Thanks for the comments. I don't believe that a footing monolithic with a slab responds to loading the same as a strip/pad footer would. The big question is, how do we qualify the difference? Some input from the geotechnicals would be helpful.
Since 1984, I have routinely used utility-grade earth anchors to resist uplift in pre-engineered buildings (the anchors and installation are more economical than concrete). Issues you have to be concerned about is (of course) corrision and water table elevation relative to the anchor contact zone. I also think summing moments to equal zero is not neccessary as long as the resisting moment is greater than the uplift moment. And, if the column pad is indeed monolithic with the slab, what affect does this have?
Ucfse, where in Florida do you do these stemwall foundations (Orlando, CF)? This type of foundation is not competitive with monolithic construction on the East coast. And the 1.5 FS has been replaced with the 0.6DL + WL load combination (or 1.67 FS) in both ASCE 7 and FBC.
Come on Structural/Geotechnical Dudes/Dudettes, post some comments!