Home & Property · Southern Tier
Barton Floodplain Work Needs a Permit Check Early
Barton owners near flood-prone land should treat maps and local flood-damage rules as an early project check, not a closing surprise.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
In Barton, floodplain status can change the project checklist. That does not make every low-ground property a problem, but it does mean the official map deserves a look before work starts.
The town’s Flood Damage Prevention chapter defines the base floodplain as land in the floodplain subject to a one-percent or greater chance of flooding in any given year.
It also defines base flood as the flood with a one-percent annual chance of being equaled or exceeded. Those definitions matter for buyers and owners because a garage, manufactured home, fill, addition, or repair may need a local floodplain review before work starts.
NYS DEC explains floodplain management as corrective and preventative measures for reducing flood damage, adopted by state and local governments so citizens remain eligible for flood insurance.
The Barton habit is simple: before buying near low ground or starting work near mapped flood-prone land, check the official map, then ask Code Enforcement whether the flood-damage chapter applies. Bring the address, project description, and any survey or elevation information you already have.
That lets the town, Tioga County context, and DEC floodplain guidance sit in the same folder before the project becomes urgent.