HB 683

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to growth management; amending s. 163.01,
3F.S.; revising provisions for filing certain interlocal
4agreements and amendments; amending s. 163.3177, F.S.;
5encouraging local governments to adopt recreational
6surface water use policies; providing criteria and
7exemptions for such policies; authorizing assistance for
8the development of such policies; directing the Office of
9Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability to
10submit a report to the Legislature; revising a provision
11relating to the amount of transferrable land use credits;
12amending s. 163.3180, F.S.; conforming a cross-reference;
13amending s. 197.303, F.S.; revising the criteria for ad
14valorem tax deferral waterfront properties; creating s.
15336.68, F.S.; providing that a property owner having real
16property located within the boundaries of a community
17development district and a special road and bridge
18district may select the community development district to
19be the provider of the road and drainage improvements to
20the property of the owner; authorizing the owner of the
21property to withdraw the property from the special road
22and bridge district; specifying the procedures and
23criteria required in order to remove the real property
24from the special road and bridge district; authorizing the
25governing body of the special road and bridge district to
26file a written objection to the proposed withdrawal of the
27property; amending s. 342.07, F.S.; including hotels and
28motels within the definition of the term "recreational and
29commercial working waterfront"; creating s. 373.4132,
30F.S.; directing water management district governing boards
31and the Department of Environmental Protection to require
32permits for certain activities relating to certain dry
33storage facilities; providing criteria for application of
34such permits; preserving regulatory authority for the
35department and governing boards; amending s. 380.06, F.S.;
36providing for the state land planning agency to determine
37the amount of development that remains to be built in
38certain circumstances; specifying certain requirements for
39a development order; revising the circumstances in which a
40local government may issue permits for development
41subsequent to the buildout date; revising the definition
42of an essentially built-out development; revising the
43criteria under which a proposed change constitutes a
44substantial deviation; providing criteria for calculating
45certain deviations; clarifying the criteria under which
46the extension of a buildout date is presumed to create a
47substantial deviation; requiring that notice of any change
48to certain set-aside areas be submitted to the local
49government; requiring that notice of certain changes be
50given to the state land planning agency, regional planning
51agency, and local government; revising the statutory
52exemptions from development-of-regional-impact review for
53certain facilities; removing waterport and marina
54developments from development-of-regional-impact review;
55providing statutory exemptions and partial statutory
56exemptions for the development of certain facilities;
57providing that the impacts from an exempt use that will be
58part of a larger project be included in the development-
59of-regional-impact review of the larger project; providing
60an exception; providing that vesting provisions relating
61to authorized developments of regional impact are not
62applicable to certain projects; revising provisions for
63the abandonment of developments of regional impact;
64providing an exemption from such provisions for certain
65developments of regional impact; providing requirements
66for developments following abandonment; amending s.
67380.0651, F.S.; revising the statewide guidelines and
68standards for development-of-regional-impact review of
69office developments; deleting such guidelines and
70standards for port facilities; revising such guidelines
71and standards for residential developments; providing such
72guidelines and standards for workforce housing; amending
73s. 380.07, F.S.; revising the appellate procedures for
74development orders within a development of regional impact
75to the Florida Land and Water Adjudicatory Commission;
76amending s. 380.115, F.S.; providing that a change in a
77development-of-regional-impact guideline and standard does
78not abridge or modify any vested right or duty under a
79development order; providing a process for the rescission
80of a development order by the local government in certain
81circumstances; providing an exemption for certain
82applications for development approval and notices of
83proposed changes; amending s. 403.813, F.S.; revising
84permitting exceptions for the construction of private
85docks in certain waterways; providing an effective date.
86
87Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
88
89     Section 1.  Subsection (11) of section 163.01, Florida
90Statutes, is amended to read:
91     163.01  Florida Interlocal Cooperation Act of 1969.--
92     (11)  Prior to its effectiveness, an interlocal agreement
93and subsequent amendments thereto shall be filed with the clerk
94of the circuit court of each county where a party to the
95agreement is located. However, if the parties to the agreement
96are located in multiple counties and the agreement under
97subsection (7) provides for a separate legal entity or
98administrative entity to administer the agreement, the
99interlocal agreement and any amendments thereto may be filed
100with the clerk of the circuit court in the county where the
101legal or administrative entity maintains its principal place of
102business.
103     Section 2.  Paragraph (g) of subsection (6) and paragraph
104(d) of subsection (11) of section 163.3177, Florida Statutes,
105are amended to read:
106     163.3177  Required and optional elements of comprehensive
107plan; studies and surveys.--
108     (6)  In addition to the requirements of subsections (1)-(5)
109and (12), the comprehensive plan shall include the following
110elements:
111     (g)1.  For those units of local government identified in s.
112380.24, a coastal management element, appropriately related to
113the particular requirements of paragraphs (d) and (e) and
114meeting the requirements of s. 163.3178(2) and (3). The coastal
115management element shall set forth the policies that shall guide
116the local government's decisions and program implementation with
117respect to the following objectives:
118     a.1.  Maintenance, restoration, and enhancement of the
119overall quality of the coastal zone environment, including, but
120not limited to, its amenities and aesthetic values.
121     b.2.  Continued existence of viable populations of all
122species of wildlife and marine life.
123     c.3.  The orderly and balanced utilization and
124preservation, consistent with sound conservation principles, of
125all living and nonliving coastal zone resources.
126     d.4.  Avoidance of irreversible and irretrievable loss of
127coastal zone resources.
128     e.5.  Ecological planning principles and assumptions to be
129used in the determination of suitability and extent of permitted
130development.
131     f.6.  Proposed management and regulatory techniques.
132     g.7.  Limitation of public expenditures that subsidize
133development in high-hazard coastal areas.
134     h.8.  Protection of human life against the effects of
135natural disasters.
136     i.9.  The orderly development, maintenance, and use of
137ports identified in s. 403.021(9) to facilitate deepwater
138commercial navigation and other related activities.
139     j.10.  Preservation, including sensitive adaptive use of
140historic and archaeological resources.
141     2.  As part of this element, a local government that has a
142coastal management element in its comprehensive plan is
143encouraged to adopt recreational surface water use policies that
144include applicable criteria for and consider such factors as
145natural resources, manatee protection needs, protection of
146working waterfronts and public access to the water, and
147recreation and economic demands. Criteria for manatee protection
148in the recreational surface water use policies should reflect
149applicable guidance outlined in the Boat Facility Siting Guide
150prepared by the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. If
151the local government elects to adopt recreational surface water
152use policies by comprehensive plan amendment, such comprehensive
153plan amendment is exempt from the provisions of s. 163.3187(1).
154Local governments that wish to adopt recreational surface water
155use policies may be eligible for assistance with the development
156of such policies through the Florida Coastal Management Program.
157The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government
158Accountability shall submit a report on the adoption of
159recreational surface water use policies under this subparagraph
160to the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
161Representatives, and the majority and minority leaders of the
162Senate and the House of Representatives no later than December
1631, 2010.
164     (11)
165     (d)1.  The department, in cooperation with the Department
166of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Department of
167Environmental Protection, water management districts, and
168regional planning councils, shall provide assistance to local
169governments in the implementation of this paragraph and rule 9J-
1705.006(5)(l), Florida Administrative Code. Implementation of
171those provisions shall include a process by which the department
172may authorize local governments to designate all or portions of
173lands classified in the future land use element as predominantly
174agricultural, rural, open, open-rural, or a substantively
175equivalent land use, as a rural land stewardship area within
176which planning and economic incentives are applied to encourage
177the implementation of innovative and flexible planning and
178development strategies and creative land use planning
179techniques, including those contained herein and in rule 9J-
1805.006(5)(l), Florida Administrative Code. Assistance may
181include, but is not limited to:
182     a.  Assistance from the Department of Environmental
183Protection and water management districts in creating the
184geographic information systems land cover database and aerial
185photogrammetry needed to prepare for a rural land stewardship
186area;
187     b.  Support for local government implementation of rural
188land stewardship concepts by providing information and
189assistance to local governments regarding land acquisition
190programs that may be used by the local government or landowners
191to leverage the protection of greater acreage and maximize the
192effectiveness of rural land stewardship areas; and
193     c.  Expansion of the role of the Department of Community
194Affairs as a resource agency to facilitate establishment of
195rural land stewardship areas in smaller rural counties that do
196not have the staff or planning budgets to create a rural land
197stewardship area.
198     2.  The department shall encourage participation by local
199governments of different sizes and rural characteristics in
200establishing and implementing rural land stewardship areas. It
201is the intent of the Legislature that rural land stewardship
202areas be used to further the following broad principles of rural
203sustainability: restoration and maintenance of the economic
204value of rural land; control of urban sprawl; identification and
205protection of ecosystems, habitats, and natural resources;
206promotion of rural economic activity; maintenance of the
207viability of Florida's agricultural economy; and protection of
208the character of rural areas of Florida. Rural land stewardship
209areas may be multicounty in order to encourage coordinated
210regional stewardship planning.
211     3.  A local government, in conjunction with a regional
212planning council, a stakeholder organization of private land
213owners, or another local government, shall notify the department
214in writing of its intent to designate a rural land stewardship
215area. The written notification shall describe the basis for the
216designation, including the extent to which the rural land
217stewardship area enhances rural land values, controls urban
218sprawl, provides necessary open space for agriculture and
219protection of the natural environment, promotes rural economic
220activity, and maintains rural character and the economic
221viability of agriculture.
