1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to environmental regulation; amending s. |
3 | 120.569, F.S.; providing that a nonapplicant who petitions |
4 | to challenge an agency's issuance of a license, permit, or |
5 | conceptual approval in certain circumstances has the |
6 | burden of ultimate persuasion and the burden of going |
7 | forward with evidence; amending s. 125.022, F.S.; |
8 | prohibiting a county from requiring an applicant to obtain |
9 | a permit or approval from another state or federal agency |
10 | as a condition of processing a development permit under |
11 | certain conditions; authorizing a county to attach certain |
12 | disclaimers to the issuance of a development permit; |
13 | creating s. 161.032, F.S.; requiring that the Department |
14 | of Environmental Protection review an application for |
15 | certain permits under the Beach and Shore Preservation Act |
16 | and request additional information within a specified |
17 | time; requiring that the department proceed to process the |
18 | application if the applicant believes that a request for |
19 | additional information is not authorized by law or rule; |
20 | extending the period for an applicant to timely submit |
21 | additional information, notwithstanding certain provisions |
22 | of the Administrative Procedure Act; authorizing the |
23 | department to issue such permits in advance of the |
24 | issuance of certain permits as provided for in the |
25 | Endangered Species Act under certain conditions; amending |
26 | s. 161.041, F.S.; specifying that s. 403.0874, F.S., |
27 | authorizing expedited permitting, applies to provisions |
28 | governing coastal construction; prohibiting the Department |
29 | of Environmental Protection from requiring certain |
30 | sediment quality specifications or turbidity standards as |
31 | a permit condition; providing legislative intent with |
32 | respect to permitting for beach renourishment projects; |
33 | directing the department to amend specified rules relating |
34 | to permitting for such projects; amending s. 163.3180, |
35 | F.S.; providing an exemption to the level-of-service |
36 | standards adopted under the Strategic Intermodal System |
37 | for certain inland multimodal facilities; specifying |
38 | project criteria; amending s. 166.033, F.S.; prohibiting a |
39 | municipality from requiring an applicant to obtain a |
40 | permit or approval from another state or federal agency as |
41 | a condition of processing a development permit under |
42 | certain conditions; authorizing a county to attach certain |
43 | disclaimers to the issuance of a development permit; |
44 | amending s. 218.075, F.S.; providing for the reduction or |
45 | waiver of permit processing fees relating to projects that |
46 | serve a public purpose for certain entities created by |
47 | special act, local ordinance, or interlocal agreement; |
48 | amending s. 258.397, F.S.; providing an exemption from a |
49 | showing of extreme hardship relating to the sale, |
50 | transfer, or lease of sovereignty submerged lands in the |
51 | Biscayne Bay Aquatic Preserve for certain municipal |
52 | applicants; providing for additional dredging and filling |
53 | activities in the preserve; amending s. 373.026, F.S.; |
54 | requiring the Department of Environmental Protection to |
55 | expand its use of Internet-based self-certification |
56 | services for exemptions and permits issued by the |
57 | department and water management districts; amending s. |
58 | 373.413, F.S.; specifying that s. 403.0874, F.S., |
59 | authorizing expedited permitting, applies to provisions |
60 | governing surface water management and storage; amending |
61 | s. 373.4135, F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; amending |
62 | s. 373.4136, F.S.; clarifying the use of the uniform |
63 | mitigation assessment method for mitigation credits for |
64 | the establishment and operation of mitigation banks; |
65 | amending s. 373.4137, F.S.; revising legislative findings |
66 | with respect to the options for mitigation relating to |
67 | transportation projects; revising certain requirements for |
68 | determining the habitat impacts of transportation |
69 | projects; requiring water management districts to purchase |
70 | credits from public or private mitigation banks under |
71 | certain conditions; providing for the release of certain |
72 | mitigation funds held for the benefit of a water |
73 | management district if a project is excluded from a |
74 | mitigation plan; requiring water management districts to |
75 | use private mitigation banks in developing plans for |
76 | complying with mitigation requirements; providing an |
77 | exception; revising the procedure for excluding a project |
78 | from a mitigation plan; amending s. 373.414, F.S.; |
79 | revising provisions for the uniform mitigation assessment |
80 | method rule for wetlands and other surface waters; |
81 | providing requirements for the interpretation and |
82 | application of the uniform mitigation assessment method |
83 | rule; providing an exception; defining the terms |
84 | "preservation mitigation" and "without preservation" for |
85 | the purposes of certain assessments pursuant to the rule; |
86 | providing for reassessment of mitigation banks under |
87 | certain conditions; amending s. 373.4141, F.S.; providing |
88 | a limitation for the request of additional information |
89 | from an applicant by the department; providing that |
90 | failure of an applicant to respond to such a request |
91 | within a specified time period constitutes withdrawal of |
92 | the application; reducing the time within which a permit |
93 | must be approved, denied, or subject to notice of proposed |
94 | agency action; prohibiting a state agency or an agency of |
95 | the state from requiring additional permits or approval |
96 | from a local, state, or federal agency without explicit |
97 | authority; amending s. 373.4144, F.S.; providing |
98 | legislative intent with respect to the coordination of |
99 | regulatory duties among specified state and federal |
100 | agencies; requiring that the department report annually to |
101 | the Legislature on efforts to expand the state |
102 | programmatic general permit or regional general permits; |
103 | providing for a voluntary state programmatic general |
104 | permit for certain dredge and fill activities; amending s. |
105 | 373.41492, F.S.; authorizing the use of proceeds from the |
106 | water treatment plant upgrade fee to pay for specified |
107 | mitigation projects; requiring proceeds from the water |
108 | treatment plant upgrade fee to be transferred by the |
109 | Department of Revenue to the South Florida Water |
110 | Management District and deposited into the Lake Belt |
111 | Mitigation Trust Fund for a specified period of time; |
112 | providing, after that period, for the proceeds of the |
113 | water treatment plant upgrade fee to return to being |
114 | transferred by the Department of Revenue to a trust fund |
115 | established by Miami-Dade County for specified purposes; |
116 | conforming a term; amending s. 373.441, F.S.; requiring |
117 | that certain counties or municipalities apply by a |
118 | specified date to the department or water management |
119 | district for authority to require certain permits; |
120 | providing that following such delegation, the department |
121 | or district may not regulate activities that are subject |
122 | to the delegation; clarifying the authority of local |
123 | governments to adopt pollution control programs under |
124 | certain conditions; amending s. 376.3071, F.S.; exempting |
125 | program deductibles, copayments, and certain assessment |
126 | report requirements from expenditures under the low-scored |
127 | site initiative; amending s. 376.30715, F.S.; providing |
128 | that the transfer of a contaminated site from an owner to |
129 | a child of the owner or corporate entity does not |
130 | disqualify the site from the innocent victim petroleum |
131 | storage system restoration financial assistance program; |
132 | authorizing certain applicants to reapply for financial |
133 | assistance; creating s. 378.413, F.S.; providing |
134 | legislative intent with respect to preemption of |
135 | environmental regulation for construction aggregate |
136 | materials mining; limiting the authority of counties to |
137 | adopt to specified ordinances and rules; providing an |
138 | exemption; amending s. 380.06, F.S.; exempting a proposed |
139 | solid mineral mine or a proposed addition or expansion of |
140 | an existing solid mineral mine from provisions governing |
141 | developments of regional impact; providing certain |
142 | exceptions; clarifying the applicability of local |
143 | government regulations with respect to such mining |
144 | activities; requiring solid mineral mines that meet |
145 | specified criteria to enter into binding agreements with |
146 | the Department of Transportation to mitigate impacts to |
147 | Strategic Intermodal System facilities; amending s. |
148 | 380.0657, F.S.; authorizing expedited permitting for |
149 | certain inland multimodal facilities that individually or |
150 | collectively will create a minimum number of jobs; |
151 | amending s. 403.061, F.S.; requiring the Department of |
152 | Environmental Protection to establish reasonable zones of |
153 | mixing for discharges into specified waters; providing |
154 | that exceedance of certain groundwater standards does not |
155 | create liability for site cleanup; providing that |
156 | exceedance of soil cleanup target levels is not a basis |
157 | for enforcement or cleanup; amending s. 403.087, F.S.; |
158 | revising conditions under which the department is |
159 | authorized to revoke environmental resource permits; |
160 | creating s. 403.0874, F.S.; providing a short title; |
161 | providing legislative findings and intent with respect to |
162 | the consideration of the compliance history of a permit |
163 | applicant; providing for applicability; specifying the |
164 | period of compliance history to be considered is issuing |
165 | or renewing a permit; providing criteria to be considered |
166 | by the Department of Environmental Protection; authorizing |
167 | expedited review of permit issuance, renewal, |
168 | modification, and transfer; providing for a reduced number |
169 | of inspections; providing for extended permit duration; |
170 | authorizing the department to make additional incentives |
171 | available under certain circumstances; providing for |
172 | automatic permit renewal and reduced or waived fees under |
173 | certain circumstances; authorizing the department to adopt |
174 | additional incentives by rule; providing that such rules |
175 | are binding on a water management district or local |
176 | government that has been delegated certain regulatory |
177 | duties; limiting applicability; amending s. 403.1838, |
178 | F.S.; revising the definition of the term "financially |
179 | disadvantaged small community" for the purposes of the |
180 | Small Community Sewer Construction Assistance Act; |
181 | amending s. 403.7045, F.S.; providing conditions under |
182 | which sludge from an industrial waste treatment works is |
183 | not solid waste; amending s. 403.707, F.S.; exempting the |
184 | disposal of solid waste monitored by certain groundwater |
185 | monitoring plans from specific authorization; extending |
186 | the duration of all permits issued to solid waste |
187 | management facilities that meet specified criteria; |
188 | providing an exception; providing for prorated permit |
189 | fees; providing applicability; amending s. 403.814, F.S.; |
190 | providing for issuance of general permits for the |
191 | construction, alteration, and maintenance of certain |
192 | surface water management systems without the action of the |
193 | department or a water management district; specifying |
194 | conditions for the general permits; amending s. 403.853, |
195 | F.S.; providing for the Department of Health, or a local |
196 | county health department designated by the department, to |
197 | perform sanitary surveys for a transient noncommunity |
198 | water system using groundwater as a source of supply and |
199 | serving religious institutions or businesses; amending s. |
200 | 403.973, F.S.; authorizing expedited permitting for |
201 | certain commercial or industrial development projects that |
202 | individually or collectively will create a minimum number |
203 | of jobs; providing for a project-specific memorandum of |
204 | agreement to apply to a project subject to expedited |
205 | permitting; clarifying the authority of the Department of |
206 | Environmental Protection to enter final orders for the |
207 | issuance of certain licenses; revising criteria for the |
208 | review of certain sites; amending s. 526.203, F.S.; |
209 | authorizing the sale of unblended fuels for certain uses; |
210 | revising the deadline for completion of the installation |
211 | of fuel tank upgrades to secondary containment systems for |
212 | specified properties; providing an effective date. |
213 |
|
214 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
215 |
|
216 | Section 1. Paragraph (p) is added to subsection (2) of |
217 | section 120.569, Florida Statutes, to read: |
218 | 120.569 Decisions which affect substantial interests.- |
219 | (2) |
220 | (p) For any proceeding arising under chapter 373, chapter |
221 | 378, or chapter 403, if a nonapplicant petitions as a third |
222 | party to challenge an agency's issuance of a license, permit, or |
223 | conceptual approval, the order of presentation in the proceeding |
224 | shall be for the permit applicant to present a prima facie case |
225 | demonstrating entitlement to the license, permit, or conceptual |
226 | approval, followed by the agency. This demonstration may be made |
227 | by entering into evidence the application and relevant material |
228 | submitted to the agency in support of the application, and the |
229 | agency's staff report or notice of intent to approve the permit, |
230 | license, or conceptual approval. Subsequent to the presentation |
231 | of the applicant's prima facie case and any direct evidence |
232 | submitted by the agency, the petitioner initiating the action |
233 | challenging the issuance of the license, permit, or conceptual |
234 | approval has the burden of ultimate persuasion and has the |
235 | burden of going forward to prove the case in opposition to the |
236 | license, permit, or conceptual approval through the presentation |
237 | of competent and substantial evidence. The permit applicant and |
238 | agency may on rebuttal present any evidence relevant to |
239 | demonstrating that the application meets the conditions for |
240 | issuance. Notwithstanding subsection (1), this paragraph applies |
241 | to proceedings under s. 120.574. |
242 | Section 2. Section 125.022, Florida Statutes, is amended |
243 | to read: |
244 | 125.022 Development permits.-When a county denies an |
245 | application for a development permit, the county shall give |
246 | written notice to the applicant. The notice must include a |
247 | citation to the applicable portions of an ordinance, rule, |
248 | statute, or other legal authority for the denial of the permit. |
249 | As used in this section, the term "development permit" has the |
250 | same meaning as in s. 163.3164. A county may not require as a |
