OAR 918-020-0090
Program Standards
(1)
Administrative Standards. A building inspection program must:(a)
Provide adequate funds, equipment, and other resources necessary to administer and enforce the building inspection program in conformance with an approved operating plan;(b)
Document in writing the authority and responsibilities of the building official, plan reviewers, and inspectors based on an ordinance or resolution that authorizes the building official on behalf of the municipality to administer and enforce a building inspection program;(c)
Establish a local process to review appeals of technical and scientific determinations made by the building official regarding any provision of the specialty codes the municipality administers and enforces, to include a method to identify the local building official or designee and notify the aggrieved persons of the provisions of ORS 455.475 (Appeal of decision of building official);(d)
Account for all revenues collected and expenditures made relating to administration and enforcement of the building inspection program, and account for the electrical program revenues and expenditures separately when administered by the municipality.(A)
Prepare income and expense projections for each code program it will administer and enforce during the reporting period; and(B)
Describe how general administrative overhead costs and losses or surpluses, if any, will be allocated.(e)
Establish policies and procedures for the retention and retrieval of records relating to the administration and enforcement of the specialty codes it administers and enforces;(f)
Make its operating plan available to the public;(g)
Establish a process to receive public inquiries, comments, and complaints;(h)
Adopt a process to receive and respond to customers’ questions regarding permitting, plan review, and inspections;(i)
Set reasonable time periods between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. on days its permit office is open, weekends and holidays excluded, when it will receive and respond to customers’ questions;(j)
Post its jurisdictional boundary, types of permits sold and hours of operation at each permit office it operates;(k)
Identify all persons in addition to the building official to whom notices issued pursuant to these rules should be sent;(l)
Return a completed data request form to and as provided by the division annually; and(m)
Execute a memorandum of agreement with and as approved by the division for initial building inspection program approval and assumption, for building program expansion approval and assumption, and thereafter when seeking approval to renew a program under OAR 918-020-0105 (Renewal of Existing Programs).(2)
Permitting Standards. A building inspection program must:(a)
Provide at least one office within its jurisdictional boundary where permits may be purchased;(b)
Set reasonable time periods between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. on days its permit office is open, weekends and holidays excluded, when it will make permits available for purchase;(c)
Establish policies and procedures for receiving permit applications, determining whether permit applications are complete and notifying applicants what information, if any, is required to complete an application;(d)
Set reasonable time periods within which the municipality will:(A)
Advise permit applicants whether an application is complete or requires additional information; and(B)
Generally issue a permit after an application has been submitted and approved.(e)
Establish policies and procedure for issuing permits not requiring plan review, emergency permits, temporary permits, master permits, and minor labels;(f)
Provide a means to receive permit applications via facsimile; and(g)
Require proof of licensing, registration, and certification of any person who proposes to engage in any activity regulated by ORS chapters 446, 447, 455, 479, 693, and 701 prior to issuing any permit.(3)
Plan Review Standards. A building inspection program must:(a)
Establish policies and procedures for its plan review process to:(A)
Assure compliance with the specialty codes it is responsible for administering and enforcing, including any current interpretive rulings adopted pursuant to ORS 455.060 (Rulings on acceptability of material, design or method of construction) or 455.475 (Appeal of decision of building official);(B)
Make available checklists or other materials at each permitting office it operates that reasonably apprises persons of the information required to constitute a complete permit application or set of plans;(C)
Inform applicants within three working days of receiving an application, whether or not the application is complete and if it is for a simple residential plan. For the purposes of this rule and ORS 455.467 (Timelines for approval or disapproval of certain specialty code building plans), a “complete application” is defined by the division, taking into consideration the regional procedures in OAR chapter 918, division 50. If deemed a simple residential plan, the jurisdiction must also inform the applicant of the time period in which the plan review will generally be completed;(D)
Establish a process that includes phased permitting and deferred submittals for plan review of commercial projects for all assumed specialty codes, taking into consideration the regional procedures in OAR chapter 918, division 50. The process may not allow a project to proceed beyond the level of approval authorized by the building official. The process must:(i)
Require the building official to issue permits in accordance with the state building code as defined in ORS 455.010 (Definitions for ORS chapter 455) provided that adequate information and detailed statements have been submitted and approved with pertinent requirements of the appropriate code. Permits may include, but not be limited to: excavation, shoring, grading and site utilities, construction of foundations, structural frame, shell, or any other part of a building or structure.(ii)
Allow deferred submittals to be permitted within each phase with the approval of the building official; and(iii)
Require the applicant to be notified of the estimated timelines for phased plan reviews and that the applicant is proceeding without assurance that a permit for the entire structure will be granted when a phased permit is issued.(E)
Verify that all plans have been stamped by a registered design professional and licensed plan reviewer where required;(F)
Verify for those architects and engineers requesting the use of alternative one and two family dwelling plan review program that all plans have been stamped by a registered professional who is also a residential plans examiner. This process must require the building official to:(i)
Establish policies and procedures in their operating plan for this process;(ii)
Waive building inspection program plan review requirements for conventional light frame construction for detached one and two family dwellings; and(iii)