222     4.  A rural land stewardship area shall be not less than
22310,000 acres and shall be located outside of municipalities and
224established urban growth boundaries, and shall be designated by
225plan amendment. The plan amendment designating a rural land
226stewardship area shall be subject to review by the Department of
227Community Affairs pursuant to s. 163.3184 and shall provide for
228the following:
229     a.  Criteria for the designation of receiving areas within
230rural land stewardship areas in which innovative planning and
231development strategies may be applied. Criteria shall at a
232minimum provide for the following: adequacy of suitable land to
233accommodate development so as to avoid conflict with
234environmentally sensitive areas, resources, and habitats;
235compatibility between and transition from higher density uses to
236lower intensity rural uses; the establishment of receiving area
237service boundaries which provide for a separation between
238receiving areas and other land uses within the rural land
239stewardship area through limitations on the extension of
240services; and connection of receiving areas with the rest of the
241rural land stewardship area using rural design and rural road
242corridors.
243     b.  Goals, objectives, and policies setting forth the
244innovative planning and development strategies to be applied
245within rural land stewardship areas pursuant to the provisions
246of this section.
247     c.  A process for the implementation of innovative planning
248and development strategies within the rural land stewardship
249area, including those described in this subsection and rule 9J-
2505.006(5)(l), Florida Administrative Code, which provide for a
251functional mix of land uses, including adequate available
252workforce housing, including low, very-low and moderate income
253housing for the development anticipated in the receiving area
254and which are applied through the adoption by the local
255government of zoning and land development regulations applicable
256to the rural land stewardship area.
257     d.  A process which encourages visioning pursuant to s.
258163.3167(11) to ensure that innovative planning and development
259strategies comply with the provisions of this section.
260     e.  The control of sprawl through the use of innovative
261strategies and creative land use techniques consistent with the
262provisions of this subsection and rule 9J-5.006(5)(l), Florida
263Administrative Code.
264     5.  A receiving area shall be designated by the adoption of
265a land development regulation. Prior to the designation of a
266receiving area, the local government shall provide the
267Department of Community Affairs a period of 30 days in which to
268review a proposed receiving area for consistency with the rural
269land stewardship area plan amendment and to provide comments to
270the local government. At the time of designation of a
271stewardship receiving area, a listed species survey will be
272performed. If listed species occur on the receiving area site,
273the developer shall coordinate with each appropriate local,
274state, or federal agency to determine if adequate provisions
275have been made to protect those species in accordance with
276applicable regulations. In determining the adequacy of
277provisions for the protection of listed species and their
278habitats, the rural land stewardship area shall be considered as
279a whole, and the impacts to areas to be developed as receiving
280areas shall be considered together with the environmental
281benefits of areas protected as sending areas in fulfilling this
282criteria.
283     6.  Upon the adoption of a plan amendment creating a rural
284land stewardship area, the local government shall, by ordinance,
285establish the methodology for the creation, conveyance, and use
286of transferable rural land use credits, otherwise referred to as
287stewardship credits, the application of which shall not
288constitute a right to develop land, nor increase density of
289land, except as provided by this section. The total amount of
290transferable rural land use credits within the rural land
291stewardship area must enable the realization of the long-term
292vision and goals for the 25-year or greater projected population
293of the rural land stewardship area, which may take into
294consideration the anticipated effect of the proposed receiving
295areas. Transferable rural land use credits are subject to the
296following limitations:
297     a.  Transferable rural land use credits may only exist
298within a rural land stewardship area.
299     b.  Transferable rural land use credits may only be used on
300lands designated as receiving areas and then solely for the
301purpose of implementing innovative planning and development
302strategies and creative land use planning techniques adopted by
303the local government pursuant to this section.
304     c.  Transferable rural land use credits assigned to a
305parcel of land within a rural land stewardship area shall cease
306to exist if the parcel of land is removed from the rural land
307stewardship area by plan amendment.
308     d.  Neither the creation of the rural land stewardship area
309by plan amendment nor the assignment of transferable rural land
310use credits by the local government shall operate to displace
311the underlying density of land uses assigned to a parcel of land
312within the rural land stewardship area; however, if transferable
313rural land use credits are transferred from a parcel for use
314within a designated receiving area, the underlying density
315assigned to the parcel of land shall cease to exist.
316     e.  The underlying density on each parcel of land located
317within a rural land stewardship area shall not be increased or
318decreased by the local government, except as a result of the
319conveyance or use of transferable rural land use credits, as
320long as the parcel remains within the rural land stewardship
321area.
322     f.  Transferable rural land use credits shall cease to
323exist on a parcel of land where the underlying density assigned
324to the parcel of land is utilized.
325     g.  An increase in the density of use on a parcel of land
326located within a designated receiving area may occur only
327through the assignment or use of transferable rural land use
328credits and shall not require a plan amendment.
329     h.  A change in the density of land use on parcels located
330within receiving areas shall be specified in a development order
331which reflects the total number of transferable rural land use
332credits assigned to the parcel of land and the infrastructure
333and support services necessary to provide for a functional mix
334of land uses corresponding to the plan of development.
335     i.  Land within a rural land stewardship area may be
336removed from the rural land stewardship area through a plan
337amendment.
338     j.  Transferable rural land use credits may be assigned at
339different ratios of credits per acre according to the natural
340resource or other beneficial use characteristics of the land and
341according to the land use remaining following the transfer of
342credits, with the highest number of credits per acre assigned to
343the most environmentally valuable land or, in locations where
344the retention of open space and agricultural land is a priority,
345to such lands.
346     k.  The use or conveyance of transferable rural land use
347credits must be recorded in the public records of the county in
348which the property is located as a covenant or restrictive
349easement running with the land in favor of the county and either
350the Department of Environmental Protection, Department of
351Agriculture and Consumer Services, a water management district,
352or a recognized statewide land trust.
353     7.  Owners of land within rural land stewardship areas
354should be provided incentives to enter into rural land
355stewardship agreements, pursuant to existing law and rules
356adopted thereto, with state agencies, water management
357districts, and local governments to achieve mutually agreed upon
358conservation objectives. Such incentives may include, but not be
359limited to, the following:
360     a.  Opportunity to accumulate transferable mitigation
361credits.
362     b.  Extended permit agreements.
363     c.  Opportunities for recreational leases and ecotourism.
364     d.  Payment for specified land management services on
365publicly owned land, or property under covenant or restricted
366easement in favor of a public entity.
367     e.  Option agreements for sale to public entities or
368private land conservation entities, in either fee or easement,
369upon achievement of conservation objectives.
370     8.  The department shall report to the Legislature on an
371annual basis on the results of implementation of rural land
372stewardship areas authorized by the department, including
373successes and failures in achieving the intent of the
374Legislature as expressed in this paragraph.
375     Section 3.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (12) of section
376163.3180, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
377     163.3180  Concurrency.--
378     (12)  When authorized by a local comprehensive plan, a
379multiuse development of regional impact may satisfy the
380transportation concurrency requirements of the local
381comprehensive plan, the local government's concurrency
382management system, and s. 380.06 by payment of a proportionate-
383share contribution for local and regionally significant traffic
384impacts, if:
385     (a)  The development of regional impact meets or exceeds
386the guidelines and standards of s. 380.0651(3)(h)(i) and rule
38728-24.032(2), Florida Administrative Code, and includes a
388residential component that contains at least 100 residential
389dwelling units or 15 percent of the applicable residential
390guideline and standard, whichever is greater;
391
392The proportionate-share contribution may be applied to any
393transportation facility to satisfy the provisions of this
394subsection and the local comprehensive plan, but, for the
395purposes of this subsection, the amount of the proportionate-
396share contribution shall be calculated based upon the cumulative
397number of trips from the proposed development expected to reach
398roadways during the peak hour from the complete buildout of a
399stage or phase being approved, divided by the change in the peak
400hour maximum service volume of roadways resulting from
401construction of an improvement necessary to maintain the adopted
402level of service, multiplied by the construction cost, at the
403time of developer payment, of the improvement necessary to
404maintain the adopted level of service. For purposes of this
405subsection, "construction cost" includes all associated costs of
406the improvement.
407     Section 4.  Subsection (3) of section 197.303, Florida
408Statutes, is amended to read:
409     197.303  Ad valorem tax deferral for recreational and
410commercial working waterfront properties.--
411     (3)  The ordinance shall designate the percentage or amount
412of the deferral and the type and location of working waterfront
413property, including the type of public lodging establishments,
414for which deferrals may be granted, which may include any
415property meeting the provisions of s. 342.07(2), which property
416may be further required to be located within a particular
417geographic area or areas of the county or municipality.
418     Section 5.  Section 336.68, Florida Statutes, is created to
419read:
420     336.68  Special road and bridge district boundaries;
421property owner rights and options.--
422     (1)  The owner of real property located within both the
423boundaries of a community development district created under
424chapter 190 and within the boundaries of a special road and
425bridge district created by the alternative method of
426establishing special road and bridge districts previously
427authorized under ss. 336.61-336.67 shall have the option to
428select the community development district to be the provider of
429the road and drainage improvements to the property of the owner.