251 | condition of processing a development permit that an applicant |
252 | obtain a permit or approval from any other state or federal |
253 | agency unless the agency has issued a notice of intent to deny |
254 | the federal or state permit before the county action on the |
255 | local development permit. Issuance of a development permit by a |
256 | county does not in any way create any rights on the part of the |
257 | applicant to obtain a permit from another state or federal |
258 | agency and does not create any liability on the part of the |
259 | county for issuance of the permit if the applicant fails to |
260 | fulfill its legal obligations to obtain requisite approvals or |
261 | fulfill the obligations imposed by another state or a federal |
262 | agency. A county may attach such a disclaimer to the issuance of |
263 | a development permit, and may include a permit condition that |
264 | all other applicable state or federal permits be obtained before |
265 | commencement of the development. This section does not prohibit |
266 | a county from providing information to an applicant regarding |
267 | what other state or federal permits may apply. |
268 | Section 3. Section 161.032, Florida Statutes, is created |
269 | to read: |
270 | 161.032 Application review; request for additional |
271 | information.- |
272 | (1) Within 30 days after receipt of an application for a |
273 | permit under this part, the department shall review the |
274 | application and shall request submission of any additional |
275 | information the department is permitted by law to require. If |
276 | the applicant believes that a request for additional information |
277 | is not authorized by law or rule, the applicant may request a |
278 | hearing pursuant to s. 120.57. Within 30 days after receipt of |
279 | such additional information, the department shall review such |
280 | additional information and may request only that information |
281 | needed to clarify such additional information or to answer new |
282 | questions raised by or directly related to such additional |
283 | information. If the applicant believes that the request for such |
284 | additional information by the department is not authorized by |
285 | law or rule, the department, at the applicant's request, shall |
286 | proceed to process the permit application. |
287 | (2) Notwithstanding s. 120.60, an applicant for a permit |
288 | under this part has 90 days after the date of a timely request |
289 | for additional information to submit such information. If an |
290 | applicant requires more than 90 days in order to respond to a |
291 | request for additional information, the applicant must notify |
292 | the agency processing the permit application in writing of the |
293 | circumstances, at which time the application shall be held in |
294 | active status for no more than one additional period of up to 90 |
295 | days. Additional extensions may be granted for good cause shown |
296 | by the applicant. A showing that the applicant is making a |
297 | diligent effort to obtain the requested additional information |
298 | constitutes good cause. Failure of an applicant to provide the |
299 | timely requested information by the applicable deadline shall |
300 | result in denial of the application without prejudice. |
301 | (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the |
302 | department is authorized to issue permits pursuant to this part |
303 | in advance of the issuance of any incidental take authorization |
304 | as provided for in the Endangered Species Act and its |
305 | implementing regulations if the permits and authorizations |
306 | include a condition requiring that authorized activities shall |
307 | not begin until such incidental take authorization is issued. |
308 | Section 4. Subsections (5), (6), and (7) are added to |
309 | section 161.041, Florida Statutes, to read: |
310 | 161.041 Permits required.- |
311 | (5) The provisions of s. 403.0874, relating to the |
312 | incentive-based permitting program, apply to all permits issued |
313 | under this chapter. |
314 | (6) The department may not require as a permit condition |
315 | sediment quality specifications or turbidity standards more |
316 | stringent than those provided for in this chapter, chapter 373, |
317 | or the Florida Administrative Code. The department may not issue |
318 | guidelines that are enforceable as standards without going |
319 | through the rulemaking process pursuant to chapter 120. |
320 | (7) As an incentive for permit applicants, it is the |
321 | Legislature's intent to simplify the permitting for periodic |
322 | maintenance of beach renourishment projects previously permitted |
323 | and restored under the joint coastal permit process pursuant to |
324 | this section or part IV of chapter 373. The department shall |
325 | amend chapters 62B-41 and 62B-49 of the Florida Administrative |
326 | Code to streamline the permitting process, as necessary, for |
327 | periodic maintenance projects. |
328 | Section 5. Subsection (10) of section 163.3180, Florida |
329 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
330 | 163.3180 Concurrency.- |
331 | (10)(a) Except in transportation concurrency exception |
332 | areas, with regard to roadway facilities on the Strategic |
333 | Intermodal System designated in accordance with s. 339.63, local |
334 | governments shall adopt the level-of-service standard |
335 | established by the Department of Transportation by rule. |
336 | However, if the Office of Tourism, Trade, and Economic |
337 | Development concurs in writing with the local government that |
338 | the proposed development is for a qualified job creation project |
339 | under s. 288.0656 or s. 403.973, the affected local government, |
340 | after consulting with the Department of Transportation, may |
341 | provide for a waiver of transportation concurrency for the |
342 | project. For all other roads on the State Highway System, local |
343 | governments shall establish an adequate level-of-service |
344 | standard that need not be consistent with any level-of-service |
345 | standard established by the Department of Transportation. In |
346 | establishing adequate level-of-service standards for any |
347 | arterial roads, or collector roads as appropriate, which |
348 | traverse multiple jurisdictions, local governments shall |
349 | consider compatibility with the roadway facility's adopted |
350 | level-of-service standards in adjacent jurisdictions. Each local |
351 | government within a county shall use a professionally accepted |
352 | methodology for measuring impacts on transportation facilities |
353 | for the purposes of implementing its concurrency management |
354 | system. Counties are encouraged to coordinate with adjacent |
355 | counties, and local governments within a county are encouraged |
356 | to coordinate, for the purpose of using common methodologies for |
357 | measuring impacts on transportation facilities for the purpose |
358 | of implementing their concurrency management systems. |
359 | (b) There shall be a limited exemption from the Strategic |
360 | Intermodal System adopted level-of-service standards for new or |
361 | redevelopment projects consistent with the local comprehensive |
362 | plan as inland multimodal facilities receiving or sending cargo |
363 | for distribution and providing cargo storage, consolidation, |
364 | repackaging, and transfer of goods, and which may, if developed |
365 | as proposed, include other intermodal terminals, related |
366 | transportation facilities, warehousing and distribution |
367 | facilities, and associated office space, light industrial, |
368 | manufacturing, and assembly uses. The limited exemption applies |
369 | if the project meets all of the following criteria: |
370 | 1. The project will not cause the adopted level-of-service |
371 | standards for the Strategic Intermodal System facilities to be |
372 | exceeded by more than 150 percent within the first 5 years of |
373 | the project's development. |
374 | 2. The project, upon completion, would result in the |
375 | creation of at least 50 full-time jobs. |
376 | 3. The project is compatible with existing and planned |
377 | adjacent land uses. |
378 | 4. The project is consistent with local and regional |
379 | economic development goals or plans. |
380 | 5. The project is proximate to regionally significant road |
381 | and rail transportation facilities. |
382 | 6. The project is proximate to a community having an |
383 | unemployment rate, as of the date of the development order |
384 | application, which is 10 percent or more above the statewide |
385 | reported average. |
386 | 7. The local government has a plan, developed in |
387 | consultation with the Department of Transportation, for |
388 | mitigating any impacts to the strategic intermodal system. |
389 | Section 6. Section 166.033, Florida Statutes, is amended |
390 | to read: |
391 | 166.033 Development permits.-When a municipality denies an |
392 | application for a development permit, the municipality shall |
393 | give written notice to the applicant. The notice must include a |
394 | citation to the applicable portions of an ordinance, rule, |
395 | statute, or other legal authority for the denial of the permit. |
396 | As used in this section, the term "development permit" has the |
397 | same meaning as in s. 163.3164. A municipality may not require |
398 | as a condition of processing a development permit that an |
399 | applicant obtain a permit or approval from any other state or |
400 | federal agency unless the agency has issued a notice of intent |
401 | to deny the federal or state permit before the municipal action |
402 | on the local development permit. Issuance of a development |
403 | permit by a municipality does not in any way create any right on |
404 | the part of an applicant to obtain a permit from another state |
405 | or federal agency and does not create any liability on the part |
406 | of the municipality for issuance of the permit if the applicant |
407 | fails to fulfill its legal obligations to obtain requisite |
408 | approvals or fulfill the obligations imposed by another state or |
409 | federal agency. A municipality may attach such a disclaimer to |
410 | the issuance of development permits and may include a permit |
411 | condition that all other applicable state or federal permits be |
412 | obtained before commencement of the development. This section |
413 | does not prohibit a municipality from providing information to |
414 | an applicant regarding what other state or federal permits may |
415 | apply. |
416 | Section 7. Section 218.075, Florida Statutes, is amended |
417 | to read: |
418 | 218.075 Reduction or waiver of permit processing fees.- |
419 | Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Department of |
420 | Environmental Protection and the water management districts |
421 | shall reduce or waive permit processing fees for counties with a |
422 | population of 50,000 or less on April 1, 1994, until such |
423 | counties exceed a population of 75,000 and municipalities with a |
424 | population of 25,000 or less, or for an entity created by |
425 | special act, local ordinance, or interlocal agreement of such |
426 | counties or municipalities, or for any county or municipality |
427 | not included within a metropolitan statistical area. Fee |
428 | reductions or waivers shall be approved on the basis of fiscal |
429 | hardship or environmental need for a particular project or |
430 | activity. The governing body must certify that the cost of the |
431 | permit processing fee is a fiscal hardship due to one of the |
432 | following factors: |
433 | (1) Per capita taxable value is less than the statewide |
434 | average for the current fiscal year; |
435 | (2) Percentage of assessed property value that is exempt |
436 | from ad valorem taxation is higher than the statewide average |
437 | for the current fiscal year; |
438 | (3) Any condition specified in s. 218.503(1) which results |
439 | in the county or municipality being in a state of financial |
440 | emergency; |
441 | (4) Ad valorem operating millage rate for the current |
442 | fiscal year is greater than 8 mills; or |
443 | (5) A financial condition that is documented in annual |
444 | financial statements at the end of the current fiscal year and |
445 | indicates an inability to pay the permit processing fee during |
446 | that fiscal year. |
447 |
|
448 | The permit applicant must be the governing body of a county or |
449 | municipality or a third party under contract with a county or |
450 | municipality or an entity created by special act, local |
451 | ordinance, or interlocal agreement and the project for which the |
452 | fee reduction or waiver is sought must serve a public purpose. |
453 | If a permit processing fee is reduced, the total fee shall not |
454 | exceed $100. |
455 | Section 8. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (3) of |
456 | section 258.397, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
457 | 258.397 Biscayne Bay Aquatic Preserve.- |
458 | (3) AUTHORITY OF TRUSTEES.-The Board of Trustees of the |
459 | Internal Improvement Trust Fund is authorized and directed to |
460 | maintain the aquatic preserve hereby created pursuant and |
461 | subject to the following provisions: |
462 | (a) No further sale, transfer, or lease of sovereignty |
463 | submerged lands in the preserve shall be approved or consummated |
464 | by the board of trustees, except upon a showing of extreme |
465 | hardship on the part of the applicant and a determination by the |
466 | board of trustees that such sale, transfer, or lease is in the |
467 | public interest. A municipal applicant proposing a project under |
468 | paragraph (b) is exempt from showing extreme hardship. |
469 | (b) No further dredging or filling of submerged lands of |
470 | the preserve shall be approved or tolerated by the board of |
471 | trustees except: |
472 | 1. Such minimum dredging and spoiling as may be authorized |
473 | for public navigation projects or for such minimum dredging and |
474 | spoiling as may be constituted as a public necessity or for |
475 | preservation of the bay according to the expressed intent of |
476 | this section. |
477 | 2. Such other alteration of physical conditions, including |
478 | the placement of riprap, as may be necessary to enhance the |
479 | quality and utility of the preserve. |
480 | 3. Such minimum dredging and filling as may be authorized |
481 | for the creation and maintenance of marinas, piers, and docks |
482 | and their attendant navigation channels and access roads. Such |
483 | projects may only be authorized upon a specific finding by the |
484 | board of trustees that there is assurance that the project will |
485 | be constructed and operated in a manner that will not adversely |
486 | affect the water quality and utility of the preserve. This |
487 | subparagraph shall not authorize the connection of upland canals |
488 | to the waters of the preserve. |
489 | 4. Such dredging as is necessary for the purpose of |
490 | eliminating conditions hazardous to the public health or for the |
491 | purpose of eliminating stagnant waters, islands, and spoil |
492 | banks, the dredging of which would enhance the aesthetic and |
493 | environmental quality and utility of the preserve and be clearly |
494 | in the public interest as determined by the board of trustees. |
495 | 5. Such dredging and filling as is necessary for the |
