify the
diagrams of the eight main types of buildings
39. Direct Physical Loss By or From Flood--Loss or damage to
insured property, directly caused by flood There must be
evidence of physical changes to the property
40. Doublewide Manufactured (Mobile) Home--A manufactured
(mobile) home that, when assembled as a nonmovable, permanent
building, is at least 16 feet wide and has an area within its
perimeter walls of at least 600 square feet
41. Dwelling--A building designed for use as a residence for
no more than four families or a single-family unit in building
under a condominium form of ownership
42. Dwelling Form--See Standard Flood Insurance
Policy--Dwelling Form
43. Elevated Building--A building that has no basement and
has its lowest elevated floor raised above the ground level by
foundation walls, shear walls, posts, piers, pilings, or columns
Solid foundation perimeter walls are not an acceptable means of
elevating buildings in V and VE zones
44. Emergency Program--The initial phase of a community's
participation in the National Flood Insurance Program During
this phase, only limited amounts of insurance are available
under the Act
45. Enclosure--That portion of an elevated building below the
lowest elevated floor that is either partially or fully shut-in
by rigid walls
46. Erosion--The collapse, undermining, or subsidence of land
along the shore of a lake or other body of water Erosion is a
covered peril if it is caused by waves or currents of water
exceeding their cyclical levels which result in flooding
47. Expense Constant--A flat charge that the policyholder
must pay on each new or renewal policy to defray the expenses of
the Federal Government related to flood insurance
48. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)--The federal
agency under which the National Flood Insurance Program is
administered
49. Federal Insurance Administration (FIA)--The federal
entity within FEMA that directly administers the National Flood
Insurance Program
50. Federal Policy Fee--A flat charge that the policyholder
must pay on each new or renewal policy to defray certain
administrative expenses incurred in carrying out the National
Flood Insurance Program This fee covers expenses not covered by
the Expense Constant
51. Financial Assistance/Subsidy Arrangement--The arrangement
between an insurance company and the FIA Administrator to
initiate the company's participation in the Write Your Own (WYO)
Program It establishes the duties of the company and the
government
52. Finished (Habitable) Area--An enclosed area having more
than 20 linear feet of finished walls (paneling, etc ) or used
for any purpose other than solely for parking of vehicles,
building access, or storage
53. Flood--A general and temporary condition of partial or
complete inundation of two or more acres of normally dry land
area or of two or more properties (at least one of which is the
policyholder's property) from:--Overflow of inland or tidal
waters; or --Unusual and rapid accumulation or runoff of surface
waters from any source; or --Mudflow;orCollapse or subsidence of
land along the shore of a lake or similar body of water as a
result of erosion or undermining caused by waves or currents of
water exceeding anticipated cyclical levels that result in a
flood as defined above
54. Flood Hazard Boundary Map (FHBM)--Official map of a
community issued by the Administrator, where the boundaries of
the flood, mudflow, and related erosion areas having special
hazards have been designated
55. Flood Insurance Claims Office (FICO)--An NFIP claims
processing office set up in a catastrophe area when a sufficient
number of flood claims result from a single event
56. Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM)--Official map of a
community on which the FIA Administrator has delineated both the
special hazard areas and the risk premium zones applicable to
the community
57. Flood Response Office (FRO)--The FRO provides a local
presence in the affected area and supports the WYO companies,
the NFIP Servicing Agent, and various federal, state, and local
officials in providing answers to claims coverage questions,
forms for claims handling, and survey and statistical input One
of the key requirements of personnel at the FRO is to coordinate
and conduct reinspections of WYO and NFIP Direct losses The FRO
also tracks adjuster performance and provides such information
to interested WYO and NFIP Direct companies
58. Floodplain--Any land area susceptible to being inundated
by flood waters from any source
59. Floodplain Management--The operation of an overall
program of corrective and preventive measures for reducing flood
damage, including but not limited to, emergency preparedness
plans, flood control works, and floodplain management
regulations
60. Floodproofing--Any combination of structural and
nonstructural additions, changes, or adjustments to structures,
which reduce or eliminate risk of flood damage to real estate or
improved real property, water and sanitation facilities, or
structures with their contents
61. Freeboard--An additional amount of height above the Base