430Having made the selection, the property owner shall further have
431the right to withdraw the property from the boundaries of the
432special road and bridge district under the procedures set forth
433in this section.
434     (2)  To be eligible for withdrawal, the subject property
435shall not have received improvements or benefits from the
436special road and bridge district; there shall be no outstanding
437bonded indebtedness of the special road and bridge district for
438which the property is subject to ad valorem tax levies; and the
439withdrawal of the property shall not create an enclave bounded
440on all sides by the other property within the boundaries of the
441district when the property owner withdraws the property from the
442boundaries of the district.
443     (3)  The election by a property owner to withdraw property
444from the boundaries of a district as described in this section
445shall be accomplished by filing a certificate in the official
446records of the county in which the property is located. The
447certificate shall identify the name and mailing address of the
448owner, the legal description of the property, the name of the
449district from which the property is being withdrawn, and the
450general location of the property within district. The
451certificate shall further state that the property has not
452received benefits from the district from which the property is
453to be withdrawn; that there is no bonded indebtedness owed by
454the district; and that the property being withdrawn will not
455become an enclave within the district boundaries.
456     (4)  The property owner shall provide copies of the
457recorded certificate to the governing body of the district from
458which the property is being withdrawn within days 10 days after
459the date that the certificate is recorded. If the district does
460not record an objection to the withdrawal of the property in the
461public records within 30 days after the recording of the
462certificate identifying the criteria in this section that has
463not been met, the withdrawal shall be final and the property
464shall be permanently withdrawn from the boundaries of the
465district.
466     Section 6.  Section 342.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to
467read:
468     342.07  Recreational and commercial working waterfronts;
469legislative findings; definitions.--
470     (1)  The Legislature recognizes that there is an important
471state interest in facilitating boating and other recreational
472access to the state's navigable waters. This access is vital to
473tourists and recreational users and the marine industry in the
474state, to maintaining or enhancing the $57 billion economic
475impact of tourism and the $14 billion economic impact of boating
476in the state annually, and to ensuring continued access to all
477residents and visitors to the navigable waters of the state. The
478Legislature recognizes that there is an important state interest
479in maintaining viable water-dependent support facilities, such
480as public lodging establishments and boat hauling and repairing
481and commercial fishing facilities, and in maintaining the
482availability of public access to the navigable waters of the
483state. The Legislature further recognizes that the waterways of
484the state are important for engaging in commerce and the
485transportation of goods and people upon such waterways and that
486such commerce and transportation is not feasible unless there is
487access to and from the navigable waters of the state through
488recreational and commercial working waterfronts.
489     (2)  As used in this section, the term "recreational and
490commercial working waterfront" means a parcel or parcels of real
491property that provide access for water-dependent commercial
492activities, including hotels and motels as defined in s.
493509.242(1), or provide access for the public to the navigable
494waters of the state. Recreational and commercial working
495waterfronts require direct access to or a location on, over, or
496adjacent to a navigable body of water. The term includes water-
497dependent facilities that are open to the public and offer
498public access by vessels to the waters of the state or that are
499support facilities for recreational, commercial, research, or
500governmental vessels. These facilities include public lodging
501establishments, docks, wharfs, lifts, wet and dry marinas, boat
502ramps, boat hauling and repair facilities, commercial fishing
503facilities, boat construction facilities, and other support
504structures over the water. As used in this section, the term
505"vessel" has the same meaning as in s. 327.02(37). Seaports are
506excluded from the definition.
507     Section 7.  Section 373.4132, Florida Statutes, is created
508to read:
509     373.4132  Dry storage facility permitting.--The governing
510board or the department shall require a permit under this part,
511including s. 373.4145, for the construction, alteration,
512operation, maintenance, abandonment, or removal of a dry storage
513facility for 10 or more vessels that is functionally associated
514with a boat launching area. As part of an applicant's
515demonstration that such a facility will not be harmful to the
516water resources and will not be inconsistent with the overall
517objectives of the district, the governing board or department
518shall require the applicant to provide reasonable assurance that
519the secondary impacts from the facility will not cause adverse
520impacts to the functions of wetlands and surface waters,
521including violations of state water quality standards applicable
522to waters as defined in s. 403.031(13), and will meet the public
523interest test of s. 373.414(1)(a), including the potential
524adverse impacts to manatees. Nothing in this section shall
525affect the authority of the governing board or the department to
526regulate such secondary impacts under this part for other
527regulated activities.
528     Section 8.  Paragraph (d) of subsection (2), paragraphs (a)
529and (i) of subsection (4), and subsections (15), (19), (24), and
530(26) of section 380.06, Florida Statutes, are amended, and
531subsection (28) is added to that section, to read:
532     380.06  Developments of regional impact.--
533     (2)  STATEWIDE GUIDELINES AND STANDARDS.--
534     (d)  The guidelines and standards shall be applied as
535follows:
536     1.  Fixed thresholds.--
537     a.  A development that is below 100 percent of all
538numerical thresholds in the guidelines and standards shall not
539be required to undergo development-of-regional-impact review.
540     b.  A development that is at or above 120 percent of any
541numerical threshold shall be required to undergo development-of-
542regional-impact review.
543     c.  Projects certified under s. 403.973 which create at
544least 100 jobs and meet the criteria of the Office of Tourism,
545Trade, and Economic Development as to their impact on an area's
546economy, employment, and prevailing wage and skill levels that
547are at or below 100 percent of the numerical thresholds for
548industrial plants, industrial parks, distribution, warehousing
549or wholesaling facilities, office development or multiuse
550projects other than residential, as described in s.
551380.0651(3)(c), (d), and (h)(i), are not required to undergo
552development-of-regional-impact review.
553     2.  Rebuttable presumption.--It shall be presumed that a
554development that is at 100 percent or between 100 and 120
555percent of a numerical threshold shall be required to undergo
556development-of-regional-impact review.
557     (4)  BINDING LETTER.--
558     (a)  If any developer is in doubt whether his or her
559proposed development must undergo development-of-regional-impact
560review under the guidelines and standards, whether his or her
561rights have vested pursuant to subsection (20), or whether a
562proposed substantial change to a development of regional impact
563concerning which rights had previously vested pursuant to
564subsection (20) would divest such rights, the developer may
565request a determination from the state land planning agency. The
566developer or the appropriate local government having
567jurisdiction may request that the state land planning agency
568determine whether the amount of development that remains to be
569built in an approved development of regional impact meets the
570criteria of subparagraph (15)(g)3.
571     (i)  In response to an inquiry from a developer or the
572appropriate local government having jurisdiction, the state land
573planning agency may issue an informal determination in the form
574of a clearance letter as to whether a development is required to
575undergo development-of-regional-impact review or whether the
576amount of development that remains to be built in an approved
577development of regional impact meets the criteria of
578subparagraph (15)(g)3. A clearance letter may be based solely on
579the information provided by the developer, and the state land
580planning agency is not required to conduct an investigation of
581that information. If any material information provided by the
582developer is incomplete or inaccurate, the clearance letter is
583not binding upon the state land planning agency. A clearance
584letter does not constitute final agency action.
585     (15)  LOCAL GOVERNMENT DEVELOPMENT ORDER.--
586     (a)  The appropriate local government shall render a
587decision on the application within 30 days after the hearing
588unless an extension is requested by the developer.
589     (b)  When possible, local governments shall issue
590development orders concurrently with any other local permits or
591development approvals that may be applicable to the proposed
592development.
593     (c)  The development order shall include findings of fact
594and conclusions of law consistent with subsections (13) and
595(14). The development order:
596     1.  Shall specify the monitoring procedures and the local
597official responsible for assuring compliance by the developer
598with the development order.
599     2.  Shall establish compliance dates for the development
600order, including a deadline for commencing physical development
601and for compliance with conditions of approval or phasing
602requirements, and shall include a buildout termination date that
603reasonably reflects the time anticipated required to complete
604the development.
605     3.  Shall establish a date until which the local government
606agrees that the approved development of regional impact shall
607not be subject to downzoning, unit density reduction, or
608intensity reduction, unless the local government can demonstrate
609that substantial changes in the conditions underlying the
610approval of the development order have occurred or the
611development order was based on substantially inaccurate
612information provided by the developer or that the change is
613clearly established by local government to be essential to the
614public health, safety, or welfare. The date established pursuant
615to this subparagraph shall be no sooner than the buildout date
616of the project.
617     4.  Shall specify the requirements for the biennial report
618designated under subsection (18), including the date of
619submission, parties to whom the report is submitted, and
620contents of the report, based upon the rules adopted by the
621state land planning agency. Such rules shall specify the scope
622of any additional local requirements that may be necessary for
623the report.
624     5.  May specify the types of changes to the development
625which shall require submission for a substantial deviation
626determination or a notice of proposed change under subsection
627(19).
628     6.  Shall include a legal description of the property.
629     (d)  Conditions of a development order that require a
630developer to contribute land for a public facility or construct,
631expand, or pay for land acquisition or construction or expansion
632of a public facility, or portion thereof, shall meet the
633following criteria:
634     1.  The need to construct new facilities or add to the
635present system of public facilities must be reasonably
636attributable to the proposed development.