496 | creation of public waterfront promenades. |
497 |
|
498 | Any dredging or filling under this subsection or improvements |
499 | under subsection (5) shall be approved only after public notice |
500 | as provided by s. 253.115. |
501 | Section 9. Subsection (10) is added to section 373.026, |
502 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
503 | 373.026 General powers and duties of the department.-The |
504 | department, or its successor agency, shall be responsible for |
505 | the administration of this chapter at the state level. However, |
506 | it is the policy of the state that, to the greatest extent |
507 | possible, the department may enter into interagency or |
508 | interlocal agreements with any other state agency, any water |
509 | management district, or any local government conducting programs |
510 | related to or materially affecting the water resources of the |
511 | state. All such agreements shall be subject to the provisions of |
512 | s. 373.046. In addition to its other powers and duties, the |
513 | department shall, to the greatest extent possible: |
514 | (10) Expand the use of Internet-based self-certification |
515 | services for appropriate exemptions and general permits issued |
516 | by the department and the water management districts, if such |
517 | expansion is economically feasible. In addition to expanding the |
518 | use of Internet-based self-certification services for |
519 | appropriate exemptions and general permits, the department and |
520 | water management districts shall identify and develop general |
521 | permits for appropriate activities currently requiring |
522 | individual review which could be expedited through the use of |
523 | applicable professional certification. |
524 | Section 10. Subsection (6) is added to section 373.413, |
525 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
526 | 373.413 Permits for construction or alteration.- |
527 | (6) The provisions of s. 403.0874, relating to the |
528 | incentive-based permitting program, apply to permits issued |
529 | under this section. |
530 | Section 11. Paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of section |
531 | 373.4135, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
532 | 373.4135 Mitigation banks and offsite regional |
533 | mitigation.- |
534 | (6) An environmental creation, preservation, enhancement, |
535 | or restoration project, including regional offsite mitigation |
536 | areas, for which money is donated or paid as mitigation, that is |
537 | sponsored by the department, a water management district, or a |
538 | local government and provides mitigation for five or more |
539 | applicants for permits under this part, or for 35 or more acres |
540 | of adverse impacts, shall be established and operated under a |
541 | memorandum of agreement. The memorandum of agreement shall be |
542 | between the governmental entity proposing the mitigation project |
543 | and the department or water management district, as appropriate. |
544 | Such memorandum of agreement need not be adopted by rule. For |
545 | the purposes of this subsection, one creation, preservation, |
546 | enhancement, or restoration project shall mean one or more |
547 | parcels of land with similar ecological communities that are |
548 | intended to be created, preserved, enhanced, or restored under a |
549 | common scheme. |
550 | (c) At a minimum, the memorandum of agreement must address |
551 | the following for each project authorized: |
552 | 1. A description of the work that will be conducted on the |
553 | site and a timeline for completion of such work. |
554 | 2. A timeline for obtaining any required environmental |
555 | resource permit. |
556 | 3. The environmental success criteria that the project |
557 | must achieve. |
558 | 4. The monitoring and long-term management requirements |
559 | that must be undertaken for the project. |
560 | 5. An assessment of the project in accordance with s. |
561 | 373.4136(4)(a)-(i), until the adoption of the uniform wetland |
562 | mitigation assessment method pursuant to s. 373.414(18). |
563 | 6. A designation of the entity responsible for the |
564 | successful completion of the mitigation work. |
565 | 7. A definition of the geographic area where the project |
566 | may be used as mitigation established using the criteria of s. |
567 | 373.4136(6). |
568 | 8. Full cost accounting of the project, including annual |
569 | review and adjustment. |
570 | 9. Provision and a timetable for the acquisition of any |
571 | lands necessary for the project. |
572 | 10. Provision for preservation of the site. |
573 | 11. Provision for application of all moneys received |
574 | solely to the project for which they were collected. |
575 | 12. Provision for termination of the agreement and |
576 | cessation of use of the project as mitigation if any material |
577 | contingency of the agreement has failed to occur. |
578 | Section 12. Subsection (4) of section 373.4136, Florida |
579 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
580 | 373.4136 Establishment and operation of mitigation banks.- |
581 | (4) MITIGATION CREDITS.-After evaluating the information |
582 | submitted by the applicant for a mitigation bank permit and |
583 | assessing the proposed mitigation bank pursuant to the criteria |
584 | in this section, the department or water management district |
585 | shall award a number of mitigation credits to a proposed |
586 | mitigation bank or phase of such mitigation bank. An entity |
587 | establishing and operating a mitigation bank may apply to modify |
588 | the mitigation bank permit to seek the award of additional |
589 | mitigation credits if the mitigation bank results in an |
590 | additional increase in ecological value over the value |
591 | contemplated at the time of the original permit issuance, or the |
592 | most recent modification thereto involving the number of credits |
593 | awarded. The number of credits awarded shall be based on the |
594 | degree of improvement in ecological value expected to result |
595 | from the establishment and operation of the mitigation bank as |
596 | determined using the uniform mitigation assessment method |
597 | adopted pursuant to s. 373.414(18). a functional assessment |
598 | methodology. In determining the degree of improvement in |
599 | ecological value, each of the following factors, at a minimum, |
600 | shall be evaluated: |
601 | (a) The extent to which target hydrologic regimes can be |
602 | achieved and maintained. |
603 | (b) The extent to which management activities promote |
604 | natural ecological conditions, such as natural fire patterns. |
605 | (c) The proximity of the mitigation bank to areas with |
606 | regionally significant ecological resources or habitats, such as |
607 | national or state parks, Outstanding National Resource Waters |
608 | and associated watersheds, Outstanding Florida Waters and |
609 | associated watersheds, and lands acquired through governmental |
610 | or nonprofit land acquisition programs for environmental |
611 | conservation; and the extent to which the mitigation bank |
612 | establishes corridors for fish, wildlife, or listed species to |
613 | those resources or habitats. |
614 | (d) The quality and quantity of wetland or upland |
615 | restoration, enhancement, preservation, or creation. |
616 | (e) The ecological and hydrological relationship between |
617 | wetlands and uplands in the mitigation bank. |
618 | (f) The extent to which the mitigation bank provides |
619 | habitat for fish and wildlife, especially habitat for species |
620 | listed as threatened, endangered, or of special concern, or |
621 | provides habitats that are unique for that mitigation service |
622 | area. |
623 | (g) The extent to which the lands that are to be preserved |
624 | are already protected by existing state, local, or federal |
625 | regulations or land use restrictions. |
626 | (h) The extent to which lands to be preserved would be |
627 | adversely affected if they were not preserved. |
628 | (i) Any special designation or classification of the |
629 | affected waters and lands. |
630 | Section 13. Subsections (1) and (2), paragraph (c) of |
631 | subsection (3), and subsection (4) of section 373.4137, Florida |
632 | Statutes, are amended to read: |
633 | 373.4137 Mitigation requirements for specified |
634 | transportation projects.- |
635 | (1) The Legislature finds that environmental mitigation |
636 | for the impact of transportation projects proposed by the |
637 | Department of Transportation or a transportation authority |
638 | established pursuant to chapter 348 or chapter 349 can be more |
639 | effectively achieved by regional, long-range mitigation planning |
640 | rather than on a project-by-project basis. It is the intent of |
641 | the Legislature that mitigation to offset the adverse effects of |
642 | these transportation projects be funded by the Department of |
643 | Transportation and be carried out by the water management |
644 | districts, through including the use of private mitigation banks |
645 | if available or, if a private mitigation bank is not available, |
646 | through any other mitigation options that satisfy state and |
647 | federal requirements established pursuant to this part. |
648 | (2) Environmental impact inventories for transportation |
649 | projects proposed by the Department of Transportation or a |
650 | transportation authority established pursuant to chapter 348 or |
651 | chapter 349 shall be developed as follows: |
652 | (a) By July 1 of each year, the Department of |
653 | Transportation or a transportation authority established |
654 | pursuant to chapter 348 or chapter 349 which chooses to |
655 | participate in this program shall submit to the water management |
656 | districts a list copy of its projects in the adopted work |
657 | program and an environmental impact inventory of habitats |
658 | addressed in the rules adopted pursuant to this part and s. 404 |
659 | of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. s. 1344, which may be impacted |
660 | by its plan of construction for transportation projects in the |
661 | next 3 years of the tentative work program. The Department of |
662 | Transportation or a transportation authority established |
663 | pursuant to chapter 348 or chapter 349 may also include in its |
664 | environmental impact inventory the habitat impacts of any future |
665 | transportation project. The Department of Transportation and |
666 | each transportation authority established pursuant to chapter |
667 | 348 or chapter 349 may fund any mitigation activities for future |
668 | projects using current year funds. |
669 | (b) The environmental impact inventory shall include a |
670 | description of these habitat impacts, including their location, |
671 | acreage, and type; state water quality classification of |
672 | impacted wetlands and other surface waters; any other state or |
673 | regional designations for these habitats; and a list survey of |
674 | threatened species, endangered species, and species of special |
675 | concern affected by the proposed project. |
676 | (3) |
677 | (c) Except for current mitigation projects in the |
678 | monitoring and maintenance phase and except as allowed by |
679 | paragraph (d), the water management districts may request a |
680 | transfer of funds from an escrow account no sooner than 30 days |
681 | prior to the date the funds are needed to pay for activities |
682 | associated with development or implementation of the approved |
683 | mitigation plan described in subsection (4) for the current |
684 | fiscal year, including, but not limited to, design, engineering, |
685 | production, and staff support. Actual conceptual plan |
686 | preparation costs incurred before plan approval may be submitted |
687 | to the Department of Transportation or the appropriate |
688 | transportation authority each year with the plan. The conceptual |
689 | plan preparation costs of each water management district will be |
690 | paid from mitigation funds associated with the environmental |
691 | impact inventory for the current year. The amount transferred to |
692 | the escrow accounts each year by the Department of |
693 | Transportation and participating transportation authorities |
694 | established pursuant to chapter 348 or chapter 349 shall |
695 | correspond to a cost per acre of $75,000 multiplied by the |
696 | projected acres of impact identified in the environmental impact |
697 | inventory described in subsection (2). However, the $75,000 cost |
698 | per acre does not constitute an admission against interest by |
699 | the state or its subdivisions nor is the cost admissible as |
700 | evidence of full compensation for any property acquired by |
701 | eminent domain or through inverse condemnation. Each July 1, the |
702 | cost per acre shall be adjusted by the percentage change in the |
703 | average of the Consumer Price Index issued by the United States |
704 | Department of Labor for the most recent 12-month period ending |
705 | September 30, compared to the base year average, which is the |
706 | average for the 12-month period ending September 30, 1996. Each |
707 | quarter, the projected acreage of impact shall be reconciled |
708 | with the acreage of impact of projects as permitted, including |
709 | permit modifications, pursuant to this part and s. 404 of the |
710 | Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. s. 1344. The subject year's transfer |
711 | of funds shall be adjusted accordingly to reflect the acreage of |
712 | impacts as permitted. The Department of Transportation and |
713 | participating transportation authorities established pursuant to |
714 | chapter 348 or chapter 349 are authorized to transfer such funds |
715 | from the escrow accounts to the water management districts to |
716 | carry out the mitigation programs. Environmental mitigation |
717 | funds that are identified or maintained in an escrow account for |
718 | the benefit of a water management district may be released if |
719 | the associated transportation project is excluded in whole or |
720 | part from the mitigation plan. For a mitigation project that is |
721 | in the maintenance and monitoring phase, the water management |
722 | district may request and receive a one-time payment based on the |
723 | project's expected future maintenance and monitoring costs. Upon |
724 | disbursement of the final maintenance and monitoring payment, |
725 | the department or the participating transportation authorities' |
726 | obligation will be satisfied, the water management district will |
727 | have continuing responsibility for the mitigation project, and |
728 | the escrow account for the project established by the Department |
729 | of Transportation or the participating transportation authority |
730 | may be closed. Any interest earned on these disbursed funds |
731 | shall remain with the water management district and must be used |
732 | as authorized under this section. |
733 | (4) Prior to March 1 of each year, each water management |
734 | district, in consultation with the Department of Environmental |
735 | Protection, the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the |
736 | Department of Transportation, participating transportation |
737 | authorities established pursuant to chapter 348 or chapter 349, |
738 | and other appropriate federal, state, and local governments, and |