Flood Elevation used as a factor of safety (e g, 2 feet above
the Base Flood) in determining the level at which a structure's
lowest floor must be elevated or floodproofed to be in
accordance with State or community floodplain management
regulations
62. General Property Form--See Standard Flood Insurance
PolicyGeneral Property Form
63. Grade Elevation--The lowest or highest finished ground
level that is immediately adjacent to the walls of the building
Use natural (pre-construction), ground level, if available, for
Zone AO and Zone A (without BFE)
64. Grandfathering--An exemption based on circumstances
previously existing Under the NFIP, buildings located in
Emergency Program communities and Pre-Flood Insurance Rate Map
buildings in the Regular Program are eligible for subsidized
flood insurance rates Post-Flood Insurance Rate Map buildings in
the Regular Program built in compliance with the floodplain
management regulations in effect at the start of construction
will continue to have favorable rate treatment even though
higher base flood elevations or more restrictive, greater risk
zone designations result from Flood Insurance Rate Map revisions
65. Group Flood Insurance--Issued by the NFIP Direct Program
in response to a Presidential disaster declaration Disaster
assistance applicants, in exchange for a modest premium, receive
a minimum amount of building and/or contents coverage for a
3-year policy period An applicant may cancel the group policy at
any time and secure a regular Standard Flood Insurance Policy
through the NFIP
66. High-Rise Building--High-rise condominium buildings have
five or more units and at least three floors excluding enclosure
even if it is the lowest floor for rating purposes An enclosure
below an elevated building, even if it is the lowest floor for
rating purposes, cannot be counted as a floor to avoid
classifying the building as low rise
67. Historic Building--Any building that is: Listed
individually in the National Register of Historic places (a
listing maintained by the Department of the Interior) or
preliminarily determined by the Secretary of the Interior as
meeting the requirements for individual listing on the National
Register; or Certified or preliminarily determined by the
Secretary of the Interior as contributing to the historical
significance of a registered historic district or a district
preliminarily determined by the Secretary to qualify as a
registered historic district; or Individually listed in a state
inventory of historic places in states with preservation
programs that have been approved by the Secretary of the
Interior; or Individually listed on a local inventory of
historic places in communities with historic preservation
programs that have been certified either:--By an approved state
program
68. as determined by the Secretary of the Interior; or
--Directly by the Secretary of the Interior in states without
approved programs
69. Improvements--Fixtures, alterations, installations, or
additions comprising a part of the insured building, including
the units within the insured condominium building
70. Increased Cost of Compliance--Coverage for expenses a
property owner must incur, above and beyond the cost to repair
the physical damage the structure actually sustained from a
flooding event, to comply with mitigation requirements of State
or local floodplain management ordinances or laws Acceptable
mitigation measures are elevation, floodproofing, relocation,
demolition, or any combination thereof
71. Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA)--An amendment to the
currently effective FEMA map which establishes that a property
is not located in a Special Flood Hazard Area A LOMA is issued
only by FEMA
72. Letter of Map Revision (LOMR)--An official amendment to
the currently effective FEMA map It is issued by FEMA and
changes flood zones, delineations, and elevations
73. Loss in Progress--A loss that is already in progress as
of 12:01 a m on the first day of the policy term; or, as to any
increase in the limits of coverage which is requested, a loss
that is already in progress when the additional coverage is
requested
74. Lowest Adjacent Grade--The lowest point of the ground
level next to the building
75. Lowest Floor--The lowest floor of the lowest enclosed
area (including a basement) An unfinished or flood-resistant
enclosure, usable solely for parking of vehicles, building
access, or storage in an area other than a basement area, is not
considered a building's lowest floor provided that such
enclosure is not built so as to render the structure in
violation of requirements (Formerly called "reference level" or
"reference level floor )
76. Lowest Floor Elevation (LFE)--The measured distance of a
building's lowest floor above the National Geodetic Vertical
Datum (NGVD) or other datum specified on the FIRM for that
location
77. Low-Rise Building--Low-rise condominium buildings having
fewer than five units regardless of the number of floors or five
or more units with fewer than three units including basement All
