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1305.01 ADOPTION. <br />There is hereby adopted by the Municipality, the Residential Code of Ohio (RCO) Ohio <br />and related codes as adopted by the Ohio Board of Building Standards, Department of Industrial <br />Relations, effective May 27, 2006, and as identified and published in Division 4101:8 et seq. of <br />the Ohio Administrative Code (OAC). <br />1305.02 PURPOSE. <br />The purpose of the Residential Code of Ohio is to establish uniform minimum <br />requirements for the erection, construction, repair, alteration, and maintenance of residential <br />buildings, including construction of industrialized units. Such requirements shall relate to the <br />conservation of energy, safety, and sanitation of buildings for their intended use and occupancy <br />with consideration for the following: <br />(a) Performance. Establish such requirements, in terms of performance objectives <br />for the use intended. Further, the rules shall consider the following: <br />(1) The impact that the state residential building code may have upon <br />the health, safety, and welfare of the public; <br />(2) The economic reasonableness of the residential building code; <br />(3) The technical feasibility of the residential building code; <br />(4) The financial impact that the residential building code may have on <br />the public's ability to purchase affordable housing. <br />(b) Extent of Use. Permit to the fullest extent feasible, the use of materials and <br />technical methods, devices, and improvements which tend to reduce the cost of <br />construction without affecting minimum requirements for the health, safety, and <br />security of the occupants of buildings without preferential treatment of types or <br />classes of materials or products or methods of construction. <br />(c) Standardization. To encourage, so far as may be practicable, the standardization <br />of construction practices, methods, equipment, material and techniques, including <br />methods employed to produce industrialized units. <br />This code does not prevent a local governing authority from adopting additional <br />regulations governing residential structures if the regulations comply with this <br />section. <br />(a) A local governing authority shall, and any person may, notify the board <br />of building standards of any regulations the local governing authority adopts <br />related to content within the scope of this code and request that the Board of <br />Building Standards determine whether that regulation conflicts with the state <br />residential building code. <br />(1) Not later than sixty days after receiving a notice to review local <br />regulations for conflict, the board shall determine, based upon a recommendation <br />from the advisory committee, whether the regulation conflicts with the state <br />residential building code and shall notify any person who submitted the notice <br />and the local governing authority that adopted the regulation of the board's <br />determination. <br />(2) If the board determines that a conflict does not exist, the board <br />shall take no further action with regard to the regulation. If the board determines <br />a conflict exists and the regulation is not necessary to protect the health or safety <br />of the persons within the local governing authority's jurisdiction, the regulation is <br />not valid and the local governing authority may not enforce the regulation. <br />(3) If the board determines that a conflict exists and that the <br />regulation is necessary to protect the health or safety of the persons within the <br />local governing authority's jurisdiction, the board shall adopt a rule to <br />2002 Replacement <br />