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Clark County outlines typical residential inspections, scheduling rules and common corrections

5448362 · July 22, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Clark County Building Safety Program presenters explained the sequence of required residential inspections, common reasons for failed inspections and how to request inspections, emphasizing pre-construction erosion control, zoning verification, framing, energy tests and final certificate-of-occupancy holds.

Mikaela Rankin, program assistant with the Clark County Building Safety Program, and field inspectors Eric Rous and James Bales summarized the typical inspections required for residential building permits and the most common corrections that cause delays during a recent online county learning lab.

The overview matters because missed requirements — from erosion control measures and correct plot-plan placement to required radon and blower-door tests — can stop final approvals and delay occupancy or trigger additional work orders and agency holds.

Clark County staff led the session as a practical guide for homeowners, contractors and builders on how to schedule inspections, what inspectors will verify on site and which items commonly cause failed inspections. Rankin emphasized three ways to request inspections: online at permits.clark.wa.gov, by phone through the automated inspection request line at (564) 397-2477, or by texting the word schedule to (866) 714-5489. “With the inspection title, there’s also an INS number next to it. That’s the inspection code that you’ll need to request the inspections over the phone or via text message,” Rankin said. She also noted requests for next-day inspections must be made before 10 p.m.

The presenters front-loaded items that most often block progress. The pre-construction erosion inspection, required before scheduling other inspections, is treated as an on-site pre-construction meeting to confirm erosion-control best management practices (BMPs), construction access and posted address. Common failures for the erosion inspection include BMPs not installed as shown on approved plans, no bathroom facility, missing posted address and absence of approved plans on site.

Eric Rous…

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