townhouses/rowhouses, regardless of the number of floors or
units, and all single-family detached condominium buildings are
classified as low rise An enclosure below an elevated building,
even if it is the lowest floor for rating purposes, cannot be
counted as a floor to avoid classifying the building as a low
rise
78. Mandatory Purchase--Under the provisions of the Flood
Disaster Protection Act of 1973, individuals, businesses, and
others buying, building, or improving property located in
identified areas of special flood hazards within participating
communities are required to purchase flood insurance as a
prerequisite for receiving any type of direct or indirect
federal financial assistance (e g , any loan, grant, guaranty,
insurance, payment, subsidy, or disaster assistance) when the
building or personal property is the subject of or security for
such assistance
79. Manufactured (Mobile) Home--A structure built on a
permanent chassis, transported to its site in one or more
sections, and affixed to a permanent foundation "Manufactured
(mobile) home" does not include recreational vehicles
Manufactured (Mobile) Home Park or Subdivision, ExistingA
manufactured (mobile) home park or subdivision for which the
construction of facilities for servicing the lots on which the
manufactured (mobile) homes are to be affixed (including, at a
minimum, the installation of utilities, the construction of
streets, and either final site grading or the pouring of
concrete pads) is completed on or before December 31, 1974, or
before the effective date of the community's initial FIRM,
whichever is later Manufactured (Mobile) Home Park or
Subdivision, Expansion to Existing Site--The preparation of
additional sites by the construction of facilities for servicing
the lots on which manufactured (mobile) homes are to be affixed
(including the installation of utilities, the construction of
streets, and either final site grading or the pouring of
concrete pads) Manufactured (Mobile) Home Park or Subdivision,
New A manufactured (mobile) home park or subdivision for which
the construction of facilities for servicing the lots on which
the manufactured (mobile) homes are to be affixed (including, at
a minimum, the installation of utilities, the construction of
streets, and either final site grading or the pouring of
concrete pads) is completed after December 31, 1974, or on or
after the effective date of the community's initial FIRM,
whichever is later
80. Map Revision--A change in the FHBM or FIRM for a
community which reflects revised zone, base flood, or other
information
81. Mean Sea Level--See National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD)
82. Modular Building--A building that is usually transported
to its site on a steel frame or special trailer because it does
not have a permanent chassis like a manufactured (mobile) home A
modular building is classified and rated under one of the other
building types Mortgage Portfolio Protection Program (MPPP)--A
program designed to help lending institutions to maintain
compliance with the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as
amended Policies written under the MPPP can be placed only
through a WYO Company
83. Mudflow--A river of liquid and flowing mud on the
surfaces of normally dry land areas, as when earth is carried by
a current of water Other earth movements, such as landslide,
slope failure, or a saturated soil mass moving by liquidity down
a slope, are not mudflows
84. National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)--The program of
flood insurance coverage and floodplain management administered
under the Act and applicable Federal regulations promulgated in
Title 44 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Subchapter B
85. National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD)--National
standard reference datum for elevations, formerly referred to as
Mean Sea Level (MSL) of 1929 NGVD is used as the reference datum
on most FIRMs
86. Natural Grade--The grade unaffected by construction
techniques such as fill, landscaping, or berming
87. New Construction--Buildings for which the "start of
construction" commenced on or after the effective date of an
initial FIRM or after December 31, 1974, whichever is later,
including any subsequent improvements
88. NFIP Bureau and Statistical Agent--A corporation,
partnership, association, or any other organized entity that
contracts with the Federal Insurance Administration to be the
focal point of support operations for the NFIP
89. NFIP Servicing Agent--A corporation, partnership,
association, or any other organized entity that contracts with
the Federal Insurance Administration to service insurance
policies as direct business
90. NFIP Special Direct Facility (SDF)--A newly formed branch
of the NFIP Servicing Agent to which, on August 1, 2000, WYO
companies began transferring renewals for identified properties
in the Repetitive Loss Target Group so that mitigation
assistance can be offered to the policyholders
91. Non-Residential--Includes, but is not limited to: small
business concerns, churches, schools, farm buildings (including
