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Administrative History

Functions pertaining to regulation of housing construction and enforcement of building codes were originally executed by the State Building Code Commission, which was established under Chapter 800 of the Laws of 1951. This statute required the commission to appoint three of its members to a State Building Construction Board of Review that performed functions almost identical to those later assigned to the modern Regional Boards of Review.

In 1961 (Chapter 197) the State Building Code Commission was abolished and replaced by the State Building Code Council, which was administratively placed within the Division of Housing. The State Building Construction Board of Review was retained and continued its responsibilities.

Chapter 707 of the Laws of 1981 (Article 18 of the Executive Law) authorized the secretary of state to promulgate rules and regulations prescribing minimum standards for the administration and enforcement of the State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code. This included establishing and implementing procedures to grant variances to any provision or requirement of the code in cases when strict compliance could entail practical difficulties or unnecessary hardship, or would otherwise be unwarranted. The law also provided for establishment of five Regional Boards of Review to grant such variances.

Although enacted in 1981, provisions of Chapter 707 did not become effective until January 1, 1984. In 1984, the functions of the former State Building Code Council remained with the Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR). Only the functions of the State Building Construction Board of Review were transferred to the Dept. of State (DOS). The DOS's Codes Division administers the variance procedure and provides administrative support for the Boards.

Since 1984, persons or organizations seeking a variance submit petitions to the DOS Codes Division. Upon receipt of a petition, a Codes Division analyst determines if all information necessary to complete a review is present. If not, the division informs the petitioner what is needed. Upon review of completed petitions, Codes Division staff either issue or deny the variance or refer the petition to one of the Regional Boards, depending on the class of building and type of variance required.

Decisions rendered by division staff deal with routine petitions; the regional boards deal with more complicated ones. Cases are classified according to standards stated in 19 NYCRR 450.6. Following hearings, board staff forward all original hearing records to Codes Division offices in Albany. Division staff use these records to prepare detailed formal decisions, copies of which go to the applicant and the local government building department. The DOS central division office is the office of record for all original records relating to variances.