flexiblefullpage - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
Currently Reading

Working Toward Affordable, Resilient Homes

Advertisement
billboard -
News

Working Toward Affordable, Resilient Homes

A new natural disaster protection act from NAHB aims to support hazard mitigation projects


By Alicia Huey January 22, 2024
fema
Photo: stock.adobe.com
This article first appeared in the January/February 2024 issue of Pro Remodeler.
alicia huey nahb
Alicia Huey, 2023 NAHB Chairman

For the past five years, the Disaster Recovery Reform Act’s pre-disaster hazard mitigation guidelines have allowed the use of building codes from the two most recent editions. This gives residential construction professionals flexibility at the state and local levels. Unfortunately, that changed in October.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) now calls for adherence to only the most recent edition of building codes. That lack of flexibility has become a serious concern for local governments and builders across the nation.

As the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) has pointed out to lawmakers, this requirement puts pressure on jurisdictions to adopt building codes without a thorough vetting and amendment process. This could result in costly code changes that do not contribute to meaningful safety and resiliency improvements.

But a solution is in the works. 

 

The Promoting Resilient Buildings Act

In December, the House of Represen­ta­tives approved NAHB-supported legislation that would help jurisdictions preserve local control over the building code adoption process while encouraging communities to take steps to withstand and recover from extreme events.

The Promoting Resilient Buildings Act (H.R. 5473) allows grants under the Pre-Disaster Mitigation grant program to use the two latest codes indefinitely. It also allows capitalization grants under the Safeguarding Tomorrow Revolving Loan Fund Program to be used to implement the two latest editions of codes instead of only the latest edition.

Reps. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) and Donald Norcross (D-NJ) introduced the bill with Reps. Nick Langworthy (R-NY), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ). Resident Commissioner Jenniffer González-Colón (R-PR) joined as co-sponsors. 

 

The requirement puts pressure on jurisdictions to adopt codes without a thorough vetting and amendment process. 

 

Residential Retrofit and Resilience Pilot Program

Under this legislation, a residential resilient retrofit means a project that is designed to increase the resilience of an existing home or residence using mitigation measures that the administrator determines reduce damage and impacts from natural disaster hazards and risks that are most likely to occur in the area where the home is located. 

This includes: 

• Elevations of homes and elevations of utilities within and around structures to mitigate damages

• Flood-proofing measures

• The construction of tornado safe rooms

• Seismic retrofits

• Wildfire retrofit and mitigation measures

• Wind retrofits, including roof replacements, hurricane straps, tie-downs, and other measures.

It’s important to note that as remodelers retrofit aging homes to improve energy efficiency, in many cases they are also improving those homes’ resistance to natural disasters, including floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, and wildfires. Research indicates that homes built to more contemporary codes perform better than older homes when subject to natural hazards.

NAHB is working to get a companion bill introduced in the Senate. Prospects are considered good, given that the bill enjoyed broad bipartisan support and passed unanimously in the House.

 

Alicia Huey, a Birmingham, Ala.-based custom builder and developer with 30+ years of experience is NAHB’s 2023 Chairman.

 


Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
leaderboard2 - default

Related Stories

Business Coach Cited in Suit Against Contractor

A New England contractor faces a civil suit alleging his company’s growth was tied to a business coach with a model that “encourages fraud.”

Harvard Says Remodeling Spending Downturn to Slow

Could the drop in remodeling spending from post-COVID levels regulate soon?

Power Home Remodeling Now Offers Subsidized Childcare

The home improvement giant's move seeks to address a greater industry issue

Contractor Facing Lawsuit in ‘Major Case’ by Ohio Attorney General

An Ohio custom builder and remodeler faces a lawsuit after alleged losses exceeding $1 million

Learn from the Best in Home Improvement and Remodeling

This year’s Pinnacle Experience aims to help remodelers stay ahead of their competitors by featuring captivating keynote speakers and subject matter experts, collaborative roundtable discussions, and networking with proven players from across the country.

Registration Open for The Pinnacle Experience 2024

Register today for The Pinnacle Experience 2024 in Baltimore from June 26-28. Join the best and brightest in home improvement and remodeling for insight, advice, and relationship-building that will help you take your business to new heights.

Marvin Releases Switchable Privacy Glass Window

The privacy glass windows can be purchased from Marvin's Direct Glaze windows

Gas Ban in New Construction Considered by Chicago

The mayor-backed ordinance would impact all new construction

The Remodeling Market Could Turn in Q4, Says Harvard

Repair and remodeling spending could see an uptick at the end of the year

Seattle Contractor Finds Grenade During Remodel

Polar Bear Construction Owner Vadim Kharkhavyy and the owner were equally shocked

Advertisement
boombox2 -
Advertisement
halfpage2 -
Advertisement
native1 -

More in Category




Advertisement
native2 -
Advertisement
halfpage1 -
Advertisement
leaderboard1 -