grain bins and silos), poolhouses, clubhouses, recreational
buildings, mercantile structures, agricultural and industrial
structures, warehouses, hotels and motels with normal room
rentals for less than 6 months' duration, and nursing homes
92. Nullification--The act of declaring an insurance contract
invalid from its inception so that, from a legal standpoint, the
insurance contract never existed
93. Other Residential--Hotels or motels where the normal
occupancy of a guest is 6 months or more; a tourist home or
rooming house which has more than four roomers A residential
building (excluding hotels and motels with normal room rentals
for less than 6 months' duration) containing more than four
dwelling units Incidental occupancies such as office,
professional private school, or studio occupancy, are permitted
if the total area of such incidental occupancies are limited to
less than 25 percent of the total floor area within the building
94. Participating Community--A community for which the FIA
Administrator has authorized the sale of flood insurance under
the NFIP
95. Policy--The entire written contract between the insured
and the insurer It includes: The printed policy form; The
application and Declarations Page;Any endorsement(s) that may be
issued; andAny renewal certificate indicating that coverage has
been instituted for a new policy and new policy term Only one
dwelling, specifically described by the prospective policyholder
in the application, may be insured under a policy
96. Pollutants--Substances that include, but are not limited
to, any solid, liquid, gaseous, or thermal irritant or
contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids,
alkalis, chemicals, and waste "Waste" includes, but is not
limited to, materials to be recycled, reconditioned, or
reclaimed
97. Ponding Hazard--A flood hazard that occurs in flat areas
when there are depressions in the ground that collect "ponds" of
water The ponding hazard is represented by the zone designation
AH on the FIRM
98. Post-FIRM Building--a building for which construction or
substantial improvement occurred after December 31, 1974, or on
or after the effective date of an initial Flood Insurance Rate
Map (FIRM), whichever is later
99. Pre-FIRM Building--a building for which construction or
substantial improvement occurred on or before December 31, 1974,
or before the effective date of an initial Flood Insurance Rate
Map (FIRM)
100. Preferred Risk Policy (PRP)--A package policy offering
nine coverage combinations for both building and contents at a
fixed premium It is available only to owners of 1-4 family
residential buildings located in B, C, and X Zones that meet
eligibility requirements based on an entire flood loss history
101. Prepaid Amount (Total)--The total amount that must be
submitted with an application or renewal in order to be
acceptable for coverage It is determined by adding the Federal
Policy Fee to the Total Prepaid Premium
102. Prepaid Premium (Total)--The amount on the application
(excluding the Preferred Risk Application) that includes the
Annual Subtotal and the Expense Constant
103. Presentment of Payment (Premium)--The date of receipt of
premium at the office of the NFIP or the date of certified mail
In the case of transfer of title, the date of settlement or
closing, when the premium is paid at that time
104. Principal Residence--A single-family dwelling in which,
at the time of loss, the named insured or the named insured's
spouse has lived for either 80 percent of the 365 days
immediately preceding the loss, or 80 percent of the period of
ownership, if less than 365 days
105. Principally Above Ground Building--A building that has
at least 51 percent of its actual cash value, including
machinery and equipment, above ground
106. Probation--A means of formally notifying participating
communities of violations and deficiencies in the administration
and enforcement of the local floodplain management regulations
107. Probation Premium--A flat charge that the policyholder
must pay on each new or renewal policy issued covering property
in a community that the NFIP has placed on probation under the
provisions of 44 CFR 59 24
108. Proper Openings -- Enclosures (Applicable to Zones A,
A1-A30, AE, AO, AH, AR, and AR Dual)--All enclosures below the
lowest elevated floor must be designed to automatically equalize
hydrostatic flood forces on exterior walls by allowing for the
entry and exit of floodwaters A minimum of two openings, with
positioning on at least two walls, having a total net area of
not less than 1 square inch for every square foot of enclosed
area subject to flooding must be provided The bottom of all
openings must be no higher than 1 foot above grade
109. Property Removed to Safety Expense--Up to $1,000 of
reasonable expenses incurred by the insured to temporarily
remove insured property from the described location because of
flood or the imminent danger of flood
110. Provisional Rating--A method for placing flood coverage
prior to the receipt of a FEMA Elevation Certificate