739 | other interested parties, including entities operating |
740 | mitigation banks, shall develop a plan for the primary purpose |
741 | of complying with the mitigation requirements adopted pursuant |
742 | to this part and 33 U.S.C. s. 1344. In developing such plans, |
743 | private mitigation banks shall be used if available or, if a |
744 | private mitigation bank is not available, the districts shall |
745 | use utilize sound ecosystem management practices to address |
746 | significant water resource needs and shall focus on activities |
747 | of the Department of Environmental Protection and the water |
748 | management districts, such as surface water improvement and |
749 | management (SWIM) projects and lands identified for potential |
750 | acquisition for preservation, restoration or enhancement, and |
751 | the control of invasive and exotic plants in wetlands and other |
752 | surface waters, to the extent that such activities comply with |
753 | the mitigation requirements adopted under this part and 33 |
754 | U.S.C. s. 1344. In determining the activities to be included in |
755 | such plans, the districts shall also consider the purchase of |
756 | credits from public or private mitigation banks permitted under |
757 | s. 373.4136 and associated federal authorization and shall |
758 | include such purchase as a part of the mitigation plan when such |
759 | purchase would offset the impact of the transportation project, |
760 | provide equal benefits to the water resources than other |
761 | mitigation options being considered, and provide the most cost- |
762 | effective mitigation option. The mitigation plan shall be |
763 | submitted to the water management district governing board, or |
764 | its designee, for review and approval. At least 14 days prior to |
765 | approval, the water management district shall provide a copy of |
766 | the draft mitigation plan to any person who has requested a |
767 | copy. |
768 | (a) For each transportation project with a funding request |
769 | for the next fiscal year, the mitigation plan must include a |
770 | brief explanation of why a mitigation bank was or was not chosen |
771 | as a mitigation option, including an estimation of identifiable |
772 | costs of the mitigation bank and nonbank options to the extent |
773 | practicable. |
774 | (b) Specific projects may be excluded from the mitigation |
775 | plan, in whole or in part, and shall not be subject to this |
776 | section upon the election agreement of the Department of |
777 | Transportation, or a transportation authority if applicable, or |
778 | and the appropriate water management district that the inclusion |
779 | of such projects would hamper the efficiency or timeliness of |
780 | the mitigation planning and permitting process. The water |
781 | management district may choose to exclude a project in whole or |
782 | in part if the district is unable to identify mitigation that |
783 | would offset impacts of the project. |
784 | Section 14. Subsection (18) of section 373.414, Florida |
785 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
786 | 373.414 Additional criteria for activities in surface |
787 | waters and wetlands.- |
788 | (18) The department, in coordination with and each water |
789 | management district responsible for implementation of the |
790 | environmental resource permitting program, shall develop a |
791 | uniform mitigation assessment method for wetlands and other |
792 | surface waters. The department shall adopt the uniform |
793 | mitigation assessment method by rule no later than July 31, |
794 | 2002. The rule shall provide an exclusive, uniform, and |
795 | consistent process for determining the amount of mitigation |
796 | required to offset impacts to wetlands and other surface waters, |
797 | and, once effective, shall supersede all rules, ordinances, and |
798 | variance procedures from ordinances that determine the amount of |
799 | mitigation needed to offset such impacts. Except when evaluating |
800 | mitigation bank applications, which must meet the criteria of s. |
801 | 373.4136(1), the rule shall be applied only after determining |
802 | that the mitigation is appropriate to offset the values and |
803 | functions of wetlands and surface waters to be adversely |
804 | impacted by the proposed activity. Once the department adopts |
805 | the uniform mitigation assessment method by rule, the uniform |
806 | mitigation assessment method shall be binding on the department, |
807 | the water management districts, local governments, and any other |
808 | governmental agencies and shall be the sole means to determine |
809 | the amount of mitigation needed to offset adverse impacts to |
810 | wetlands and other surface waters and to award and deduct |
811 | mitigation bank credits. A water management district and any |
812 | other governmental agency subject to chapter 120 may apply the |
813 | uniform mitigation assessment method without the need to adopt |
814 | it pursuant to s. 120.54. It shall be a goal of the department |
815 | and water management districts that the uniform mitigation |
816 | assessment method developed be practicable for use within the |
817 | timeframes provided in the permitting process and result in a |
818 | consistent process for determining mitigation requirements. It |
819 | shall be recognized that any such method shall require the |
820 | application of reasonable scientific judgment. The uniform |
821 | mitigation assessment method must determine the value of |
822 | functions provided by wetlands and other surface waters |
823 | considering the current conditions of these areas, utilization |
824 | by fish and wildlife, location, uniqueness, and hydrologic |
825 | connection, and, when applied to mitigation banks, the factors |
826 | listed in s. 373.4136(4). The uniform mitigation assessment |
827 | method shall also account for the expected time-lag associated |
828 | with offsetting impacts and the degree of risk associated with |
829 | the proposed mitigation. The uniform mitigation assessment |
830 | method shall account for different ecological communities in |
831 | different areas of the state. In developing the uniform |
832 | mitigation assessment method, the department and water |
833 | management districts shall consult with approved local programs |
834 | under s. 403.182 which have an established mitigation program |
835 | for wetlands or other surface waters. The department and water |
836 | management districts shall consider the recommendations |
837 | submitted by such approved local programs, including any |
838 | recommendations relating to the adoption by the department and |
839 | water management districts of any uniform mitigation methodology |
840 | that has been adopted and used by an approved local program in |
841 | its established mitigation program for wetlands or other surface |
842 | waters. Environmental resource permitting rules may establish |
843 | categories of permits or thresholds for minor impacts under |
844 | which the use of the uniform mitigation assessment method will |
845 | not be required. The application of the uniform mitigation |
846 | assessment method is not subject to s. 70.001. In the event the |
847 | rule establishing the uniform mitigation assessment method is |
848 | deemed to be invalid, the applicable rules related to |
849 | establishing needed mitigation in existence prior to the |
850 | adoption of the uniform mitigation assessment method, including |
851 | those adopted by a county which is an approved local program |
852 | under s. 403.182, and the method described in paragraph (b) for |
853 | existing mitigation banks, shall be authorized for use by the |
854 | department, water management districts, local governments, and |
855 | other state agencies. |
856 | (a) In developing the uniform mitigation assessment |
857 | method, the department shall seek input from the United States |
858 | Army Corps of Engineers in order to promote consistency in the |
859 | mitigation assessment methods used by the state and federal |
860 | permitting programs. |
861 | (b) An entity which has received a mitigation bank permit |
862 | prior to the adoption of the uniform mitigation assessment |
863 | method shall have impact sites assessed, for the purpose of |
864 | deducting bank credits, using the credit assessment method, |
865 | including any functional assessment methodology, which was in |
866 | place when the bank was permitted; unless the entity elects to |
867 | have its credits redetermined, and thereafter have its credits |
868 | deducted, using the uniform mitigation assessment method. |
869 | (c) The department shall ensure statewide coordination and |
870 | consistency in the interpretation and application of the uniform |
871 | mitigation assessment method rule by providing programmatic |
872 | training and guidance to staff of the department, water |
873 | management districts, and local governments. To ensure that the |
874 | uniform mitigation assessment method rule is interpreted and |
875 | applied uniformly, the department's interpretation, guidance, |
876 | and approach to applying the uniform mitigation assessment |
877 | method rule shall govern. |
878 | (d) Applicants shall submit the information needed to |
879 | perform the assessment required under the uniform mitigation |
880 | assessment method rule and may submit the qualitative |
881 | characterization and quantitative assessment for each assessment |
882 | area specified by the rule. The reviewing agency shall review |
883 | that information and notify the applicant of any inadequacy in |
884 | the information or application of the assessment method. |
885 | (e) When conducting qualitative characterization of |
886 | artificial wetlands and other surface waters, such as borrow |
887 | pits, ditches, and canals, under the uniform mitigation |
888 | assessment method rule, the native community type to which it is |
889 | most analogous in function shall be used as a reference. For |
890 | wetlands or other surface waters that have been altered from |
891 | their native community type, the historic community type at that |
892 | location shall be used as a reference, unless the alteration has |
893 | been of such a degree and extent that a different native |
894 | community type is now present and self-sustaining. |
895 | (f) When conducting qualitative characterization of upland |
896 | mitigation assessment areas, the characterization shall include |
897 | functions that the upland assessment area provides to the fish |
898 | and wildlife of the associated wetland or other surface waters. |
899 | These functions shall be considered and accounted for when |
900 | scoring the upland assessment area for preservation, |
901 | enhancement, or restoration. |
902 | (g) The term "preservation mitigation," as used in the |
903 | uniform mitigation assessment method, means the protection of |
904 | important wetland, other surface water, or upland ecosystems |
905 | predominantly in their existing condition and absent |
906 | restoration, creation, or enhancement from adverse impacts by |
907 | placing a conservation easement or other comparable land use |
908 | restriction over the property or by donation of fee simple |
909 | interest in the property. Preservation may include a management |
910 | plan for perpetual protection of the area. The preservation |
911 | adjustment factor set forth in rule 62-345.500(3), Florida |
912 | Administrative Code, shall only apply to preservation |
913 | mitigation. |
914 | (h) When assessing a preservation mitigation assessment |
915 | area under the uniform mitigation assessment method, the |
916 | following apply: |
917 | 1. The term "without preservation" means the reasonably |
918 | anticipated loss of functions and values provided by the |
919 | assessment area, assuming the area is not preserved. |
920 | 2. Each of the considerations of the preservation |
921 | adjustment factor specified in rule 62-345.500(3)(a), Florida |
922 | Administrative Code, shall be equally weighted and scored on a |
923 | scale from 0, no value, to 0.2, optimal value. In addition, the |
924 | minimum preservation adjustment factor shall be 0.2. |
925 | (i) The location and landscape support scores, pursuant to |
926 | rule 62-345.500, Florida Administrative Code, may change in the |
927 | "with mitigation" or "with impact" condition in both upland and |
928 | wetland assessment areas, regardless of the initial community |
929 | structure or water environment scores. |
930 | (j) When a mitigation plan for creation, restoration, or |
931 | enhancement includes a preservation mechanism, such as a |
932 | conservation easement, the "with mitigation" assessment of that |
933 | creation, restoration, or enhancement shall consider, and the |
934 | scores shall reflect, the benefits of that preservation |
935 | mechanism, and the benefits of that preservation mechanism may |
936 | not be scored separately. |
937 | (k) Any entity holding a mitigation bank permit that was |
938 | evaluated under the uniform mitigation assessment method before |
939 | the effective date of paragraphs (c)-(j) may submit a permit |
940 | modification request to the relevant permitting agency to have |
941 | such mitigation bank reassessed pursuant to the provisions set |
942 | forth in this section, and the relevant permitting agency shall |
943 | reassess such mitigation bank, if such request is filed with |
944 | that agency no later than September 30, 2011. |
945 | Section 15. Section 373.4141, Florida Statutes, is amended |
946 | to read: |
947 | 373.4141 Permits; processing.- |
948 | (1) Within 30 days after receipt of an application for a |
949 | permit under this part, the department or the water management |
950 | district shall review the application and shall request |
951 | submittal of all additional information the department or the |
952 | water management district is permitted by law to require. If the |
953 | applicant believes any request for additional information is not |
954 | authorized by law or rule, the applicant may request a hearing |
955 | pursuant to s. 120.57. Within 30 days after receipt of such |
956 | additional information, the department or water management |
957 | district shall review it and may request only that information |
958 | needed to clarify such additional information or to answer new |
959 | questions raised by or directly related to such additional |
960 | information. If the applicant believes the request of the |
961 | department or water management district for such additional |
962 | information is not authorized by law or rule, the department or |
963 | water management district, at the applicant's request, shall |
964 | proceed to process the permit application. The department or |
965 | water management district may request additional information no |
966 | more than twice unless the applicant waives this limitation in |
967 | writing. If the applicant does not provide a written response to |
968 | the second request for additional information within 90 days or |
969 | another time period mutually agreed upon between the applicant |
970 | and the department or water management district, the application |
971 | shall be considered withdrawn. |
972 | (2) A permit shall be approved, or denied, or subject to a |
973 | notice of proposed agency action within 60 90 days after receipt |
974 | of the original application, the last item of timely requested |
