A new coalition led by real estate and building trade industry groups wants to make building and occupancy codes in St. Louis County more consistent.
鈥淲e have about 42 different code books active across six code areas in St. Louis County,鈥 said Charlie Hinderliter, government affairs director for the St. Louis Realtors, which is part of Safer, Simpler St. Louis County. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 17,000 pages, nearly twice the size of the Internal Revenue Code.鈥
The codes govern such details as how many exits a building must have and the color of cement used to join PVC pipes, Hinderliter said. Having so many codes is not only confusing for contractors, it can also present a safety issue.
A study by the Realtors group found that some municipalities are using codes from the early 2000s, he said.
鈥淭hose best practices that we have been learning have not been applied and do not have to be applied when people go and build in those municipalities,鈥 Hinderliter said. 鈥淲e've got some municipalities here that are very small, and they don't have the staff to go through what are really complicated building codes and make sure they're up to date.鈥
Safer, Simpler St. Louis County has no interest in addressing zoning or architectural review policies, Hinderliter said. Local governments, he said, should be allowed to control the look and feel of their communities.
Pat Kelly, executive director of the Municipal League of Metropolitan St. Louis, said his organization鈥檚 members support the idea of simplifying the codes. But he was annoyed by inconsistencies he cited in a report from the Realtors.
For example, Kelly said, the City of Black Jack using a building code from 1996 written by an organization that no longer exists. But Kelly said Black Jack has had a contract with St. Louis County to do its permitting since the early 2000s, which means it has by default adopted St. Louis County鈥檚 codes.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 need the falsehoods,鈥 Kelly said. 鈥淲e鈥檇 be better off if we just communicate and try to work together to resolve and come up with a collaborative solution for what they鈥檙e trying to do.鈥
Hinderliter said the coalition expects code simplification to be a multiyear effort.
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