111. Regular Program--The final phase of a community's
participation in the National Flood Insurance Program In this
phase, a Flood Insurance Rate Map is in effect and full limits
of coverage are available under the Act
112. Regular Program Community--A community wherein a FIRM is
in effect and full limits of coverage are available under the
Act
113. Repetitive Loss Structure--A structure, covered by a
contract of flood insurance issued under the NFIP, that has
suffered flood damage on two occasions during a 10-year period
that ends on the date of the second loss, in which the cost to
repair the flood damage, on average, equaled or exceeded 25% of
the market value of the structure at the time of each flood loss
114. Repetitive Loss Target Group--NFIP-insured properties
that, on the basis of losses since 1978, meet one or more of the
loss criteria described on page RL 1 WYO companies began
transferring renewals for identified properties in this group to
the NFIP Special Direct Facility (SDF, a branch of the NFIP
Servicing Agent) on August 1, 2000, so that mitigation
assistance can be offered to the policyholders
115. Replacement Cost Value (RCV)--The cost to replace
property with the same kind of material and construction without
deduction for depreciation
116. Residential Condominium Building--A building, owned and
administered as a condominium, containing one or more family
units and in which at least 75 percent of the floor area is
residential
117. Residential Condominium Building Association Policy (RCBAP)--
See "Standard Flood Insurance Policy-Residential Condominium
Building Association Policy (RCBAP)
118. Scheduled Building Policy--A policy that requires a
specific amount of insurance to be designated for each building
and its contents
119. Section 1316--Section of the National Flood Insurance
Act of 1968, as amended, which states that no new flood
insurance coverage shall be provided for any property that the
FIA Administrator finds has been declared by a duly constituted
state or local zoning authority or other authorized public body
to be in violation of state or local laws, regulations, or
ordinances that are intended to discourage or otherwise restrict
land development or occupancy in flood-prone areas
120. Shear Walls--Walls used for structural support but not
structurally joined or enclosed at the ends (except by breakaway
walls) Shear walls are parallel, or nearly parallel, to the flow
of the water and can be used in any flood zone
121. Sheet Flow Hazard--A type of flood hazard with flooding
depths of 1 to 3 feet that occurs in areas of sloping land The
sheet flow hazard is represented by the zone designation AO on
the FIRM
122. Single Adjuster Program--A procedure implemented among
the NFIP, various wind pools, and WYO Companies to allow one
adjuster to represent both carriers in adjusting a combined
wind-water loss where the NFIP has the flood coverage and
another carrier has the wind coverage
123. Single Building--A building that is separated from other
buildings by intervening clear space or solid, vertical,
load-bearing division walls
124. Single-Family Residence--A residential single family
dwelling Incidental office, professional, private school, or
studio occupancies, including a small service operation, are
permitted if such incidental occupancies are limited to less
than 50 percent of the building's total floor area
125. Solid Foundation Perimeter Walls--Walls that are used as
a means of elevating a building in A Zones and that must contain
sufficient openings to allow for the unimpeded flow of
floodwaters more than 1 foot deep
126. Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA)--An area having special
flood, mudflow, or flood-related erosion hazards, and shown on a
Flood Hazard Boundary Map or a Flood Insurance Rate Map as Zone
A, AO, A1-A30, AE, A99, AH, AR, AR/A, AR/AE, AR/AH, AR/AO,
AR/A1-A30, V1-V30, VE, or V For the purpose of determining
Community Rating System premium discounts, all AR and A99 zones
are treated as non-SFHAs
127. Standard Flood Insurance Policy--Dwelling Form--Policy
issued to insure a building and/or residential contents on a
single-family or a 2-4 family dwelling
128. Standard Flood Insurance Policy--General Property
Form--Policy issued to insure a building and/or contents on
other residential or non-residential buildings
129. Standard Flood Insurance Policy--Residential Condominium
Building Association Policy (RCBAP)--Policy issued to insure a
residential condominium building and all units within the
building, provided that the building is located in a Regular
Program Community and at least 75 percent of the total floor
area is residential
130. Start of Construction--For other than new construction
or substantial improvements, under the Coastal Barrier Resources
Act, this is the date the building permit was issued, provided
that the actual start of construction, repair, rehabilitation,
addition, placement, or other improvement was within 180 days of
the permit date The actual start means either the first
placement of permanent construction of a building on site, such