637     2.  Any contribution of funds, land, or public facilities
638required from the developer shall be comparable to the amount of
639funds, land, or public facilities that the state or the local
640government would reasonably expect to expend or provide, based
641on projected costs of comparable projects, to mitigate the
642impacts reasonably attributable to the proposed development.
643     3.  Any funds or lands contributed must be expressly
644designated and used to mitigate impacts reasonably attributable
645to the proposed development.
646     4.  Construction or expansion of a public facility by a
647nongovernmental developer as a condition of a development order
648to mitigate the impacts reasonably attributable to the proposed
649development is not subject to competitive bidding or competitive
650negotiation for selection of a contractor or design professional
651for any part of the construction or design unless required by
652the local government that issues the development order.
653     (e)1.  Effective July 1, 1986, A local government shall not
654include, as a development order condition for a development of
655regional impact, any requirement that a developer contribute or
656pay for land acquisition or construction or expansion of public
657facilities or portions thereof unless the local government has
658enacted a local ordinance which requires other development not
659subject to this section to contribute its proportionate share of
660the funds, land, or public facilities necessary to accommodate
661any impacts having a rational nexus to the proposed development,
662and the need to construct new facilities or add to the present
663system of public facilities must be reasonably attributable to
664the proposed development.
665     2.  A local government shall not approve a development of
666regional impact that does not make adequate provision for the
667public facilities needed to accommodate the impacts of the
668proposed development unless the local government includes in the
669development order a commitment by the local government to
670provide these facilities consistently with the development
671schedule approved in the development order; however, a local
672government's failure to meet the requirements of subparagraph 1.
673and this subparagraph shall not preclude the issuance of a
674development order where adequate provision is made by the
675developer for the public facilities needed to accommodate the
676impacts of the proposed development. Any funds or lands
677contributed by a developer must be expressly designated and used
678to accommodate impacts reasonably attributable to the proposed
679development.
680     3.  The Department of Community Affairs and other state and
681regional agencies involved in the administration and
682implementation of this act shall cooperate and work with units
683of local government in preparing and adopting local impact fee
684and other contribution ordinances.
685     (f)  Notice of the adoption of a development order or the
686subsequent amendments to an adopted development order shall be
687recorded by the developer, in accordance with s. 28.222, with
688the clerk of the circuit court for each county in which the
689development is located. The notice shall include a legal
690description of the property covered by the order and shall state
691which unit of local government adopted the development order,
692the date of adoption, the date of adoption of any amendments to
693the development order, the location where the adopted order with
694any amendments may be examined, and that the development order
695constitutes a land development regulation applicable to the
696property. The recording of this notice shall not constitute a
697lien, cloud, or encumbrance on real property, or actual or
698constructive notice of any such lien, cloud, or encumbrance.
699This paragraph applies only to developments initially approved
700under this section after July 1, 1980.
701     (g)  A local government shall not issue permits for
702development subsequent to the buildout termination date or
703expiration date contained in the development order unless:
704     1.  The proposed development has been evaluated
705cumulatively with existing development under the substantial
706deviation provisions of subsection (19) subsequent to the
707termination or expiration date;
708     2.  The proposed development is consistent with an
709abandonment of development order that has been issued in
710accordance with the provisions of subsection (26); or
711     3.  The development of regional impact is essentially built
712out, in that all the mitigation requirements in the development
713order have been satisfied, all developers are in compliance with
714all applicable terms and conditions of the development order
715except the buildout date, and the amount of proposed development
716that remains to be built is less than 20 percent of any
717applicable development-of-regional-impact threshold; or
718     4.3.  The project has been determined to be an essentially
719built-out development of regional impact through an agreement
720executed by the developer, the state land planning agency, and
721the local government, in accordance with s. 380.032, which will
722establish the terms and conditions under which the development
723may be continued. If the project is determined to be essentially
724built out built-out, development may proceed pursuant to the s.
725380.032 agreement after the termination or expiration date
726contained in the development order without further development-
727of-regional-impact review subject to the local government
728comprehensive plan and land development regulations or subject
729to a modified development-of-regional-impact analysis. As used
730in this paragraph, an "essentially built-out" development of
731regional impact means:
732     a.  The developers are development is in compliance with
733all applicable terms and conditions of the development order
734except the buildout built-out date; and
735     b.(I)  The amount of development that remains to be built
736is less than the substantial deviation threshold specified in
737paragraph (19)(b) for each individual land use category, or, for
738a multiuse development, the sum total of all unbuilt land uses
739as a percentage of the applicable substantial deviation
740threshold is equal to or less than 100 percent; or
741     (II)  The state land planning agency and the local
742government have agreed in writing that the amount of development
743to be built does not create the likelihood of any additional
744regional impact not previously reviewed.
745
746The single-family residential portions of a development may be
747considered "essentially built out" if all of the workforce
748housing obligations and all of the infrastructure and horizontal
749development have been completed, at least 50 percent of the
750dwelling units have been completed, and more than 80 percent of
751the lots have been conveyed to third-party individual lot owners
752or to individual builders who own no more than 40 lots at the
753time of the determination. The mobile home park portions of a
754development may be considered "essentially built out" if all the
755infrastructure and horizontal development has been completed,
756and at least 50 percent of the lots are leased to individual
757mobile home owners.
758     (h)  If the property is annexed by another local
759jurisdiction, the annexing jurisdiction shall adopt a new
760development order that incorporates all previous rights and
761obligations specified in the prior development order.
762     (19)  SUBSTANTIAL DEVIATIONS.--
763     (a)  Any proposed change to a previously approved
764development which creates a reasonable likelihood of additional
765regional impact, or any type of regional impact created by the
766change not previously reviewed by the regional planning agency,
767shall constitute a substantial deviation and shall cause the
768proposed change development to be subject to further
769development-of-regional-impact review. There are a variety of
770reasons why a developer may wish to propose changes to an
771approved development of regional impact, including changed
772market conditions. The procedures set forth in this subsection
773are for that purpose.
774     (b)  Any proposed change to a previously approved
775development of regional impact or development order condition
776which, either individually or cumulatively with other changes,
777exceeds any of the following criteria shall constitute a
778substantial deviation and shall cause the development to be
779subject to further development-of-regional-impact review without
780the necessity for a finding of same by the local government:
781     1.  An increase in the number of parking spaces at an
782attraction or recreational facility by 10 5 percent or 330 300
783spaces, whichever is greater, or an increase in the number of
784spectators that may be accommodated at such a facility by 10 5
785percent or 1,100 1,000 spectators, whichever is greater.
786     2.  A new runway, a new terminal facility, a 25-percent
787lengthening of an existing runway, or a 25-percent increase in
788the number of gates of an existing terminal, but only if the
789increase adds at least three additional gates.
790     3.  An increase in the number of hospital beds by 5 percent
791or 60 beds, whichever is greater.
792     3.4.  An increase in industrial development area by 10 5
793percent or 35 32 acres, whichever is greater.
794     4.5.  An increase in the average annual acreage mined by 10
7955 percent or 11 10 acres, whichever is greater, or an increase
796in the average daily water consumption by a mining operation by
79710 5 percent or 330,000 300,000 gallons, whichever is greater. A
798net An increase in the size of the mine by 10 5 percent or 825
799750 acres, whichever is less. For purposes of calculating any
800net increases in size, only additions and deletions of lands
801that have not been mined shall be considered. An increase in the
802size of a heavy mineral mine as defined in s. 378.403(7) will
803only constitute a substantial deviation if the average annual
804acreage mined is more than 550 500 acres and consumes more than
8053.3 3 million gallons of water per day.
806     5.6.  An increase in land area for office development by 10
8075 percent or an increase of gross floor area of office
808development by 10 5 percent or 66,000 60,000 gross square feet,
809whichever is greater.
810     7.  An increase in the storage capacity for chemical or
811petroleum storage facilities by 5 percent, 20,000 barrels, or 7
812million pounds, whichever is greater.
813     8.  An increase of development at a waterport of wet
814storage for 20 watercraft, dry storage for 30 watercraft, or
815wet/dry storage for 60 watercraft in an area identified in the
816state marina siting plan as an appropriate site for additional
817waterport development or a 5-percent increase in watercraft
818storage capacity, whichever is greater.
819     6.9.  An increase in the number of dwelling units by 10 5
820percent or 55 50 dwelling units, whichever is greater.
821     7.  An increase in the number of dwelling units by 50
822percent or 200 units, whichever is greater, provided that 15
823percent of the proposed additional dwelling units are dedicated
824to affordable workforce housing, subject to a recorded land use
825restriction that shall be for a period of not less than 20 years
826and that includes resale provisions to ensure long-term
827affordability for income-eligible homeowners and renters and
828provisions for the workforce housing to be commenced prior to
829the completion of 50 percent of the market rate dwelling. For
830purposes of this subparagraph, the term "affordable workforce
831housing" means housing that is affordable to a person who earns
832less than 120 percent of the area median income, or less than
833140 percent of the area median income if located in a county in
834which the median purchase price for a single-family existing
835home exceeds the statewide median purchase price of a single-
836family existing home. For purposes of this subparagraph, the
837term "statewide median purchase price of a single-family
838existing home" means the statewide purchase price as determined
839in the Florida Sales Report, Single-Family Existing Homes,
840released each January by the Florida Association of Realtors and
841the University of Florida Real Estate Research Center.
