OK as one structural engineer in Florida who has forever been criticized for oversized foundations here is what I do in my practice. I'm sure some of you will disagree with regard to code interpretation but this is what I do and I feel confident.
First my the .6DL for ASD design I think was intended to make sure the dead load wasn't overestimated with dealing with net uplift situations. Usually for a gravity load situation in ASD the factor is 1.0. For LRFD its 1.2. So clearly the more confident we are on the accuracy of our loads the less of a amplification factor is required. For live loads the amplifcation is much higher.
I think the 0.6 factor is extra low just because our base dead loads are usually overestimated for gravity load cases. So by using a 0.6 factor we are sure not to be using too heavy a dead load when calculation net uplift. Its not that all the sudden we are unsure of the dead load.
For single story buildings I actually calculate the net uplift at the base of the column using ASD's 0.6DL + WL. That is the acting force on the foundation. On the resistance side I will then use the soil weight, concrete footing weight, etc... then make sure that the this resistance is 1.5 times greater than the net uplift from above. My view is that the soil weight and the concrete weights are known and therefore don't have to have the 0.6 DL factor. If I were to do this than I wouldn't think any factor of safety would be required.
In addition I make sure that the concrete weight alone without any soil weight yields at least a factor of safety of 1.0. That way if the soil conditions are soaked with water I still really don't have a problem. Also if the foundation starts to lift out of the ground the water bouyancy issue goes to zero effect. If the area of the column is greater than 800 square feet I'll sometimes use the MFWRS uplift loads since they are lower. It just depends on my mood.
I'm sure some will disagree with this approach but it is substantial and I'm confident I'll never have a footing pull out of the ground. I never considered cohesion cause I don't have time for that. What I do know is that I get accused of over designing my foundations on a regular basis and it gets really old explaining to someone why. Every now and then you'll talk to a contractor whos seen overturned steel dumpsters from a hurricane and they get the idea. I always try to paint the picture for people by having them imagine the building upside down with the columns hanging from the foundations. Now hang about 10 cars on the columns, etc, etc... You start putting the loads in terms of how many cars and they start getting the idea. Still I see relative to mine plenty of light foundations out there that obviously have not considered uplift.
For the anchor bolts sometimes I'll use the proper LRFD factors but in most cases I'll just take the 0.6DL + WL and multiply by 1.6 and 2.0 which is almost always way conservative. I see no reason why connections shouldn't be over engineered since they are cheap.
I have to say though that I've never heard of a foundation pulling up out of the ground. Not even on old buildings where certainly the engineers of old didn't even consider this. My guess is that if one column starts to lift up all the sudden it carries a much larger areas of DL then just its normal tributary area. Other columns might not even be in uplift at the same time cause we are talking about gusting winds. So you need to have multiple columns foundation fail simultaneously. The ASCE wind loads are probably way conservative with respect to the higher tribuatary area situations. On top of that the cladding tends to probably fail first due to human error, higher localized loads, etc...
I've also seen those beat up metal building foundation engineers using some pretty low factor of safeties out there. I caught one guy using 1.1 while including slab weights far the columns. Be careful on those people. I'm so sick of this net uplift issue that I've come close to no longer even taking on metal building foundation projects. I probably would just start telling people I don't want them anymore because of liability issues only the economy is so slow with respect to new building construction right now.
John Southard, M.S., P.E.