as the pouring of a slab or footing, the installation of piles,
the construction of columns, or any work beyond the stage of
excavation; or the placement of a manufactured (mobile) home on
a foundation For a substantial improvement, actual start of
construction means the first alteration of any wall, ceiling,
floor, or other structural part of a building, whether or not
that alteration affects the external dimensions of the building
131. Stock--Merchandise held in storage or for sale, raw
materials, and in-process or finished goods, including supplies
used in their packing or shipping "Stock" does not include any
property not covered under "Section IV Property not Covered" of
the General Property Form, except the following: Parts and
equipment for self-propelled vehicles; Furnishings and equipment
for watercraft; Spas and hot-tubs, including their equipment;
and Swimming pool equipment Submit-for-Rate--An application for
flood insurance on a building for which no risk rate is
published in the Flood Insurance Manual Insurance coverage can
be obtained only after the NFIP has approved the application and
has established the risk premium rate
132. Substantial Damage--Damage of any origin sustained by a
building whereby the cost of restoring the building to its
before-damaged condition would equal or exceed 50 percent of the
market value of the building before the damage occurred
133. Substantial Improvement--Any reconstruction,
rehabilitation, addition, or other improvement of a building,
the cost of which equals or exceeds 50 percent of the market
value of the building before the "start of construction" of the
improvement Substantial improvement includes buildings that have
incurred "substantial damage," regardless of the actual repair
work performed The term does not, however, include either any
project for improvement of a building to correct existing state
or local code violations or any alteration to a "historic
building," provided that the alteration will not preclude the
building's continued designation as a "historic building
134. Suspension--Removal of a participating community from
the NFIP because the community has not enacted and/or enforced
the proper floodplain management regulations required for
participation in the NFIP
135. Tentative Rates--Unpublished NFIP rates used to issue
policies for applications that fail to provide the NFIP with
valid actuarial rating information
136. Travel Trailer--Under the NFIP, a travel trailer can be
considered a building only if it is without wheels, built on a
chassis and affixed to a permanent foundation, and regulated
under the community's floodplain management and building
ordinances or laws
137. 2-to 4-Family Residence--A residential building
(excluding hotels and motels with normal room rentals for less
than 6 months' duration) containing no more than four dwelling
units Incidental occupancies such as office, professional,
private school, or studio space are permitted if the total area
of such occupancies is limited to less than 25 percent of the
total floor area within the building
138. Underground Building--A building for which 50 percent or
more of the actual cash value, including machinery and equipment
that are part of the building, is below ground
139. Unfinished Area--An enclosed area that is used only for
the parking of vehicles, building access, or storage purposes
and that does not meet the definition of a finished (habitable)
area Sheet-rock (drywall) used for fire protection is permitted
in unfinished areas
140. Unit--A single-family unit owned by the policyholder in
a condominium building
141. Valued Policy--A policy in which the insured and the
insurer agree on the value of the property insured, that value
being payable in the event of a total loss The Standard Flood
Insurance Policy is not a valued policy
142. Variance--A grant of relief by a participating community
from the terms of its floodplain management regulations
143. Waiting Period--The time between the date of application
and the policy effective date
144. Walled and Roofed--A building that has two or more
exterior rigid walls and a fully secured roof and that is
affixed to a permanent site
145. Wave Height Adjustment--A measurement that is added to
the base flood elevation for V Zones shown on the Flood
Insurance Rate Map published prior to 1981 For coastal
communities, the base flood elevation shown on Flood Insurance
Rate Maps published prior to 1981 are still-water elevations,
which include only the effects of tide and storm surge, and not
the height of wind-generated waves
146. Write Your Own (WYO) Program--A cooperative undertaking
of the insurance industry and the Federal Insurance
Administration begun in October 1983 The WYO Program operates
within the context of the NFIP and involves private insurance
carriers who issue and service National Flood Insurance Program
policies
147. Zone--A geographical area shown on a Flood Hazard
Boundary Map or a Flood Insurance Rate Map that reflects the
severity or type of flooding in the area.
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