842     8.10.  An increase in commercial development by 55,000
84350,000 square feet of gross floor area or of parking spaces
844provided for customers for 330 300 cars or a 10-percent 5-
845percent increase of either of these, whichever is greater.
846     9.11.  An increase in hotel or motel rooms facility units
847by 10 5 percent or 83 rooms 75 units, whichever is greater.
848     10.12.  An increase in a recreational vehicle park area by
84910 5 percent or 110 100 vehicle spaces, whichever is less.
850     11.13.  A decrease in the area set aside for open space of
8515 percent or 20 acres, whichever is less.
852     12.14.  A proposed increase to an approved multiuse
853development of regional impact where the sum of the increases of
854each land use as a percentage of the applicable substantial
855deviation criteria is equal to or exceeds 110 100 percent. The
856percentage of any decrease in the amount of open space shall be
857treated as an increase for purposes of determining when 110 100
858percent has been reached or exceeded.
859     13.15.  A 15-percent increase in the number of external
860vehicle trips generated by the development above that which was
861projected during the original development-of-regional-impact
862review.
863     14.16.  Any change which would result in development of any
864area which was specifically set aside in the application for
865development approval or in the development order for
866preservation or special protection of endangered or threatened
867plants or animals designated as endangered, threatened, or
868species of special concern and their habitat, any species
869protected by 16 U.S.C. s. 668a-668d, primary dunes, or
870archaeological and historical sites designated as significant by
871the Division of Historical Resources of the Department of State.
872The further refinement of the boundaries and configuration of
873such areas by survey shall be considered under sub-subparagraph
874(e)2.j. (e)5.b.
875
876The substantial deviation numerical standards in subparagraphs
8773., 5., 8., 9., and 12. 4., 6., 10., 14., excluding residential
878uses, and in subparagraph 13. 15., are increased by 100 percent
879for a project certified under s. 403.973 which creates jobs and
880meets criteria established by the Office of Tourism, Trade, and
881Economic Development as to its impact on an area's economy,
882employment, and prevailing wage and skill levels. The
883substantial deviation numerical standards in subparagraphs 3.,
8845., 6., 7., 8., 9., 12., and 13. 4., 6., 9., 10., 11., and 14.
885are increased by 50 percent for a project located wholly within
886an urban infill and redevelopment area designated on the
887applicable adopted local comprehensive plan future land use map
888and not located within the coastal high hazard area.
889     (c)  An extension of the date of buildout of a development,
890or any phase thereof, by more than 7 or more years shall be
891presumed to create a substantial deviation subject to further
892development-of-regional-impact review. An extension of the date
893of buildout, or any phase thereof, of more than 5 years or more
894but not more less than 7 years shall be presumed not to create a
895substantial deviation. The extension of the date of buildout of
896an areawide development of regional impact by more than 5 years
897but less than 10 years is presumed not to create a substantial
898deviation. These presumptions may be rebutted by clear and
899convincing evidence at the public hearing held by the local
900government. An extension of 5 years or less than 5 years is not
901a substantial deviation. For the purpose of calculating when a
902buildout or, phase, or termination date has been exceeded, the
903time shall be tolled during the pendency of administrative or
904judicial proceedings relating to development permits. Any
905extension of the buildout date of a project or a phase thereof
906shall automatically extend the commencement date of the project,
907the termination date of the development order, the expiration
908date of the development of regional impact, and the phases
909thereof if applicable by a like period of time.
910     (d)  A change in the plan of development of an approved
911development of regional impact resulting from requirements
912imposed by the Department of Environmental Protection or any
913water management district created by s. 373.069 or any of their
914successor agencies or by any appropriate federal regulatory
915agency shall be submitted to the local government pursuant to
916this subsection. The change shall be presumed not to create a
917substantial deviation subject to further development-of-
918regional-impact review. The presumption may be rebutted by clear
919and convincing evidence at the public hearing held by the local
920government.
921     (e)1.  Except for a development order rendered pursuant to
922subsection (22) or subsection (25), a proposed change to a
923development order that individually or cumulatively with any
924previous change is less than any numerical criterion contained
925in subparagraphs (b)1.-13. (b)1.-15. and does not exceed any
926other criterion, or that involves an extension of the buildout
927date of a development, or any phase thereof, of less than 5
928years is not subject to the public hearing requirements of
929subparagraph (f)3., and is not subject to a determination
930pursuant to subparagraph (f)5. Notice of the proposed change
931shall be made to the regional planning council and the state
932land planning agency. Such notice shall include a description of
933previous individual changes made to the development, including
934changes previously approved by the local government, and shall
935include appropriate amendments to the development order.
936     2.  The following changes, individually or cumulatively
937with any previous changes, are not substantial deviations:
938     a.  Changes in the name of the project, developer, owner,
939or monitoring official.
940     b.  Changes to a setback that do not affect noise buffers,
941environmental protection or mitigation areas, or archaeological
942or historical resources.
943     c.  Changes to minimum lot sizes.
944     d.  Changes in the configuration of internal roads that do
945not affect external access points.
946     e.  Changes to the building design or orientation that stay
947approximately within the approved area designated for such
948building and parking lot, and which do not affect historical
949buildings designated as significant by the Division of
950Historical Resources of the Department of State.
951     f.  Changes to increase the acreage in the development,
952provided that no development is proposed on the acreage to be
953added.
954     g.  Changes to eliminate an approved land use, provided
955that there are no additional regional impacts.
956     h.  Changes required to conform to permits approved by any
957federal, state, or regional permitting agency, provided that
958these changes do not create additional regional impacts.
959     i.  Any renovation or redevelopment of development within a
960previously approved development of regional impact which does
961not change land use or increase density or intensity of use.
962     j.  Changes that modify boundaries and configuration of
963areas described in subparagraph (b)14. due to science-based
964refinement of such areas by survey, by habitat evaluation, by
965other recognized assessment methodology, or by an environmental
966assessment. In order for changes to qualify under this sub-
967subparagraph, the survey, habitat evaluation, or assessment must
968occur prior to the time a conservation easement protecting such
969lands is recorded and must not result in any net decrease in the
970total acreage of the lands specifically set aside for permanent
971preservation in the final development order.
972     k.j.  Any other change which the state land planning
973agency, in consultation with the regional planning council,
974agrees in writing is similar in nature, impact, or character to
975the changes enumerated in sub-subparagraphs a.-j. a.-i. and
976which does not create the likelihood of any additional regional
977impact.
978
979This subsection does not require the filing of a notice of
980proposed change but shall require an application to the local
981government to amend the development order in accordance with the
982local government's procedures for amendment of a development
983order. In accordance with the local government's procedures,
984including requirements for notice to the applicant and the
985public, the local government shall either deny the application
986for amendment or adopt an amendment to the development order
987which approves the application with or without conditions.
988Following adoption, the local government shall render to the
989state land planning agency the amendment to the development
990order. The state land planning agency may appeal, pursuant to s.
991380.07(3), the amendment to the development order if the
992amendment involves sub-subparagraph g., sub-subparagraph h.,
993sub-subparagraph j., or sub-subparagraph k. and it believes the
994change creates a reasonable likelihood of new or additional
995regional impacts a development order amendment for any change
996listed in sub-subparagraphs a.-j. unless such issue is addressed
997either in the existing development order or in the application
998for development approval, but, in the case of the application,
999only if, and in the manner in which, the application is
1000incorporated in the development order.
1001     3.  Except for the change authorized by sub-subparagraph
10022.f., any addition of land not previously reviewed or any change
1003not specified in paragraph (b) or paragraph (c) shall be
1004presumed to create a substantial deviation. This presumption may
1005be rebutted by clear and convincing evidence.
1006     4.  Any submittal of a proposed change to a previously
1007approved development shall include a description of individual
1008changes previously made to the development, including changes
1009previously approved by the local government. The local
1010government shall consider the previous and current proposed
1011changes in deciding whether such changes cumulatively constitute
1012a substantial deviation requiring further development-of-
1013regional-impact review.
1014     5.  The following changes to an approved development of
1015regional impact shall be presumed to create a substantial
1016deviation. Such presumption may be rebutted by clear and
1017convincing evidence.
1018     a.  A change proposed for 15 percent or more of the acreage
1019to a land use not previously approved in the development order.
1020Changes of less than 15 percent shall be presumed not to create
1021a substantial deviation.
1022     b.  Except for the types of uses listed in subparagraph
1023(b)16., any change which would result in the development of any
1024area which was specifically set aside in the application for
1025development approval or in the development order for
1026preservation, buffers, or special protection, including habitat
1027for plant and animal species, archaeological and historical
1028sites, dunes, and other special areas.
1029     b.c.  Notwithstanding any provision of paragraph (b) to the
1030contrary, a proposed change consisting of simultaneous increases
1031and decreases of at least two of the uses within an authorized
1032multiuse development of regional impact which was originally
1033approved with three or more uses specified in s. 380.0651(3)(c),
1034(d), (e)(f), and (f)(g) and residential use.