975 | additional material, or the applicant's written request to begin |
976 | processing the permit application. |
977 | (3) Processing of applications for permits for affordable |
978 | housing projects shall be expedited to a greater degree than |
979 | other projects. |
980 | (4) A state agency or an agency of the state may not |
981 | require as a condition of approval for a permit or as an item to |
982 | complete a pending permit application that an applicant obtain a |
983 | permit or approval from any other local, state, or federal |
984 | agency without explicit statutory authority to require such |
985 | permit or approval. |
986 | Section 16. Section 373.4144, Florida Statutes, is amended |
987 | to read: |
988 | 373.4144 Federal environmental permitting.- |
989 | (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to: |
990 | (a) Facilitate coordination and a more efficient process |
991 | of implementing regulatory duties and functions between the |
992 | Department of Environmental Protection, the water management |
993 | districts, the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the United |
994 | States Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Marine Fisheries |
995 | Service, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the |
996 | Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, and other relevant |
997 | federal and state agencies. |
998 | (b) Authorize the Department of Environmental Protection |
999 | to obtain issuance by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, |
1000 | pursuant to state and federal law and as set forth in this |
1001 | section, of an expanded state programmatic general permit, or a |
1002 | series of regional general permits, for categories of activities |
1003 | in waters of the United States governed by the Clean Water Act |
1004 | and in navigable waters under the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 |
1005 | which are similar in nature, which will cause only minimal |
1006 | adverse environmental effects when performed separately, and |
1007 | which will have only minimal cumulative adverse effects on the |
1008 | environment. |
1009 | (c) Use the mechanism of such a state general permit or |
1010 | such regional general permits to eliminate overlapping federal |
1011 | regulations and state rules that seek to protect the same |
1012 | resource and to avoid duplication of permitting between the |
1013 | United States Army Corps of Engineers and the department for |
1014 | minor work located in waters of the United States, including |
1015 | navigable waters, thus eliminating, in appropriate cases, the |
1016 | need for a separate individual approval from the United States |
1017 | Army Corps of Engineers while ensuring the most stringent |
1018 | protection of wetland resources. |
1019 | (d) Direct the department not to seek issuance of or take |
1020 | any action pursuant to any such permit or permits unless such |
1021 | conditions are at least as protective of the environment and |
1022 | natural resources as existing state law under this part and |
1023 | federal law under the Clean Water Act and the Rivers and Harbors |
1024 | Act of 1899. The department is directed to develop, on or before |
1025 | October 1, 2005, a mechanism or plan to consolidate, to the |
1026 | maximum extent practicable, the federal and state wetland |
1027 | permitting programs. It is the intent of the Legislature that |
1028 | all dredge and fill activities impacting 10 acres or less of |
1029 | wetlands or waters, including navigable waters, be processed by |
1030 | the state as part of the environmental resource permitting |
1031 | program implemented by the department and the water management |
1032 | districts. The resulting mechanism or plan shall analyze and |
1033 | propose the development of an expanded state programmatic |
1034 | general permit program in conjunction with the United States |
1035 | Army Corps of Engineers pursuant to s. 404 of the Clean Water |
1036 | Act, Pub. L. No. 92-500, as amended, 33 U.S.C. ss. 1251 et seq., |
1037 | and s. 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899. Alternatively, |
1038 | or in combination with an expanded state programmatic general |
1039 | permit, the mechanism or plan may propose the creation of a |
1040 | series of regional general permits issued by the United States |
1041 | Army Corps of Engineers pursuant to the referenced statutes. All |
1042 | of the regional general permits must be administered by the |
1043 | department or the water management districts or their designees. |
1044 | (2) In order to effectuate efficient wetland permitting |
1045 | and avoid duplication, the department and water management |
1046 | districts are authorized to implement a voluntary state |
1047 | programmatic general permit for all dredge and fill activities |
1048 | impacting 3 acres or less of wetlands or other surface waters, |
1049 | including navigable waters, subject to agreement with the United |
1050 | States Army Corps of Engineers, if the general permit is at |
1051 | least as protective of the environment and natural resources as |
1052 | existing state law under this part and federal law under the |
1053 | Clean Water Act and the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899. The |
1054 | department is directed to file with the Speaker of the House of |
1055 | Representatives and the President of the Senate a report |
1056 | proposing any required federal and state statutory changes that |
1057 | would be necessary to accomplish the directives listed in this |
1058 | section and to coordinate with the Florida Congressional |
1059 | Delegation on any necessary changes to federal law to implement |
1060 | the directives. |
1061 | (3) Nothing in this section shall be construed to preclude |
1062 | the department from pursuing a series of regional general |
1063 | permits for construction activities in wetlands or surface |
1064 | waters or complete assumption of federal permitting programs |
1065 | regulating the discharge of dredged or fill material pursuant to |
1066 | s. 404 of the Clean Water Act, Pub. L. No. 92-500, as amended, |
1067 | 33 U.S.C. ss. 1251 et seq., and s. 10 of the Rivers and Harbors |
1068 | Act of 1899, so long as the assumption encompasses all dredge |
1069 | and fill activities in, on, or over jurisdictional wetlands or |
1070 | waters, including navigable waters, within the state. |
1071 | Section 17. Subsections (2) and (3), paragraph (a) of |
1072 | subsection (4), and paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section |
1073 | 373.41492, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
1074 | 373.41492 Miami-Dade County Lake Belt Mitigation Plan; |
1075 | mitigation for mining activities within the Miami-Dade County |
1076 | Lake Belt.- |
1077 | (2) To provide for the mitigation of wetland resources |
1078 | lost to mining activities within the Miami-Dade County Lake Belt |
1079 | Plan, effective October 1, 1999, a mitigation fee is imposed on |
1080 | each ton of limerock and sand extracted by any person who |
1081 | engages in the business of extracting limerock or sand from |
1082 | within the Miami-Dade County Lake Belt Area and the east one- |
1083 | half of sections 24 and 25 and all of sections 35 and 36, |
1084 | Township 53 South, Range 39 East. The mitigation fee is imposed |
1085 | for each ton of limerock and sand sold from within the |
1086 | properties where the fee applies in raw, processed, or |
1087 | manufactured form, including, but not limited to, sized |
1088 | aggregate, asphalt, cement, concrete, and other limerock and |
1089 | concrete products. The mitigation fee imposed by this subsection |
1090 | for each ton of limerock and sand sold shall be 12 cents per ton |
1091 | beginning January 1, 2007; 18 cents per ton beginning January 1, |
1092 | 2008; 24 cents per ton beginning January 1, 2009; and 45 cents |
1093 | per ton beginning close of business December 31, 2011. To pay |
1094 | for seepage mitigation projects, including hydrological |
1095 | structures, as authorized in an environmental resource permit |
1096 | issued by the department for mining activities within the Miami- |
1097 | Dade County Lake Belt Area, and to upgrade a water treatment |
1098 | plant that treats water coming from the Northwest Wellfield in |
1099 | Miami-Dade County, a water treatment plant upgrade fee is |
1100 | imposed within the same Lake Belt Area subject to the mitigation |
1101 | fee and upon the same kind of mined limerock and sand subject to |
1102 | the mitigation fee. The water treatment plant upgrade fee |
1103 | imposed by this subsection for each ton of limerock and sand |
1104 | sold shall be 15 cents per ton beginning on January 1, 2007, and |
1105 | the collection of this fee shall cease once the total amount of |
1106 | proceeds collected for this fee reaches the amount of the actual |
1107 | moneys necessary to design and construct the water treatment |
1108 | plant upgrade, as determined in an open, public solicitation |
1109 | process. Any limerock or sand that is used within the mine from |
1110 | which the limerock or sand is extracted is exempt from the fees. |
1111 | The amount of the mitigation fee and the water treatment plant |
1112 | upgrade fee imposed under this section must be stated separately |
1113 | on the invoice provided to the purchaser of the limerock or sand |
1114 | product from the limerock or sand miner, or its subsidiary or |
1115 | affiliate, for which the fee or fees apply. The limerock or sand |
1116 | miner, or its subsidiary or affiliate, who sells the limerock or |
1117 | sand product shall collect the mitigation fee and the water |
1118 | treatment plant upgrade fee and forward the proceeds of the fees |
1119 | to the Department of Revenue on or before the 20th day of the |
1120 | month following the calendar month in which the sale occurs. As |
1121 | used in this section, the term "proceeds of the fee" means all |
1122 | funds collected and received by the Department of Revenue under |
1123 | this section, including interest and penalties on delinquent |
1124 | fees. The amount deducted for administrative costs may not |
1125 | exceed 3 percent of the total revenues collected under this |
1126 | section and may equal only those administrative costs reasonably |
1127 | attributable to the fees. |
1128 | (3) The mitigation fee and the water treatment plant |
1129 | upgrade fee imposed by this section must be reported to the |
1130 | Department of Revenue. Payment of the mitigation and the water |
1131 | treatment plant upgrade fees must be accompanied by a form |
1132 | prescribed by the Department of Revenue. The proceeds of the |
1133 | mitigation fee, less administrative costs, must be transferred |
1134 | by the Department of Revenue to the South Florida Water |
1135 | Management District and deposited into the Lake Belt Mitigation |
1136 | Trust Fund. Beginning January 1, 2012, and ending December 31, |
1137 | 2017, or upon issuance of water quality certification by the |
1138 | department for mining activities within Phase II of the Miami- |
1139 | Dade County Lake Belt Plan, whichever occurs later, the proceeds |
1140 | of the water treatment plant upgrade fee, less administrative |
1141 | costs, must be transferred by the Department of Revenue to the |
1142 | South Florida Water Management District and deposited into the |
1143 | Lake Belt Mitigation Trust Fund. Beginning January 1, 2018, the |
1144 | proceeds of the water treatment plant upgrade fee, less |
1145 | administrative costs, must be transferred by the Department of |
1146 | Revenue to a trust fund established by Miami-Dade County, for |
1147 | the sole purpose authorized by paragraph (6)(a). As used in this |
1148 | section, the term "proceeds of the fee" means all funds |
1149 | collected and received by the Department of Revenue under this |
1150 | section, including interest and penalties on delinquent fees. |
1151 | The amount deducted for administrative costs may not exceed 3 |
1152 | percent of the total revenues collected under this section and |
1153 | may equal only those administrative costs reasonably |
1154 | attributable to the fees. |
1155 | (4)(a) The Department of Revenue shall administer, |
1156 | collect, and enforce the mitigation and water treatment plant |
1157 | upgrade fees authorized under this section in accordance with |
1158 | the procedures used to administer, collect, and enforce the |
1159 | general sales tax imposed under chapter 212. The provisions of |
1160 | chapter 212 with respect to the authority of the Department of |
1161 | Revenue to audit and make assessments, the keeping of books and |
1162 | records, and the interest and penalties imposed on delinquent |
1163 | fees apply to this section. The fees may not be included in |
1164 | computing estimated taxes under s. 212.11, and the dealer's |
1165 | credit for collecting taxes or fees provided for in s. 212.12 |
1166 | does not apply to the fees imposed by this section. |
1167 | (6)(a) The proceeds of the mitigation fee must be used to |
1168 | conduct mitigation activities that are appropriate to offset the |
1169 | loss of the value and functions of wetlands as a result of |
1170 | mining activities and must be used in a manner consistent with |
1171 | the recommendations contained in the reports submitted to the |
1172 | Legislature by the Miami-Dade County Lake Belt Plan |
1173 | Implementation Committee and adopted under s. 373.4149. Such |
1174 | mitigation may include the purchase, enhancement, restoration, |
1175 | and management of wetlands and uplands, the purchase of |
1176 | mitigation credit from a permitted mitigation bank, and any |
1177 | structural modifications to the existing drainage system to |
1178 | enhance the hydrology of the Miami-Dade County Lake Belt Area. |
1179 | Funds may also be used to reimburse other funding sources, |
1180 | including the Save Our Rivers Land Acquisition Program, the |
1181 | Internal Improvement Trust Fund, the South Florida Water |
1182 | Management District, and Miami-Dade County, for the purchase of |
1183 | lands that were acquired in areas appropriate for mitigation due |
1184 | to rock mining and to reimburse governmental agencies that |
1185 | exchanged land under s. 373.4149 for mitigation due to rock |
1186 | mining. The proceeds of the water treatment plant upgrade fee |
1187 | that are deposited into the Lake Belt Mitigation Trust Fund |
1188 | shall be used solely to pay for seepage mitigation projects, |
1189 | including groundwater or surface water management structures, as |
1190 | authorized in an environmental resource permit issued by the |
1191 | department for mining activities within the Miami-Dade County |
1192 | Lake Belt Area. The proceeds of the water treatment plant |
1193 | upgrade fee that are transferred to a trust fund established by |
1194 | Miami-Dade County shall be used to upgrade a water treatment |
1195 | plant that treats water coming from the Northwest Wellfield in |
1196 | Miami-Dade County. As used in this section, the terms "upgrade a |
1197 | water treatment plant" or "water treatment plant upgrade" means |
1198 | those works necessary to treat or filter a surface water source |
1199 | or supply or both. |
1200 | Section 18. Present subsections (3), (4), and (5) of |
1201 | section 373.441, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections |
1202 | (7), (8), and (9), respectively, and new subsections (3), (4), |