Establish an appropriate fee for processing plans submitted under this rule.(G)
Establish a process for plan review if non-certified individuals review permit applications under OAR 918-098-1010 (Certification Exemptions).(b)
Employ or contract with a person licensed, registered, or certified to provide consultation and advice on plan reviews as deemed necessary by the building official based on the complexity and scope of its customers’ needs;(c)
Maintain a list of all persons it employs or contracts with to provide plan review services including licenses, registrations, and certifications held by each plan reviewer and evidence of compliance with all applicable statutory or professional continuing education requirements;(d)
Designate at least three licensed plan reviewers from whom the municipality will accept plan reviews when the time periods in subsection (e) of this section cannot be met; and(e)
Allow an applicant to use a plan reviewer licensed under OAR 918-090-0210 (Specialty Code Plan Reviewer and Inspector License — Application Requirements) and approved by the building official when the time period for review of “simple one- or two-family dwelling plans” exceeds 10 days where the population served is less than 300,000, or 15 days where the population served is 300,000 or greater.(4)
For the purposes of these rules, “simple one- or two-family dwelling plans” must:(a)
Comply with the requirements for prescriptive construction under the Oregon Residential Specialty Code; or(b)
Comply with the Oregon Manufactured Dwelling Installation Specialty Code and the requirements in OAR chapter 918, division 500; and(c)
Be a structure of three stories or less with an enclosed total floor space of 4,500 square feet or less, inclusive of multiple stories and garage(s).(5)
“Simple one- or two-family dwelling plans” may:(a)
Include pre-engineered systems listed and approved by nationally accredited agencies in accordance with the appropriate specialty code, or by state interpretive rulings approved by the appropriate specialty board, that require no additional analysis; and(b)
Be designed by an architect or engineer and be considered a simple one- and two-family dwelling if all other criteria in this rule are met.(6)
The following are considered “simple one- or two-family dwelling plans”:(a)
Master plans approved by the division or municipality or under ORS 455.685 (Review of plans and specifications to determine compliance), which require no additional analysis; and(b)
Plans that include an engineering soil report if the report allows prescriptive building construction and requires no special systems or additional analysis.(7)
A plan that does not meet the definition of “simple” in this rule is deemed “complex”. In order to provide timely customer service, a building official may accept a plan review performed by a licensed plan reviewer for a complex one- or two-family dwelling.(8)
Inspection Standards. A building inspection program must:(a)
Set reasonable time periods between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. on days its permit office is open, weekends and holidays excluded, when it will provide inspection services or alternative inspection schedules agreed to by the municipality and permittee;(b)
Unless otherwise specified by statute or specialty code, establish reasonable time periods when inspection services will be provided following requests for inspections;(c)
Establish policies and procedures for inspection services;(d)
Leave a written copy of the inspection report on site;(e)
Make available any inspection checklists;(f)
Maintain a list of all persons it employs or contracts with to provide inspection services including licenses, registrations, and certifications held by persons performing inspection services and evidence of compliance with all applicable statutory or professional continuing education requirements;(g)
Vest the building official with authority to issue stop work orders for failure to comply with the specialty codes the municipality is responsible for administering and enforcing; and(h)
Require inspectors to perform license enforcement inspections as part of routine installation inspections.(i)
Where a municipality investigates and enforces violations under ORS 455.156 (Municipal investigation and enforcement of certain violations) or in accordance with the municipality’s local compliance program, the municipality’s inspectors must require proof of compliance with the licensing, permitting, registration, and certification requirements of persons engaged in any activity regulated by ORS Chapters 446, 447, 455, 479, 693, and 701. Inspectors must report any violation of a licensing, permitting, registration, or certification requirement to the appropriate enforcement agency.(9)
Compliance Programs. A municipality administering a building inspection program may enact local regulations to create its own enforcement program with local procedures and penalties; utilize the division’s compliance program by submitting compliance reports to the division; elect to act as an agent of a division board pursuant to ORS 455.156 (Municipal investigation and enforcement of certain violations); or develop a program that may include, but not be limited to, a combination thereof. A building inspection program must establish in its operating plan:(a)
Procedures to respond to public complaints regarding work performed without a license or permit or in violation of the specialty codes the municipality is responsible for administering and enforcing;(b)
Procedures requiring proof of licensure for work being performed under the state building code utilizing the approved citation process and procedures in OAR 918-020-0091 (Citation Process for Licensing Violations).(c)
Policies and procedures to implement their compliance program;(d)
Policies and procedures regarding investigation of complaints, where the municipality chooses to investigate and enforce violations pursuant to ORS 455.156 (Municipal investigation and enforcement of certain violations); and(e)
Policies and procedures regarding issuance of notices of proposed assessments of civil penalties, where the municipality chooses to act as an agent of a board pursuant to ORS 455.156 (Municipal investigation and enforcement of certain violations). Penalties under such a program are subject to the limitations set in 455.156 (Municipal investigation and enforcement of certain violations) and 455.895 (Civil penalties).(10)
Electrical Programs. Municipalities that administer and enforce an electrical program must demonstrate compliance with all applicable electrical rules adopted pursuant to ORS 479.855 (City and county inspection and enforcement programs).
Source:
Rule 918-020-0090 — Program Standards, https://secure.sos.state.or.us/oard/view.action?ruleNumber=918-020-0090
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