1035     (f)1.  The state land planning agency shall establish by
1036rule standard forms for submittal of proposed changes to a
1037previously approved development of regional impact which may
1038require further development-of-regional-impact review. At a
1039minimum, the standard form shall require the developer to
1040provide the precise language that the developer proposes to
1041delete or add as an amendment to the development order.
1042     2.  The developer shall submit, simultaneously, to the
1043local government, the regional planning agency, and the state
1044land planning agency the request for approval of a proposed
1045change.
1046     3.  No sooner than 30 days but no later than 45 days after
1047submittal by the developer to the local government, the state
1048land planning agency, and the appropriate regional planning
1049agency, the local government shall give 15 days' notice and
1050schedule a public hearing to consider the change that the
1051developer asserts does not create a substantial deviation. This
1052public hearing shall be held within 60 90 days after submittal
1053of the proposed changes, unless that time is extended by the
1054developer.
1055     4.  The appropriate regional planning agency or the state
1056land planning agency shall review the proposed change and, no
1057later than 45 days after submittal by the developer of the
1058proposed change, unless that time is extended by the developer,
1059and prior to the public hearing at which the proposed change is
1060to be considered, shall advise the local government in writing
1061whether it objects to the proposed change, shall specify the
1062reasons for its objection, if any, and shall provide a copy to
1063the developer.
1064     5.  At the public hearing, the local government shall
1065determine whether the proposed change requires further
1066development-of-regional-impact review. The provisions of
1067paragraphs (a) and (e), the thresholds set forth in paragraph
1068(b), and the presumptions set forth in paragraphs (c) and (d)
1069and subparagraph (e)3. shall be applicable in determining
1070whether further development-of-regional-impact review is
1071required.
1072     6.  If the local government determines that the proposed
1073change does not require further development-of-regional-impact
1074review and is otherwise approved, or if the proposed change is
1075not subject to a hearing and determination pursuant to
1076subparagraphs 3. and 5. and is otherwise approved, the local
1077government shall issue an amendment to the development order
1078incorporating the approved change and conditions of approval
1079relating to the change. The requirement that a change be
1080otherwise approved shall not be construed to require additional
1081local review or approval if the change is allowed by applicable
1082local ordinances without further local review or approval. The
1083decision of the local government to approve, with or without
1084conditions, or to deny the proposed change that the developer
1085asserts does not require further review shall be subject to the
1086appeal provisions of s. 380.07. However, the state land planning
1087agency may not appeal the local government decision if it did
1088not comply with subparagraph 4. The state land planning agency
1089may not appeal a change to a development order made pursuant to
1090subparagraph (e)1. or subparagraph (e)2. for developments of
1091regional impact approved after January 1, 1980, unless the
1092change would result in a significant impact to a regionally
1093significant archaeological, historical, or natural resource not
1094previously identified in the original development-of-regional-
1095impact review.
1096     (g)  If a proposed change requires further development-of-
1097regional-impact review pursuant to this section, the review
1098shall be conducted subject to the following additional
1099conditions:
1100     1.  The development-of-regional-impact review conducted by
1101the appropriate regional planning agency shall address only
1102those issues raised by the proposed change except as provided in
1103subparagraph 2.
1104     2.  The regional planning agency shall consider, and the
1105local government shall determine whether to approve, approve
1106with conditions, or deny the proposed change as it relates to
1107the entire development. If the local government determines that
1108the proposed change, as it relates to the entire development, is
1109unacceptable, the local government shall deny the change.
1110     3.  If the local government determines that the proposed
1111change, as it relates to the entire development, should be
1112approved, any new conditions in the amendment to the development
1113order issued by the local government shall address only those
1114issues raised by the proposed change and require mitigation only
1115for the individual and cumulative impacts of the proposed
1116change.
1117     4.  Development within the previously approved development
1118of regional impact may continue, as approved, during the
1119development-of-regional-impact review in those portions of the
1120development which are not directly affected by the proposed
1121change.
1122     (h)  When further development-of-regional-impact review is
1123required because a substantial deviation has been determined or
1124admitted by the developer, the amendment to the development
1125order issued by the local government shall be consistent with
1126the requirements of subsection (15) and shall be subject to the
1127hearing and appeal provisions of s. 380.07. The state land
1128planning agency or the appropriate regional planning agency need
1129not participate at the local hearing in order to appeal a local
1130government development order issued pursuant to this paragraph.
1131     (i)  An increase in the number of residential dwelling
1132units shall not constitute a substantial deviation and shall not
1133be subject to development-of-regional-impact review for
1134additional impacts provided that all the residential dwelling
1135units are dedicated to affordable workforce housing and the
1136total number of new residential units does not exceed 200
1137percent of the substantial deviation threshold. The affordable
1138workforce housing shall be subject to a recorded land use
1139restriction that shall be for a period of not less than 20 years
1140and that includes resale provisions to ensure long-term
1141affordability for income-eligible homeowners and renters. For
1142purposes of this paragraph, the term "affordable workforce
1143housing" means housing that is affordable to a person who earns
1144less than 120 percent of the area median income, or less than
1145140 percent of the area median income if located in a county in
1146which the median purchase price for a single-family existing
1147home exceeds the statewide median purchase price of a single-
1148family existing home. For purposes of this paragraph, the term
1149"statewide median purchase price of a single-family existing
1150home" means the statewide purchase price as determined in the
1151Florida Sales Report, Single-Family Existing Homes, released
1152each January by the Florida Association of Realtors and the
1153University of Florida Real Estate Research Center.
1154     (24)  STATUTORY EXEMPTIONS.--
1155     (a)  Any proposed hospital which has a designed capacity of
1156not more than 100 beds is exempt from the provisions of this
1157section.
1158     (b)  Any proposed electrical transmission line or
1159electrical power plant is exempt from the provisions of this
1160section, except any steam or solar electrical generating
1161facility of less than 50 megawatts in capacity attached to a
1162development of regional impact.
1163     (c)  Any proposed addition to an existing sports facility
1164complex is exempt from the provisions of this section if the
1165addition meets the following characteristics:
1166     1.  It would not operate concurrently with the scheduled
1167hours of operation of the existing facility.
1168     2.  Its seating capacity would be no more than 75 percent
1169of the capacity of the existing facility.
1170     3.  The sports facility complex property is owned by a
1171public body prior to July 1, 1983.
1172
1173This exemption does not apply to any pari-mutuel facility.
1174     (d)  Any proposed addition or cumulative additions
1175subsequent to July 1, 1988, to an existing sports facility
1176complex owned by a state university is exempt if the increased
1177seating capacity of the complex is no more than 30 percent of
1178the capacity of the existing facility.
1179     (e)  Any addition of permanent seats or parking spaces for
1180an existing sports facility located on property owned by a
1181public body prior to July 1, 1973, is exempt from the provisions
1182of this section if future additions do not expand existing
1183permanent seating or parking capacity more than 15 percent
1184annually in excess of the prior year's capacity.
1185     (f)  Any increase in the seating capacity of an existing
1186sports facility having a permanent seating capacity of at least
118750,000 spectators is exempt from the provisions of this section,
1188provided that such an increase does not increase permanent
1189seating capacity by more than 5 percent per year and not to
1190exceed a total of 10 percent in any 5-year period, and provided
1191that the sports facility notifies the appropriate local
1192government within which the facility is located of the increase
1193at least 6 months prior to the initial use of the increased
1194seating, in order to permit the appropriate local government to
1195develop a traffic management plan for the traffic generated by
1196the increase. Any traffic management plan shall be consistent
1197with the local comprehensive plan, the regional policy plan, and
1198the state comprehensive plan.
1199     (g)  Any expansion in the permanent seating capacity or
1200additional improved parking facilities of an existing sports
1201facility is exempt from the provisions of this section, if the
1202following conditions exist:
1203     1.a.  The sports facility had a permanent seating capacity
1204on January 1, 1991, of at least 41,000 spectator seats;
1205     b.  The sum of such expansions in permanent seating
1206capacity does not exceed a total of 10 percent in any 5-year
1207period and does not exceed a cumulative total of 20 percent for
1208any such expansions; or
1209     c.  The increase in additional improved parking facilities
1210is a one-time addition and does not exceed 3,500 parking spaces
1211serving the sports facility; and
1212     2.  The local government having jurisdiction of the sports
1213facility includes in the development order or development permit
1214approving such expansion under this paragraph a finding of fact
1215that the proposed expansion is consistent with the
1216transportation, water, sewer and stormwater drainage provisions
1217of the approved local comprehensive plan and local land
1218development regulations relating to those provisions.
1219
1220Any owner or developer who intends to rely on this statutory
1221exemption shall provide to the department a copy of the local
1222government application for a development permit. Within 45 days
1223of receipt of the application, the department shall render to
1224the local government an advisory and nonbinding opinion, in
1225writing, stating whether, in the department's opinion, the
1226prescribed conditions exist for an exemption under this
1227paragraph. The local government shall render the development
1228order approving each such expansion to the department. The
1229owner, developer, or department may appeal the local government
1230development order pursuant to s. 380.07, within 45 days after
1231the order is rendered. The scope of review shall be limited to
1232the determination of whether the conditions prescribed in this
1233paragraph exist. If any sports facility expansion undergoes
1234development of regional impact review, all previous expansions
1235which were exempt under this paragraph shall be included in the
1236development of regional impact review.