1203 | (5), and (6) are added to that section, to read: |
1204 | 373.441 Role of counties, municipalities, and local |
1205 | pollution control programs in permit processing; delegation.- |
1206 | (3) A county having a population of 200,000 or more or a |
1207 | municipality having a population of 100,000 or more that |
1208 | implements a local pollution control program regulating all or a |
1209 | portion of the wetlands or surface waters throughout its |
1210 | geographic boundary must apply for delegation of state |
1211 | environmental resource permitting authority on or before June 1, |
1212 | 2012. A county or municipality that fails to receive delegation |
1213 | of all or a portion of state environmental resource permitting |
1214 | authority within 1 year after submitting its application for |
1215 | delegation or by June 1, 2013, at the latest, may not require |
1216 | permits that in part or in full are substantially similar to the |
1217 | requirements needed to obtain an environmental resource permit. |
1218 | A county or municipality that has received delegation before |
1219 | June 1, 2012, does not need to reapply. |
1220 | (4) The department is responsible for all delegations of |
1221 | state environmental resource permitting authority to local |
1222 | governments. The department must grant or deny an application |
1223 | for delegation submitted by a county or municipality that meets |
1224 | the criteria in subsection (3) within 1 year after the receipt |
1225 | of the application. If an application for delegation is denied, |
1226 | any available legal challenge to such denial shall toll the 1- |
1227 | year preemption deadline until resolution of the legal |
1228 | challenge. Upon delegation to a qualified local government, the |
1229 | department and water management district may not regulate the |
1230 | activities subject to the delegation within that jurisdiction |
1231 | unless regulation is required pursuant to the terms of the |
1232 | delegation agreement. |
1233 | (5) This section does not prohibit or limit a local |
1234 | government that meets the criteria in subsection (3) from |
1235 | regulating wetlands or surface waters after June 1, 2012, if the |
1236 | local government receives delegation of all or a portion of |
1237 | state environmental resource permitting authority within 1 year |
1238 | after submitting its application for delegation. |
1239 | (6) Notwithstanding subsections (3), (4), and (5), this |
1240 | section does not apply to environmental resource permitting or |
1241 | reclamation applications for solid mineral mining and does not |
1242 | prohibit the application of local government regulations to any |
1243 | new solid mineral mine or any proposed addition to, change to, |
1244 | or expansion of an existing solid mineral mine. |
1245 | Section 19. Paragraph (b) of subsection (11) of section |
1246 | 376.3071, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1247 | 376.3071 Inland Protection Trust Fund; creation; purposes; |
1248 | funding.- |
1249 | (11) |
1250 | (b) Low-scored site initiative.-Notwithstanding s. |
1251 | 376.30711, any site with a priority ranking score of 10 points |
1252 | or less may voluntarily participate in the low-scored site |
1253 | initiative, whether or not the site is eligible for state |
1254 | restoration funding. |
1255 | 1. To participate in the low-scored site initiative, the |
1256 | responsible party or property owner must affirmatively |
1257 | demonstrate that the following conditions are met: |
1258 | a. Upon reassessment pursuant to department rule, the site |
1259 | retains a priority ranking score of 10 points or less. |
1260 | b. No excessively contaminated soil, as defined by |
1261 | department rule, exists onsite as a result of a release of |
1262 | petroleum products. |
1263 | c. A minimum of 6 months of groundwater monitoring |
1264 | indicates that the plume is shrinking or stable. |
1265 | d. The release of petroleum products at the site does not |
1266 | adversely affect adjacent surface waters, including their |
1267 | effects on human health and the environment. |
1268 | e. The area of groundwater containing the petroleum |
1269 | products' chemicals of concern is less than one-quarter acre and |
1270 | is confined to the source property boundaries of the real |
1271 | property on which the discharge originated. |
1272 | f. Soils onsite that are subject to human exposure found |
1273 | between land surface and 2 feet below land surface meet the soil |
1274 | cleanup target levels established by department rule or human |
1275 | exposure is limited by appropriate institutional or engineering |
1276 | controls. |
1277 | 2. Upon affirmative demonstration of the conditions under |
1278 | subparagraph 1., the department shall issue a determination of |
1279 | "No Further Action." Such determination acknowledges that |
1280 | minimal contamination exists onsite and that such contamination |
1281 | is not a threat to human health or the environment. If no |
1282 | contamination is detected, the department may issue a site |
1283 | rehabilitation completion order. |
1284 | 3. Sites that are eligible for state restoration funding |
1285 | may receive payment of preapproved costs for the low-scored site |
1286 | initiative as follows: |
1287 | a. A responsible party or property owner may submit an |
1288 | assessment plan designed to affirmatively demonstrate that the |
1289 | site meets the conditions under subparagraph 1. Notwithstanding |
1290 | the priority ranking score of the site, the department may |
1291 | preapprove the cost of the assessment pursuant to s. 376.30711, |
1292 | including 6 months of groundwater monitoring, not to exceed |
1293 | $30,000 for each site. The department may not pay the costs |
1294 | associated with the establishment of institutional or |
1295 | engineering controls. |
1296 | b. The assessment work shall be completed no later than 6 |
1297 | months after the department issues its approval. |
1298 | c. No more than $10 million for the low-scored site |
1299 | initiative shall be encumbered from the Inland Protection Trust |
1300 | Fund in any fiscal year. Funds shall be made available on a |
1301 | first-come, first-served basis and shall be limited to 10 sites |
1302 | in each fiscal year for each responsible party or property |
1303 | owner. |
1304 | d. Program deductibles, copayments, and the limited |
1305 | contamination assessment report requirements under paragraph |
1306 | (13)(c) do not apply to expenditures under this paragraph. |
1307 | Section 20. Section 376.30715, Florida Statutes, is |
1308 | amended to read: |
1309 | 376.30715 Innocent victim petroleum storage system |
1310 | restoration.-A contaminated site acquired by the current owner |
1311 | prior to July 1, 1990, which has ceased operating as a petroleum |
1312 | storage or retail business prior to January 1, 1985, is eligible |
1313 | for financial assistance pursuant to s. 376.305(6), |
1314 | notwithstanding s. 376.305(6)(a). For purposes of this section, |
1315 | the term "acquired" means the acquisition of title to the |
1316 | property; however, a subsequent transfer of the property to a |
1317 | spouse or child of the owner, a surviving spouse or child of the |
1318 | owner in trust or free of trust, or a revocable trust created |
1319 | for the benefit of the settlor, or a corporate entity created by |
1320 | the owner to hold title to the site does not disqualify the site |
1321 | from financial assistance pursuant to s. 376.305(6) and |
1322 | applicants previously denied coverage may reapply. Eligible |
1323 | sites shall be ranked in accordance with s. 376.3071(5). |
1324 | Section 21. Section 378.413, Florida Statutes, is created |
1325 | to read: |
1326 | 378.413 Regulatory preemption for construction aggregate |
1327 | materials mining.-Except as otherwise provided in this section, |
1328 | it is the intent of the Legislature for all mines for |
1329 | construction aggregate materials, as defined under s. |
1330 | 337.0261(1), for which an environmental resource permit |
1331 | application was filed pursuant to part IV of chapter 373, since |
1332 | January 1, 2008, that the regulation, permitting, and |
1333 | enforcement of all matters relating to stormwater, drainage, |
1334 | wetlands, surface or ground water flows or levels, surface or |
1335 | ground water quality, or surface or ground water management, |
1336 | reclamation, consumptive uses of water, and imperiled, |
1337 | endangered, or threatened species under, but not limited to, s. |
1338 | 9, Art. IV of the State Constitution, this chapter, chapters 373 |
1339 | and 379, and parts II and IV of chapter 403 or any equivalent |
1340 | federal law or regulation, are preempted to the state, and a |
1341 | county may not enact any ordinance or local rule, or attempt to |
1342 | regulate or enforce by any means, any matter relating to these |
1343 | subjects. This section does not apply to construction aggregate |
1344 | materials mines in the Miami-Dade County Lake Belt Area as |
1345 | described in s. 373.4149(3). |
1346 | Section 22. Paragraph (u) is added to subsection (24) of |
1347 | section 380.06, Florida Statutes, to read: |
1348 | 380.06 Developments of regional impact.- |
1349 | (24) STATUTORY EXEMPTIONS.- |
1350 | (u) Any proposed solid mineral mine and any proposed |
1351 | addition to, expansion of, or change to an existing solid |
1352 | mineral mine is exempt from the provisions of this section. |
1353 | Proposed changes to any previously approved solid mineral mine |
1354 | development-of-regional-impact development orders having vested |
1355 | rights is not subject to further review or approval as a |
1356 | development of regional impact or notice of proposed change |
1357 | review or approval pursuant to subsection (19), except for those |
1358 | applications pending as of July 1, 2011, which shall be governed |
1359 | by s. 380.115(2). Notwithstanding the foregoing, however, |
1360 | pursuant to s. 380.115(1), previously approved solid mineral |
1361 | mine development-of-regional-impact development orders shall |
1362 | continue to enjoy vested rights and continue to be effective |
1363 | unless rescinded by the developer. All local government |
1364 | regulations of proposed solid mineral mines apply to any new |
1365 | solid mineral mine or to any proposed addition to, expansion of, |
1366 | or change to an existing solid mineral mine. Notwithstanding |
1367 | this exemption, a new solid mineral mine that contributes more |
1368 | than 5 percent of the maximum service volume to a Strategic |
1369 | Intermodal System facility operating below its designated level |
1370 | of service must enter into a binding agreement with the |
1371 | Department of Transportation to mitigate its impacts to the |
1372 | Strategic Intermodal System facility. |
1373 |
|
1374 | If a use is exempt from review as a development of regional |
1375 | impact under paragraphs (a)-(s), but will be part of a larger |
1376 | project that is subject to review as a development of regional |
1377 | impact, the impact of the exempt use must be included in the |
1378 | review of the larger project, unless such exempt use involves a |
1379 | development of regional impact that includes a landowner, |
1380 | tenant, or user that has entered into a funding agreement with |
1381 | the Office of Tourism, Trade, and Economic Development under the |
1382 | Innovation Incentive Program and the agreement contemplates a |
1383 | state award of at least $50 million. |
1384 | Section 23. Subsection (1) of section 380.0657, Florida |
1385 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1386 | 380.0657 Expedited permitting process for economic |
1387 | development projects.- |
1388 | (1) The Department of Environmental Protection and, as |
1389 | appropriate, the water management districts created under |
1390 | chapter 373 shall adopt programs to expedite the processing of |
1391 | wetland resource and environmental resource permits for economic |
1392 | development projects that have been identified by a municipality |
1393 | or county as meeting the definition of target industry |
1394 | businesses under s. 288.106, or any inland multimodal facility, |
1395 | receiving or sending cargo to or from Florida ports, with the |
1396 | exception of those projects requiring approval by the Board of |
1397 | Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund. |
1398 | Section 24. Subsection (11) of section 403.061, Florida |
1399 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1400 | 403.061 Department; powers and duties.-The department |
1401 | shall have the power and the duty to control and prohibit |
1402 | pollution of air and water in accordance with the law and rules |
1403 | adopted and promulgated by it and, for this purpose, to: |
1404 | (11) Establish ambient air quality and water quality |
1405 | standards for the state as a whole or for any part thereof, and |
1406 | also standards for the abatement of excessive and unnecessary |
1407 | noise. The department is authorized to establish reasonable |
1408 | zones of mixing for discharges into waters. For existing |
1409 | installations as defined by rule 62-520.200(10), Florida |
1410 | Administrative Code, effective July 12, 2009, zones of discharge |
1411 | to groundwater are authorized to a facility's or owner's |
1412 | property boundary and extending to the base of a specifically |
1413 | designated aquifer or aquifers. Exceedance of primary and |
1414 | secondary groundwater standards that occur within a zone of |
1415 | discharge does not create liability pursuant to this chapter or |
1416 | chapter 376 for site cleanup, and the exceedance of soil cleanup |
1417 | target levels is not a basis for enforcement or site cleanup. |
1418 | (a) When a receiving body of water fails to meet a water |
1419 | quality standard for pollutants set forth in department rules, a |
1420 | steam electric generating plant discharge of pollutants that is |
1421 | existing or licensed under this chapter on July 1, 1984, may |
1422 | nevertheless be granted a mixing zone, provided that: |
1423 | 1. The standard would not be met in the water body in the |
1424 | absence of the discharge; |
1425 | 2. The discharge is in compliance with all applicable |
1426 | technology-based effluent limitations; |
1427 | 3. The discharge does not cause a measurable increase in |
1428 | the degree of noncompliance with the standard at the boundary of |
1429 | the mixing zone; and |
1430 | 4. The discharge otherwise complies with the mixing zone |
1431 | provisions specified in department rules. |
1432 | (b) No mixing zone for point source discharges shall be |
1433 | permitted in Outstanding Florida Waters except for: |
1434 | 1. Sources that have received permits from the department |
1435 | prior to April 1, 1982, or the date of designation, whichever is |
1436 | later; |
1437 | 2. Blowdown from new power plants certified pursuant to |
1438 | the Florida Electrical Power Plant Siting Act; |
1439 | 3. Discharges of water necessary for water management |
1440 | purposes which have been approved by the governing board of a |
1441 | water management district and, if required by law, by the |
1442 | secretary; and |
1443 | 4. The discharge of demineralization concentrate which has |
1444 | been determined permittable under s. 403.0882 and which meets |
1445 | the specific provisions of s. 403.0882(4)(a) and (b), if the |
