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<br />Profiles and Floodway Data tables. Users should reference the data presented in the FIS <br />report as well as additional information that may be available at the local community map <br />repository before making flood elevation and/or floodplain boundary determinations. <br /> <br />4.1 Floodplain Boundaries <br /> <br />To provide a national standard without regional discrimination, the I-percent- <br />annual-chance flood has been adopted by FEMA as the base flood for floodplain <br />management purposes. The 0.2-percent-annual-chance flood is employed to <br />indicate additional areas of flood risk in the community. For each stream studied <br />by detailed methods, the 1- and 0.2-percent-annual-chance floodplain boundaries <br />have been delineated using the flood elevations determined at each cross section. <br />Between cross sections, the boundaries were interpolated using topographic <br />mapping. <br /> <br />The 1- and 0.2-percent-alll1ual-chance floodplain boundaries are shown on the <br />FIRM. On this map, the I-percent-annual-chance floodplain boundary <br />corresponds to the boundary of the areas of special flood hazards (Zones A, AE, <br />and AH), and the 0.2-percent-alll1ual-chance floodplain boundary corresponds to <br />the boundary of areas of moderate flood hazards. In cases where the 1- and 0.2- <br />percent-annual-chance floodplain boundaries are close together, only the 1- <br />percent-annual-chance floodplain boundary has been shown. Small areas within <br />the floodplain boundaries may lie above the flood elevations, but cannot be <br />shown due to limitations of the map scale and/or lack of detailed topographic <br />data. <br /> <br />For the streams studied by approximate methods, only the <br />I-percent-annual-chance floodplain boundary is shown on the FIRM. <br /> <br />4.2 Floodways <br /> <br />Encroachment on floodplains, such as structures and fill, reduces flood-carrying <br />capacity, increases flood heights and velocities, and increases flood hazards in <br />areas beyond the encroachment itself. One aspect of floodplain management <br />involves balancing the economic gain from floodplain development against the <br />resulting increase in flood hazard. For purposes of the NFIP, a floodway is used <br />as a tool to assist local conununities in this aspect of floodplain management. <br />Under this concept, the area of the I-percent-annual-chance floodplain is divided <br />into a floodway and a floodway fringe. The floodway is the channel of a stream, <br />plus any adjacent floodplain areas, that must be kept free of encroachment so that <br />the base flood can be carried without substantial increases in flood heights. <br />Minimum Federal standards limit such increases to 1 foot, provided that <br />hazardous velocities are not produced. The floodways in this study are presented <br />to local agencies as minimum standards that can be adopted directly or that can <br />be used as a basis for additional floodway studies. <br /> <br />The floodways for this study were computed on the basis of equal conveyance <br />reduction from each side of the flood plain or encroachment to the stream banks. <br />The results of these computations are tabulated at selected cross sections for each <br />stream segment for which a floodway is computed and are shown on Table 6, <br />"Floodway Data". <br /> <br />12 <br />