1237     (h)  Expansion to port harbors, spoil disposal sites,
1238navigation channels, turning basins, harbor berths, and other
1239related inwater harbor facilities of ports listed in s.
1240403.021(9)(b), port transportation facilities and projects
1241listed in s. 311.07(3)(b), and intermodal transportation
1242facilities identified pursuant to s. 311.09(3) are exempt from
1243the provisions of this section when such expansions, projects,
1244or facilities are consistent with comprehensive master plans
1245that are in compliance with the provisions of s. 163.3178.
1246     (i)  Any proposed facility for the storage of any petroleum
1247product or any expansion of an existing facility is exempt from
1248the provisions of this section, if the facility is consistent
1249with a local comprehensive plan that is in compliance with s.
1250163.3177 or is consistent with a comprehensive port master plan
1251that is in compliance with s. 163.3178.
1252     (j)  Any renovation or redevelopment within the same land
1253parcel which does not change land use or increase density or
1254intensity of use.
1255     (k)1.  Waterport and marina development, including dry
1256storage facilities, are exempt from the provisions of this
1257section Any waterport or marina development is exempt from the
1258provisions of this section if the relevant county or
1259municipality has adopted a boating facility siting plan or
1260policy which includes applicable criteria, considering such
1261factors as natural resources, manatee protection needs and
1262recreation and economic demands as generally outlined in the
1263Bureau of Protected Species Management Boat Facility Siting
1264Guide, dated August 2000, into the coastal management or land
1265use element of its comprehensive plan. The adoption of boating
1266facility siting plans or policies into the comprehensive plan is
1267exempt from the provisions of s. 163.3187(1). Any waterport or
1268marina development within the municipalities or counties with
1269boating facility siting plans or policies that meet the above
1270criteria, adopted prior to April 1, 2002, are exempt from the
1271provisions of this section, when their boating facility siting
1272plan or policy is adopted as part of the relevant local
1273government's comprehensive plan.
1274     2.  Within 6 months of the effective date of this law, The
1275Department of Community Affairs, in conjunction with the
1276Department of Environmental Protection and the Florida Fish and
1277Wildlife Conservation Commission, shall provide technical
1278assistance and guidelines, including model plans, policies and
1279criteria to local governments for the development of their
1280siting plans.
1281     (l)  Any proposed development within an urban service
1282boundary established under s. 163.3177(14) is exempt from the
1283provisions of this section if the local government having
1284jurisdiction over the area where the development is proposed has
1285adopted the urban service boundary, and has entered into a
1286binding agreement with adjacent jurisdictions that would be
1287impacted and with the Department of Transportation regarding the
1288mitigation of impacts on state and regional transportation
1289facilities, and has adopted a proportionate share methodology
1290pursuant to s. 163.3180(16).
1291     (m)  Any proposed development within a rural land
1292stewardship area created under s. 163.3177(11)(d) is exempt from
1293the provisions of this section if the local government that has
1294adopted the rural land stewardship area has entered into a
1295binding agreement with jurisdictions that would be impacted and
1296the Department of Transportation regarding the mitigation of
1297impacts on state and regional transportation facilities, and has
1298adopted a proportionate share methodology pursuant to s.
1299163.3180(16).
1300     (n)  Any proposed development or redevelopment within an
1301area designated as an urban infill and redevelopment area under
1302s. 163.2517 is exempt from the provisions of this section if the
1303local government has entered into a binding agreement with
1304jurisdictions that would be impacted and the Department of
1305Transportation regarding the mitigation of impacts on state and
1306regional transportation facilities, and has adopted a
1307proportionate share methodology pursuant to s. 163.3180(16).
1308     (o)  The establishment, relocation, or expansion of any
1309military installation as defined in s. 163.3175, is exempt from
1310this section.
1311     (p)  Any self-storage warehousing that does not allow
1312retail or other services is exempt from this section.
1313     (q)  Any proposed nursing home or assisted living facility
1314is exempt from this section.
1315     (r)  Any development identified in an airport master plan
1316and adopted into the comprehensive plan pursuant to s.
1317163.3177(6)(k) is exempt from this section.
1318     (s)  Any development identified in a campus master plan and
1319adopted pursuant to s. 1013.30 is exempt from this section.
1320     (t)  Any development in a specific area plan which is
1321prepared pursuant to s. 163.3245 and adopted into the
1322comprehensive plan is exempt from this section.
1323     (u)  Any development within a county with a research and
1324education authority created by special act and is also within a
1325research and development park that is operated or managed by a
1326research and development authority pursuant to part V of chapter
1327159 is exempt from this section.
1328
1329If a use is exempt from review as a development of regional
1330impact under paragraphs (a)-(t), except for paragraph (u), but
1331will be part of a larger project that is subject to review as a
1332development of regional impact, the impact of the exempt use
1333must be included in the review of the larger project.
1334     (26)  ABANDONMENT OF DEVELOPMENTS OF REGIONAL IMPACT.--
1335     (a)  There is hereby established a process to abandon a
1336development of regional impact and its associated development
1337orders. A development of regional impact and its associated
1338development orders may be proposed to be abandoned by the owner
1339or developer. The local government in which the development of
1340regional impact is located also may propose to abandon the
1341development of regional impact, provided that the local
1342government gives individual written notice to each development-
1343of-regional-impact owner and developer of record, and provided
1344that no such owner or developer objects in writing to the local
1345government prior to or at the public hearing pertaining to
1346abandonment of the development of regional impact. The state
1347land planning agency is authorized to promulgate rules that
1348shall include, but not be limited to, criteria for determining
1349whether to grant, grant with conditions, or deny a proposal to
1350abandon, and provisions to ensure that the developer satisfies
1351all applicable conditions of the development order and
1352adequately mitigates for the impacts of the development. If
1353there is no existing development within the development of
1354regional impact at the time of abandonment and no development
1355within the development of regional impact is proposed by the
1356owner or developer after such abandonment, an abandonment order
1357shall not require the owner or developer to contribute any land,
1358funds, or public facilities as a condition of such abandonment
1359order. The rules shall also provide a procedure for filing
1360notice of the abandonment pursuant to s. 28.222 with the clerk
1361of the circuit court for each county in which the development of
1362regional impact is located. Any decision by a local government
1363concerning the abandonment of a development of regional impact
1364shall be subject to an appeal pursuant to s. 380.07. The issues
1365in any such appeal shall be confined to whether the provisions
1366of this subsection or any rules promulgated thereunder have been
1367satisfied.
1368     (b)  Upon receipt of written confirmation from the state
1369land planning agency that any required mitigation applicable to
1370completed development has occurred, an industrial development of
1371regional impact located within the coastal high-hazard area of a
1372rural county of economic concern which was approved prior to the
1373adoption of the local government's comprehensive plan required
1374under s. 163.3167 and which plan's future land use map and
1375zoning designates the land use for the development of regional
1376impact as commercial may be unilaterally abandoned without the
1377need to proceed through the process described in paragraph (a)
1378if the developer or owner provides a notice of abandonment to
1379the local government and records such notice with the applicable
1380clerk of court. Abandonment shall be deemed to have occurred
1381upon the recording of the notice. All development following
1382abandonment shall be fully consistent with the current
1383comprehensive plan and applicable zoning.
1384     (28)  PARTIAL STATUTORY EXEMPTIONS.--
1385     (a)  If the binding agreement referenced under paragraph
1386(24)(l) for urban service boundaries is not entered into within
138712 months after establishment of the urban service boundary, the
1388development-of-regional-impact review for projects within the
1389urban service boundary must address transportation impacts only.
1390     (b)  If the binding agreement referenced under paragraph
1391(24)(m) for rural land stewardship areas is not entered into
1392within 12 months after the designation of a rural land
1393stewardship area, the development-of-regional-impact review for
1394projects within the rural land stewardship area must address
1395transportation impacts only.
1396     (c)  If the binding agreement referenced under paragraph
1397(24)(n) for designated urban infill and redevelopment areas is
1398not entered into within 12 months after the designation of the
1399area or July 1, 2007, whichever occurs later, the development-
1400of-regional-impact review for projects within the urban infill
1401and redevelopment area must address transportation impacts only.
1402     (d)  A local government that does not wish to enter into a
1403binding agreement or that is unable to agree on the terms of the
1404agreement referenced under paragraph (24)(l), paragraph (24)(m),
1405or paragraph (24)(n) shall provide written notification to the
1406state land planning agency of the decision to not enter into a
1407binding agreement or the failure to enter into a binding
1408agreement within the 12-month period referenced in paragraphs
1409(a), (b) and (c). Following the notification of the state land
1410planning agency, development-of-regional-impact review for
1411projects within an urban service boundary under paragraph
1412(24)(l), a rural land stewardship area under paragraph (24)(m),
1413or an urban infill and redevelopment area under paragraph
1414(24)(n), must address transportation impacts only.
1415     (e)  The vesting provision of s. 163.3167(8) relating to an
1416authorized development of regional impact shall not apply to
1417those projects partially exempt from the development-of-
1418regional-impact review process under paragraphs (a)-(d).
