Thanks for the help, guys, but I am already ahead of you. Maybe I should have explained my question better. I already have the footings sized for uplift and have sufficient anchor bolt depth to anchor to the mass of concrete. The footings, in this case, have a top surface that is at floor elevation. In other words, these footings will become part of the floor slab (when it is poured at a later date). Therefore, there are no piers and no soil over the top of the footing to resist. This was not by my choice, this is the situation that was given to me. What I am trying to prevent is cracking along the top surface of the concrete, since this will eventually be part of the finished floor. Since I have sized the footings to resist the given uplift, and it is adequately anchored, they will never actually lift from the ground. But, what I am trying to prevent is the cracking that may occur from a high uplift load causing tension in the top face of the footing. Essentially, the way that I perceive it, it is equivalent to viewing the footing as trying to fold under by its own weight (these footings are large enough to do so). So, that is my problem, how to prevent the compromise of the surface of the concrete.