The permit application landed on Tom Breslin's desk Monday morning: single-family home, Bay County, Florida, three blocks from where Hurricane Michael erased his house in 2018. Foundation elevation 12 feet above sea level. Wind load calculations for 120 mph gusts. Impact-resistant windows. Everything by the book.
Under the old rules, Breslin would have had weeks to review it. Under House Bill 267, which went into effect January 1, he has five business days or the permit auto-approves. It's Wednesday. The builder called twice yesterday asking about timeline.
Breslin has been a building inspector for 23 years. His truck smells like coffee and drywall dust. The passenger seat holds a clipboard, a laser level, and a three-ring binder containing the Florida Building Code—specifically the 2023 8th Edition that went into effect last December. On the dashboard, a faded photo shows his house before Michael. There's no after photo.
"The timeline's the timeline," he says, driving to the site. "Five days for projects under fifteen thousand. We miss it, the permit approves automatically. We're late on revisions, we cut the fee twenty percent per day."
He doesn't say what happens when you're rushing inspections in a county where the last major hurricane exceeded code parameters by 40 mph.
What the Code Does Brilliantly
The house frame is already up. The builder, Mike Torres, meets Breslin at the site with revised plans. Torres has been building in Bay County for 15 years. He knows what Breslin knows: the code works brilliantly for what it was designed to address.
After Hurricane Ian in 2022, FEMA found that homes built to post-2001 standards showed zero wind-related structural damage. Zero. Meanwhile, older homes in the same neighborhoods experienced severe structural damage. The code saves lives and property.
For wind.
"Foundation elevation looks good," Breslin says, checking his laser level. "Twelve feet. That's two feet above base flood elevation."
"Owner asked about going higher," Torres says. "Fourteen, maybe fifteen feet. I told him it's not required."
"It's not."
"But you think—"
"I think the code is the code," Breslin says. "My job is to verify compliance with the standards as written."
What he doesn't say: the current building code for this region assumes maximum wind gusts of 120 mph in a 700-year period—roughly a Category 2 storm. Hurricane Michael hit here with 160 mph sustained winds. The 2010 code revision actually reduced wind speed requirements in the Panhandle and removed parts of the region from the 140-mph wind-borne debris zone. Michael's inner core hit areas where the code no longer required impact-resistant windows more than a mile inland.
Breslin approved construction to those standards the week before Michael hit. He approves construction to those same standards today.
Four Years Behind the Last Storm
Torres watches Breslin measure the foundation. "How long until they update the code for Ian?"
"December 2026," Breslin says. "Four years after the storm."
"That's—"
"The three-year update cycle. Ian hit September 2022. Couldn't make the 8th Edition. Goes into the 9th."
"So this house—"
"Meets the 8th Edition. Which was locked in before Ian."
Torres doesn't ask the obvious question: what happens when the next storm exceeds code parameters? That's not on the inspection checklist.
Breslin checks the wind load calculations. The impact-resistant window installation. The roof-to-wall connections. Everything meets code. Everything will probably survive a Category 2, maybe a Category 3 depending on storm surge.
He signs the preliminary approval. Torres looks at the form, then at the house frame, then back at Breslin.
"You ever tell people the truth?" Torres asks. "About what's actually coming?"
"I tell them if they meet code or they don't. That's the truth I'm authorized to tell."
Faster Permits, Same Old Standards
Breslin's truck idles in the driveway while he updates his tablet. Fourteen inspections today. The office manager sent an email this morning: they're running behind on permit approvals. HB 267's five-day deadline is creating backlog. The county can't afford the 20% daily fee reductions for late approvals.
Meanwhile, FEMA—which has historically pushed for stronger building codes after disasters—withdrew its recommendations for the 2027 International Codes in February. The proposals focused on helping homes survive strong winds, seismic shaking, and rising floodwaters. FEMA submitted them, then pulled them back.
Speed matters more than scrutiny now. Federal support for stronger standards is evaporating. And the houses Breslin approves today, with their 50-year expected lifespans, will face conditions based on climate patterns from 2015-2020.
Sea level is rising at more than an inch per decade. Storm surge is intensifying. The base flood elevation he's checking against doesn't account for acceleration in either.
His phone rings. Another builder asking about permit timeline. Breslin gives him the same answer he gave Torres: five business days or it auto-approves.
"Can you expedite?" the builder asks.
"I can verify compliance with the standards as written," Breslin says. "That's what I can do."
The Calculation Nobody Makes
If builders followed the latest International Codes, communities could avoid more than $600 billion in cumulative disaster losses by 2060—with every dollar spent on hazard-resistant codes saving $11.
Those calculations assume the codes keep pace with changing risk. They assume the update cycle captures emerging threats before they become catastrophic. They assume the standards being enforced today will be adequate for conditions buildings will face over their lifespan.
Breslin drives to his next inspection. The clipboard sits on the passenger seat. The binder with the code stays on the dashboard. The photo of his old house stays there too, fading a little more in the Florida sun each day.
The homeowner meets him outside. New construction, foundation at code-required elevation, everything by the book. The homeowner thanks him for the inspection, says she feels safer knowing the house meets Florida's strict building standards.
Breslin measures the foundation elevation. Checks the wind load calculations. Verifies the impact-resistant window installation. Everything on the checklist. Everything correct.
"You're good to go," he says, signing the form.
The homeowner asks if the house will survive the next hurricane. Breslin looks at the form in his hand, then at the house, then back at the homeowner.
"It meets code," he says.
That's the truth he's authorized to tell.
Things to follow up on...
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Private provider oversight weakened: House Bill 267 also limited local building agencies' ability to audit private providers to just four times per month, raising questions about quality control as inspection timelines compress.
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Aging building inspections mandated: Florida's 2024 code supplement now requires milestone inspections for buildings that reach 30 years of age, with coastal buildings potentially requiring inspection at 25 years due to environmental conditions.
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Climate data update coming: NOAA is updating its precipitation frequency atlas to account for climate change by 2027, providing critical information for infrastructure design in a changing climate—the first time the atlas will incorporate climate projections.
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Post-Ian mortgage delinquencies reveal pattern: CoreLogic found that homes built between 1978 and 2002 had some of the highest 90-day-plus mortgage delinquency rates after Hurricane Ian, while post-2010 homes had the lowest rates, demonstrating the economic impact of building code improvements.