1446 | proposed discharge is clearly in the public interest. |
1447 | (c) The department, by rule, shall establish water quality |
1448 | criteria for wetlands which criteria give appropriate |
1449 | recognition to the water quality of such wetlands in their |
1450 | natural state. |
1451 |
|
1452 | Nothing in this act shall be construed to invalidate any |
1453 | existing department rule relating to mixing zones. The |
1454 | department shall cooperate with the Department of Highway Safety |
1455 | and Motor Vehicles in the development of regulations required by |
1456 | s. 316.272(1). |
1457 |
|
1458 | The department shall implement such programs in conjunction with |
1459 | its other powers and duties and shall place special emphasis on |
1460 | reducing and eliminating contamination that presents a threat to |
1461 | humans, animals or plants, or to the environment. |
1462 | Section 25. Subsection (7) of section 403.087, Florida |
1463 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1464 | 403.087 Permits; general issuance; denial; revocation; |
1465 | prohibition; penalty.- |
1466 | (7) A permit issued pursuant to this section shall not |
1467 | become a vested right in the permittee. The department may |
1468 | revoke any permit issued by it if it finds that the permitholder |
1469 | has: |
1470 | (a) Has Submitted false or inaccurate information in the |
1471 | his or her application for such permit; |
1472 | (b) Has Violated law, department orders, rules, or |
1473 | regulations, or permit conditions; |
1474 | (c) Has Failed to submit operational reports or other |
1475 | information required by department rule which directly relate to |
1476 | such permit and has refused to correct or cure such violations |
1477 | when requested to do so or regulation; or |
1478 | (d) Has Refused lawful inspection under s. 403.091 at the |
1479 | facility authorized by such permit. |
1480 | Section 26. Section 403.0874, Florida Statutes, is created |
1481 | to read: |
1482 | 403.0874 Incentive-based permitting program.- |
1483 | (1) SHORT TITLE.-This section may be cited as the "Florida |
1484 | Incentive-based Permitting Act." |
1485 | (2) FINDINGS AND INTENT.-The Legislature finds and |
1486 | declares that the department should consider compliance history |
1487 | when deciding whether to issue, renew, amend, or modify a permit |
1488 | by evaluating an applicant's site-specific and program-specific |
1489 | relevant aggregate compliance history. Persons having a history |
1490 | of complying with applicable permits or state environmental laws |
1491 | and rules are eligible for permitting benefits, including, but |
1492 | not limited to, expedited permit application reviews, longer- |
1493 | duration permit periods, decreased announced compliance |
1494 | inspections, and other similar regulatory and compliance |
1495 | incentives to encourage and reward such persons for their |
1496 | environmental performance. |
1497 | (3) APPLICABILITY.- |
1498 | (a) This section applies to all persons and regulated |
1499 | activities that are subject to the permitting requirements of |
1500 | chapter 161, chapter 373, or this chapter, and all other |
1501 | applicable state or federal laws that govern activities for the |
1502 | purpose of protecting the environment or the public health from |
1503 | pollution or contamination. |
1504 | (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), this section does not |
1505 | apply to certain permit actions or environmental permitting laws |
1506 | such as: |
1507 | 1. Environmental permitting or authorization laws that |
1508 | regulate activities for the purpose of zoning, growth |
1509 | management, or land use; or |
1510 | 2. Any federal law or program delegated or assumed by the |
1511 | state to the extent that implementation of this section, or any |
1512 | part of this section, would jeopardize the ability of the state |
1513 | to retain such delegation or assumption. |
1514 | (c) As used in this section, the term "regulated activity" |
1515 | means any activity, including, but not limited to, the |
1516 | construction or operation of a facility, installation, system, |
1517 | or project, for which a permit, certification, or authorization |
1518 | is required under chapter 161, chapter 373, or this chapter. |
1519 | (4) COMPLIANCE HISTORY.-The compliance history period |
1520 | shall be the 10 years before the date any permit or renewal |
1521 | application is received by the department. Any person is |
1522 | entitled to the incentives under subsection (5) if: |
1523 | (a)1. The applicant has conducted the regulated activity |
1524 | at the same site for which the permit or renewal is sought for |
1525 | at least 8 of the 10 years before the date the permit |
1526 | application is received by the department; or |
1527 | 2. The applicant has conducted the same regulated activity |
1528 | at a different site within the state for at least 8 of the 10 |
1529 | years before the date the permit or renewal application is |
1530 | received by the department; and |
1531 | (b) In the 10 years before the date the permit or renewal |
1532 | application is received by the department or water management |
1533 | district, the applicant has not been subject to a final |
1534 | administrative order or civil judgment or criminal conviction |
1535 | whereby an administrative law judge or civil or criminal court |
1536 | found the applicant violated the applicable law or rule and has |
1537 | not been the subject of an administrative settlement or consent |
1538 | order, whether formal or informal, that established a violation |
1539 | of an applicable law or rule; and |
1540 | (c) The applicant can demonstrate during a 10-year |
1541 | compliance history period the implementation of activities or |
1542 | practices that resulted in: |
1543 | 1. Reductions in actual or permitted discharges or |
1544 | emissions; |
1545 | 2. Reductions in the impacts of regulated activities on |
1546 | public lands or natural resources; and |
1547 | 3. Implementation of voluntary environmental performance |
1548 | programs, such as environmental management systems. |
1549 | (5) COMPLIANCE INCENTIVES.-An applicant shall request all |
1550 | applicable incentives at the time of application submittal. |
1551 | Unless otherwise prohibited by state or federal law, rule, or |
1552 | regulation, and if the applicant meets all other applicable |
1553 | criteria for the issuance of a permit or authorization, an |
1554 | applicant is entitled to the following incentives: |
1555 | (a) Expedited reviews on permit actions, including, but |
1556 | not limited to, initial permit issuance, renewal, modification, |
1557 | and transfer, if applicable. Expedited review means, at a |
1558 | minimum, that the initial request for additional information |
1559 | regarding a permit application shall be issued no later than 30 |
1560 | days after the application is filed, and final agency action |
1561 | shall be taken no later than 60 days after the application is |
1562 | deemed complete; |
1563 | (b) Priority review of the permit application; |
1564 | (c) Reduction in the number of routine compliance |
1565 | inspections; |
1566 | (d) No more than two requests for additional information |
1567 | under s. 120.60; and |
1568 | (e) Longer permit period durations. |
1569 | (6) RULEMAKING.-The department may adopt additional |
1570 | incentives by rule. Such incentives shall be based on, and |
1571 | proportional to, actions taken by the applicant to reduce the |
1572 | applicant's impacts on human health and the environment beyond |
1573 | those actions required by law. The department's rules adopted |
1574 | under this section are binding on the water management districts |
1575 | and any local government that has been delegated or assumed a |
1576 | regulatory program to which this section applies. |
1577 | (7) SAVINGS PROVISION.-This section does not affect an |
1578 | applicant's responsibility to provide reasonable assurance of |
1579 | compliance with applicable statutes and rules as a condition |
1580 | precedent to issuance of a permit and does not limit factors the |
1581 | department, a water management district, or a delegated program |
1582 | may consider in evaluating a permit application under existing |
1583 | law. |
1584 | Section 27. Subsection (2) of section 403.1838, Florida |
1585 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1586 | 403.1838 Small Community Sewer Construction Assistance |
1587 | Act.- |
1588 | (2) The department shall use funds specifically |
1589 | appropriated to award grants under this section to assist |
1590 | financially disadvantaged small communities with their needs for |
1591 | adequate sewer facilities. For purposes of this section, the |
1592 | term "financially disadvantaged small community" means a |
1593 | municipality that has with a population of 10,000 7,500 or fewer |
1594 | less, according to the latest decennial census and a per capita |
1595 | annual income less than the state per capita annual income as |
1596 | determined by the United States Department of Commerce. |
1597 | Section 28. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) of section |
1598 | 403.7045, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1599 | 403.7045 Application of act and integration with other |
1600 | acts.- |
1601 | (1) The following wastes or activities shall not be |
1602 | regulated pursuant to this act: |
1603 | (f) Industrial byproducts, if: |
1604 | 1. A majority of the industrial byproducts are |
1605 | demonstrated to be sold, used, or reused within 1 year. |
1606 | 2. The industrial byproducts are not discharged, |
1607 | deposited, injected, dumped, spilled, leaked, or placed upon any |
1608 | land or water so that such industrial byproducts, or any |
1609 | constituent thereof, may enter other lands or be emitted into |
1610 | the air or discharged into any waters, including groundwaters, |
1611 | or otherwise enter the environment such that a threat of |
1612 | contamination in excess of applicable department standards and |
1613 | criteria or a significant threat to public health is caused. |
1614 | 3. The industrial byproducts are not hazardous wastes as |
1615 | defined under s. 403.703 and rules adopted under this section. |
1616 |
|
1617 | Sludge from an industrial waste treatment works that meets the |
1618 | exemption requirements of this paragraph is not solid waste as |
1619 | defined in s. 403.703(32). |
1620 | Section 29. Subsections (2) and (3) of section 403.707, |
1621 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
1622 | 403.707 Permits.- |
1623 | (2) Except as provided in s. 403.722(6), a permit under |
1624 | this section is not required for the following, if the activity |
1625 | does not create a public nuisance or any condition adversely |
1626 | affecting the environment or public health and does not violate |
1627 | other state or local laws, ordinances, rules, regulations, or |
1628 | orders: |
1629 | (a) Disposal by persons of solid waste resulting from |
1630 | their own activities on their own property, if such waste is |
1631 | ordinary household waste from their residential property or is |
1632 | rocks, soils, trees, tree remains, and other vegetative matter |
1633 | that normally result from land development operations. Disposal |
1634 | of materials that could create a public nuisance or adversely |
1635 | affect the environment or public health, such as white goods; |
1636 | automotive materials, such as batteries and tires; petroleum |
1637 | products; pesticides; solvents; or hazardous substances, is not |
1638 | covered under this exemption. |
1639 | (b) Storage in containers by persons of solid waste |
1640 | resulting from their own activities on their property, leased or |
1641 | rented property, or property subject to a homeowners or |
1642 | maintenance association for which the person contributes |
1643 | association assessments, if the solid waste in such containers |
1644 | is collected at least once a week. |
1645 | (c) Disposal by persons of solid waste resulting from |
1646 | their own activities on their property, if the environmental |
1647 | effects of such disposal on groundwater and surface waters are: |
1648 | 1. Addressed or authorized by a site certification order |
1649 | issued under part II or a permit issued by the department under |
1650 | this chapter or rules adopted pursuant to this chapter; or |
1651 | 2. Addressed or authorized by, or exempted from the |
1652 | requirement to obtain, a groundwater monitoring plan approved by |
1653 | the department. If a facility has a permit authorizing disposal |
1654 | activity, new areas where solid waste is being disposed of that |
1655 | are monitored by an existing or modified groundwater monitoring |
1656 | plan are not required to be specifically authorized in a permit |
1657 | or other certification. |
1658 | (d) Disposal by persons of solid waste resulting from |
1659 | their own activities on their own property, if such disposal |
1660 | occurred prior to October 1, 1988. |
1661 | (e) Disposal of solid waste resulting from normal farming |
1662 | operations as defined by department rule. Polyethylene |
1663 | agricultural plastic, damaged, nonsalvageable, untreated wood |
1664 | pallets, and packing material that cannot be feasibly recycled, |
1665 | which are used in connection with agricultural operations |
1666 | related to the growing, harvesting, or maintenance of crops, may |
1667 | be disposed of by open burning if a public nuisance or any |
1668 | condition adversely affecting the environment or the public |
1669 | health is not created by the open burning and state or federal |
1670 | ambient air quality standards are not violated. |
1671 | (f) The use of clean debris as fill material in any area. |
1672 | However, this paragraph does not exempt any person from |
1673 | obtaining any other required permits, and does not affect a |
1674 | person's responsibility to dispose of clean debris appropriately |
1675 | if it is not to be used as fill material. |
1676 | (g) Compost operations that produce less than 50 cubic |
1677 | yards of compost per year when the compost produced is used on |
1678 | the property where the compost operation is located. |
1679 | (3)(a) All applicable provisions of ss. 403.087 and |
1680 | 403.088, relating to permits, apply to the control of solid |
1681 | waste management facilities. |
1682 | (b) Any permit issued to a solid waste management facility |
1683 | that is designed with a leachate control system that meets |
1684 | department requirements shall be issued for a term of 20 years |
1685 | unless the applicant requests a lesser permit term. Existing |
1686 | permit fees for qualifying solid waste management facilities |
1687 | shall be prorated to the permit term authorized by this section. |
1688 | This provision applies to all qualifying solid waste management |
1689 | facilities that apply for an operating or construction permit or |
1690 | renew an existing operating or construction permit on or after |
1691 | July 1, 2012. |
1692 | Section 30. Subsection (12) is added to section 403.814, |
1693 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
1694 | 403.814 General permits; delegation.- |
1695 | (12) A general permit shall be granted for the |
1696 | construction, alteration, and maintenance of a surface water |
1697 | management system serving a total project area of up to 10 |
1698 | acres. The construction of such a system may proceed without any |
1699 | agency action by the department or water management district if: |
1700 | (a) The total project area is less than 10 acres; |
1701 | (b) The total project area involves less than 2 acres of |
1702 | impervious surface; |
1703 | (c) No activities will impact wetlands or other surface |
1704 | waters; |
1705 | (d) No activities are conducted in, on, or over wetlands |
1706 | or other surface waters; |
1707 | (e) Drainage facilities will not include pipes having |
1708 | diameters greater than 24 inches, or the hydraulic equivalent, |
1709 | and will not use pumps in any manner; |
1710 | (f) The project is not part of a larger common plan, |
1711 | development, or sale. |
1712 | (g) The project does not: |
1713 | 1. Cause adverse water quantity or flooding impacts to |
1714 | receiving water and adjacent lands; |
1715 | 2. Cause adverse impacts to existing surface water storage |
1716 | and conveyance capabilities; |
1717 | 3. Cause a violation of state water quality standards; and |
1718 | 4. Cause an adverse impact to the maintenance of surface |
1719 | or ground water levels or surface water flows established |
1720 | pursuant to s. 373.042 or a work of the district established |
1721 | pursuant to s. 373.086; and |
1722 | (h) The surface water management system design plans must |
1723 | be signed and sealed by a Florida registered professional who |
1724 | shall attest that the system will perform and function as |
1725 | proposed and has been designed in accordance with appropriate, |
1726 | generally accepted performance standards and scientific |
1727 | principles. |
1728 | Section 31. Subsection (6) of section 403.853, Florida |
1729 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1730 | 403.853 Drinking water standards.- |
1731 | (6) Upon the request of the owner or operator of a |
1732 | transient noncommunity water system using groundwater as a |
1733 | source of supply and serving religious institutions or |
1734 | businesses, other than restaurants or other public food service |
1735 | establishments or religious institutions with school or day care |
1736 | services, and using groundwater as a source of supply, the |
1737 | department, or a local county health department designated by |
1738 | the department, shall perform a sanitary survey of the facility. |
1739 | Upon receipt of satisfactory survey results according to |
1740 | department criteria, the department shall reduce the |
1741 | requirements of such owner or operator from monitoring and |
1742 | reporting on a quarterly basis to performing these functions on |
1743 | an annual basis. Any revised monitoring and reporting schedule |
1744 | approved by the department under this subsection shall apply |
1745 | until such time as a violation of applicable state or federal |
1746 | primary drinking water standards is determined by the system |
1747 | owner or operator, by the department, or by an agency designated |
1748 | by the department, after a random or routine sanitary survey. |
1749 | Certified operators are not required for transient noncommunity |
1750 | water systems of the type and size covered by this subsection. |
1751 | Any reports required of such system shall be limited to the |
1752 | minimum as required by federal law. When not contrary to the |
1753 | provisions of federal law, the department may, upon request and |
1754 | by rule, waive additional provisions of state drinking water |
1755 | regulations for such systems. |
1756 | Section 32. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) and |
1757 | subsections (4), (5), (10), (11), (14), (15), and (18) of |
1758 | section 403.973, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
1759 | 403.973 Expedited permitting; amendments to comprehensive |
1760 | plans.- |
1761 | (3)(a) The secretary shall direct the creation of regional |
1762 | permit action teams for the purpose of expediting review of |
1763 | permit applications and local comprehensive plan amendments |
1764 | submitted by: |
1765 | 1. Businesses creating at least 50 jobs or a commercial or |
1766 | industrial development project that will be occupied by |
1767 | businesses that would individually or collectively create at |
1768 | least 50 jobs; or |
1769 | 2. Businesses creating at least 25 jobs if the project is |
1770 | located in an enterprise zone, or in a county having a |
1771 | population of fewer than 75,000 or in a county having a |
1772 | population of fewer than 125,000 which is contiguous to a county |
1773 | having a population of fewer than 75,000, as determined by the |
1774 | most recent decennial census, residing in incorporated and |
1775 | unincorporated areas of the county. |
1776 | (4) The regional teams shall be established through the |
1777 | execution of a project-specific memoranda of agreement developed |
1778 | and executed by the applicant and the secretary, with input |
1779 | solicited from the office and the respective heads of the |
1780 | Department of Community Affairs, the Department of |
1781 | Transportation and its district offices, the Department of |
1782 | Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Fish and Wildlife |
1783 | Conservation Commission, appropriate regional planning councils, |
1784 | appropriate water management districts, and voluntarily |
1785 | participating municipalities and counties. The memoranda of |
1786 | agreement should also accommodate participation in this |
1787 | expedited process by other local governments and federal |
1788 | agencies as circumstances warrant. |
1789 | (5) In order to facilitate local government's option to |
1790 | participate in this expedited review process, the secretary |
1791 | shall, in cooperation with local governments and participating |
1792 | state agencies, create a standard form memorandum of agreement. |
1793 | The standard form of the memorandum of agreement shall be used |
1794 | only if the local government participates in the expedited |
1795 | review process. In the absence of local government |
1796 | participation, only the project-specific memorandum of agreement |
1797 | executed pursuant to subsection (4) applies. A local government |
1798 | shall hold a duly noticed public workshop to review and explain |
1799 | to the public the expedited permitting process and the terms and |
1800 | conditions of the standard form memorandum of agreement. |
1801 | (10) The memoranda of agreement may provide for the waiver |
1802 | or modification of procedural rules prescribing forms, fees, |
1803 | procedures, or time limits for the review or processing of |
1804 | permit applications under the jurisdiction of those agencies |
1805 | that are members of the regional permit action team party to the |
1806 | memoranda of agreement. Notwithstanding any other provision of |
1807 | law to the contrary, a memorandum of agreement must to the |
1808 | extent feasible provide for proceedings and hearings otherwise |
1809 | held separately by the parties to the memorandum of agreement to |
1810 | be combined into one proceeding or held jointly and at one |
1811 | location. Such waivers or modifications shall not be available |
1812 | for permit applications governed by federally delegated or |
1813 | approved permitting programs, the requirements of which would |
1814 | prohibit, or be inconsistent with, such a waiver or |
1815 | modification. |
1816 | (11) The standard form for memoranda of agreement shall |
1817 | include guidelines to be used in working with state, regional, |
1818 | and local permitting authorities. Guidelines may include, but |
1819 | are not limited to, the following: |
1820 | (a) A central contact point for filing permit applications |
1821 | and local comprehensive plan amendments and for obtaining |
1822 | information on permit and local comprehensive plan amendment |
1823 | requirements; |
1824 | (b) Identification of the individual or individuals within |
1825 | each respective agency who will be responsible for processing |
1826 | the expedited permit application or local comprehensive plan |
1827 | amendment for that agency; |
1828 | (c) A mandatory preapplication review process to reduce |
1829 | permitting conflicts by providing guidance to applicants |
1830 | regarding the permits needed from each agency and governmental |
1831 | entity, site planning and development, site suitability and |
1832 | limitations, facility design, and steps the applicant can take |
1833 | to ensure expeditious permit application and local comprehensive |
1834 | plan amendment review. As a part of this process, the first |
1835 | interagency meeting to discuss a project shall be held within 14 |
1836 | days after the secretary's determination that the project is |
1837 | eligible for expedited review. Subsequent interagency meetings |
1838 | may be scheduled to accommodate the needs of participating local |
1839 | governments that are unable to meet public notice requirements |
1840 | for executing a memorandum of agreement within this timeframe. |
1841 | This accommodation may not exceed 45 days from the secretary's |
1842 | determination that the project is eligible for expedited review; |
1843 | (d) The preparation of a single coordinated project |
1844 | description form and checklist and an agreement by state and |
1845 | regional agencies to reduce the burden on an applicant to |
1846 | provide duplicate information to multiple agencies; |
1847 | (e) Establishment of a process for the adoption and review |
1848 | of any comprehensive plan amendment needed by any certified |
1849 | project within 90 days after the submission of an application |
1850 | for a comprehensive plan amendment. However, the memorandum of |
1851 | agreement may not prevent affected persons as defined in s. |
1852 | 163.3184 from appealing or participating in this expedited plan |
1853 | amendment process and any review or appeals of decisions made |
1854 | under this paragraph; and |
1855 | (f) Additional incentives for an applicant who proposes a |
1856 | project that provides a net ecosystem benefit. |
1857 | (14)(a) Challenges to state agency action in the expedited |
1858 | permitting process for projects processed under this section are |
1859 | subject to the summary hearing provisions of s. 120.574, except |
1860 | that the administrative law judge's decision, as provided in s. |
1861 | 120.574(2)(f), shall be in the form of a recommended order and |
1862 | shall not constitute the final action of the state agency. In |
1863 | those proceedings where the action of only one agency of the |
1864 | state other than the Department of Environmental Protection is |
1865 | challenged, the agency of the state shall issue the final order |
1866 | within 45 working days after receipt of the administrative law |
1867 | judge's recommended order, and the recommended order shall |
1868 | inform the parties of their right to file exceptions or |
1869 | responses to the recommended order in accordance with the |
1870 | uniform rules of procedure pursuant to s. 120.54. In those |
1871 | proceedings where the actions of more than one agency of the |
1872 | state are challenged, the Governor shall issue the final order |
1873 | within 45 working days after receipt of the administrative law |
1874 | judge's recommended order, and the recommended order shall |
1875 | inform the parties of their right to file exceptions or |
1876 | responses to the recommended order in accordance with the |
1877 | uniform rules of procedure pursuant to s. 120.54. For This |
1878 | paragraph does not apply to the issuance of department licenses |
1879 | required under any federally delegated or approved permit |
1880 | program. In such instances, the department, and not the |
1881 | Governor, shall enter the final order. The participating |
1882 | agencies of the state may opt at the preliminary hearing |
1883 | conference to allow the administrative law judge's decision to |
1884 | constitute the final agency action. If a participating local |
1885 | government agrees to participate in the summary hearing |
1886 | provisions of s. 120.574 for purposes of review of local |
1887 | government comprehensive plan amendments, s. 163.3184(9) and |
1888 | (10) apply. |
1889 | (b) Projects identified in paragraph (3)(f) or challenges |
1890 | to state agency action in the expedited permitting process for |
1891 | establishment of a state-of-the-art biomedical research |
1892 | institution and campus in this state by the grantee under s. |
1893 | 288.955 are subject to the same requirements as challenges |
1894 | brought under paragraph (a), except that, notwithstanding s. |
1895 | 120.574, summary proceedings must be conducted within 30 days |
1896 | after a party files the motion for summary hearing, regardless |
1897 | of whether the parties agree to the summary proceeding. |
1898 | (15) The office, working with the agencies providing |
1899 | cooperative assistance and input regarding the memoranda of |
1900 | agreement, shall review sites proposed for the location of |
1901 | facilities that the office has certified to be eligible for the |
1902 | Innovation Incentive Program under s. 288.1089. Within 20 days |
1903 | after the request for the review by the office, the agencies |
1904 | shall provide to the office a statement as to each site's |
1905 | necessary permits under local, state, and federal law and an |
1906 | identification of significant permitting issues, which if |
1907 | unresolved, may result in the denial of an agency permit or |
1908 | approval or any significant delay caused by the permitting |
1909 | process. |
1910 | (18) The office, working with the Rural Economic |
1911 | Development Initiative and the agencies participating in the |
1912 | memoranda of agreement, shall provide technical assistance in |
1913 | preparing permit applications and local comprehensive plan |
1914 | amendments for counties having a population of fewer than 75,000 |
1915 | residents, or counties having fewer than 125,000 residents which |
1916 | are contiguous to counties having fewer than 75,000 residents. |
1917 | Additional assistance may include, but not be limited to, |
1918 | guidance in land development regulations and permitting |
1919 | processes, working cooperatively with state, regional, and local |
1920 | entities to identify areas within these counties which may be |
1921 | suitable or adaptable for preclearance review of specified types |
1922 | of land uses and other activities requiring permits. |
1923 | Section 33. Subsection (5) is added to section 526.203, |
1924 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
1925 | 526.203 Renewable fuel standard.- |
1926 | (5) SALE OF UNBLENDED FUELS.-This section does not |
1927 | prohibit the sale of unblended fuels for the uses exempted under |
1928 | subsection (3). |
1929 | Section 34. The installation of fuel tank upgrades to |
1930 | secondary containment systems shall be completed by the |
1931 | deadlines specified in rule 62-761.510, Florida Administrative |
1932 | Code, Table UST. However, notwithstanding any agreements to the |
1933 | contrary, any fuel service station that changed ownership |
1934 | interest through a bona fide sale of the property between |
1935 | January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2009, is not required to |
1936 | complete the upgrades described in rule 62-761.510, Florida |
1937 | Administrative Code, Table UST, until December 31, 2012. |
1938 | Section 35. This act shall take effect July 1, 2011. |