1419     Section 9.  Paragraphs (d) and (e) of subsection (3) of
1420section 380.0651, Florida Statutes, are amended, paragraphs (f)
1421through (i) are redesignated as paragraphs (e) through (h),
1422respectively, paragraph (j) is redesignated as paragraph (i) and
1423amended, and a new paragraph (j) is added to that subsection, to
1424read:
1425     380.0651  Statewide guidelines and standards.--
1426     (3)  The following statewide guidelines and standards shall
1427be applied in the manner described in s. 380.06(2) to determine
1428whether the following developments shall be required to undergo
1429development-of-regional-impact review:
1430     (d)  Office development.--Any proposed office building or
1431park operated under common ownership, development plan, or
1432management that:
1433     1.  Encompasses 300,000 or more square feet of gross floor
1434area; or
1435     2.  Encompasses more than 600,000 square feet of gross
1436floor area in a county with a population greater than 500,000
1437and only in a geographic area specifically designated as highly
1438suitable for increased threshold intensity in the approved local
1439comprehensive plan and in the strategic regional policy plan.
1440     (e)  Port facilities.--The proposed construction of any
1441waterport or marina is required to undergo
1442development-of-regional-impact review, except one designed for:
1443     1.a.  The wet storage or mooring of fewer than 150
1444watercraft used exclusively for sport, pleasure, or commercial
1445fishing, or
1446     b.  The dry storage of fewer than 200 watercraft used
1447exclusively for sport, pleasure, or commercial fishing, or
1448     c.  The wet or dry storage or mooring of fewer than 150
1449watercraft on or adjacent to an inland freshwater lake except
1450Lake Okeechobee or any lake which has been designated an
1451Outstanding Florida Water, or
1452     d.  The wet or dry storage or mooring of fewer than 50
1453watercraft of 40 feet in length or less of any type or purpose.
1454The exceptions to this paragraph's requirements for development-
1455of-regional-impact review shall not apply to any waterport or
1456marina facility located within or which serves physical
1457development located within a coastal barrier resource unit on an
1458unbridged barrier island designated pursuant to 16 U.S.C. s.
14593501.
1460
1461In addition to the foregoing, for projects for which no
1462environmental resource permit or sovereign submerged land lease
1463is required, the Department of Environmental Protection must
1464determine in writing that a proposed marina in excess of 10
1465slips or storage spaces or a combination of the two is located
1466so that it will not adversely impact Outstanding Florida Waters
1467or Class II waters and will not contribute boat traffic in a
1468manner that will have an adverse impact on an area known to be,
1469or likely to be, frequented by manatees. If the Department of
1470Environmental Protection fails to issue its determination within
147145 days of receipt of a formal written request, it has waived
1472its authority to make such determination. The Department of
1473Environmental Protection determination shall constitute final
1474agency action pursuant to chapter 120.
1475     2.  The dry storage of fewer than 300 watercraft used
1476exclusively for sport, pleasure, or commercial fishing at a
1477marina constructed and in operation prior to July 1, 1985.
1478     3.  Any proposed marina development with both wet and dry
1479mooring or storage used exclusively for sport, pleasure, or
1480commercial fishing, where the sum of percentages of the
1481applicable wet and dry mooring or storage thresholds equals 100
1482percent. This threshold is in addition to, and does not
1483preclude, a development from being required to undergo
1484development-of-regional-impact review under sub-subparagraphs
14851.a. and b. and subparagraph 2.
1486     (i)(j)  Residential development.--No rule may be adopted
1487concerning residential developments which treats a residential
1488development in one county as being located in a less populated
1489adjacent county unless more than 25 percent of the development
1490is located within 2 or less miles of the less populated adjacent
1491county. The residential thresholds of adjacent counties with
1492less population and a lower threshold shall not be controlling
1493on any development wholly located within areas designated as
1494rural areas of critical economic concern.
1495     (j)  Workforce housing.--The applicable guidelines for
1496residential development and the residential component for
1497multiuse development shall be increased by 50 percent where the
1498developer demonstrates that at least 15 percent of the total
1499residential dwelling units authorized within the development of
1500regional impact will be dedicated to affordable workforce
1501housing, subject to a recorded land use restriction that shall
1502be for a period of not less than 20 years and that includes
1503resale provisions to ensure long-term affordability for income-
1504eligible homeowners and renters and provisions for the workforce
1505housing to be commenced prior to the completion of 50 percent of
1506the market rate dwelling. For purposes of this paragraph, the
1507term "affordable workforce housing" means housing that is
1508affordable to a person who earns less than 120 percent of the
1509area median income, or less than 140 percent of the area median
1510income if located in a county in which the median purchase price
1511for a single-family existing home exceeds the statewide median
1512purchase price of a single-family existing home. For the
1513purposes of this paragraph, the term "statewide median purchase
1514price of a single-family existing home" means the statewide
1515purchase price as determined in the Florida Sales Report,
1516Single-Family Existing Homes, released each January by the
1517Florida Association of Realtors and the University of Florida
1518Real Estate Research Center.
1519     Section 10.  Section 380.07, Florida Statutes, is amended
1520to read:
1521     380.07  Florida Land and Water Adjudicatory Commission.--
1522     (1)  There is hereby created the Florida Land and Water
1523Adjudicatory Commission, which shall consist of the
1524Administration Commission. The commission may adopt rules
1525necessary to ensure compliance with the area of critical state
1526concern program and the requirements for developments of
1527regional impact as set forth in this chapter.
1528     (2)  Whenever any local government issues any development
1529order in any area of critical state concern, or in regard to any
1530development of regional impact, copies of such orders as
1531prescribed by rule by the state land planning agency shall be
1532transmitted to the state land planning agency, the regional
1533planning agency, and the owner or developer of the property
1534affected by such order. The state land planning agency shall
1535adopt rules describing development order rendition and
1536effectiveness in designated areas of critical state concern.
1537Within 45 days after the order is rendered, the owner, the
1538developer, or the state land planning agency may appeal the
1539order to the Florida Land and Water Adjudicatory Commission by
1540filing a petition alleging that the development order is not
1541consistent with the provisions of this part notice of appeal
1542with the commission. The appropriate regional planning agency by
1543vote at a regularly scheduled meeting may recommend that the
1544state land planning agency undertake an appeal of a development-
1545of-regional-impact development order. Upon the request of an
1546appropriate regional planning council, affected local
1547government, or any citizen, the state land planning agency shall
1548consider whether to appeal the order and shall respond to the
1549request within the 45-day appeal period. Any appeal taken by a
1550regional planning agency between March 1, 1993, and the
1551effective date of this section may only be continued if the
1552state land planning agency has also filed an appeal. Any appeal
1553initiated by a regional planning agency on or before March 1,
15541993, shall continue until completion of the appeal process and
1555any subsequent appellate review, as if the regional planning
1556agency were authorized to initiate the appeal.
1557     (3)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an appeal
1558of a development order by the state land planning agency under
1559this section may include consistency of the development order
1560with the local comprehensive plan. However, if a development
1561order relating to a development of regional impact has been
1562challenged in a proceeding under s. 163.3215 and a party to the
1563proceeding serves notice to the state land planning agency of
1564the pending proceeding under s. 163.3215, the state land
1565planning agency shall:
1566     (a)  Raise its consistency issues by intervening as a full
1567party in the pending proceeding under s. 163.3215 within 30 days
1568after service of the notice; and
1569     (b)  Dismiss the consistency issues from the development
1570order appeal.
1571     (4)  The appellant shall furnish a copy of the petition to
1572the opposing party, as the case may be, and to the local
1573government that issued the order. The filing of the petition
1574stays the effectiveness of the order until after the completion
1575of the appeal process.
1576     (5)(3)  The 45-day appeal period for a development of
1577regional impact within the jurisdiction of more than one local
1578government shall not commence until after all the local
1579governments having jurisdiction over the proposed development of
1580regional impact have rendered their development orders. The
1581appellant shall furnish a copy of the notice of appeal to the
1582opposing party, as the case may be, and to the local government
1583which issued the order. The filing of the notice of appeal shall
1584stay the effectiveness of the order until after the completion
1585of the appeal process.
1586     (6)(4)  Prior to issuing an order, the Florida Land and
1587Water Adjudicatory Commission shall hold a hearing pursuant to
1588the provisions of chapter 120. The commission shall encourage
1589the submission of appeals on the record made below in cases in
1590which the development order was issued after a full and complete
1591hearing before the local government or an agency thereof.
1592     (7)(5)  The Florida Land and Water Adjudicatory Commission
1593shall issue a decision granting or denying permission to develop
1594pursuant to the standards of this chapter and may attach
1595conditions and restrictions to its decisions.
1596     (8)(6)  If an appeal is filed with respect to any issues
1597within the scope of a permitting program authorized by chapter
1598161, chapter 373, or chapter 403 and for which a permit or
1599conceptual review approval has been obtained prior to the
1600issuance of a development order, any such issue shall be
1601specifically identified in the notice of appeal which is filed
1602pursuant to this section, together with other issues which
1603constitute grounds for the appeal. The appeal may proceed with
1604respect to issues within the scope of permitting programs for
1605which a permit or conceptual review approval has been obtained
1606prior to the issuance of a development order only after the
1607commission determines by majority vote at a regularly scheduled
1608commission meeting that statewide or regional interests may be
1609adversely affected by the development. In making this
1610determination, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that
1611statewide and regional interests relating to issues within the
1612scope of the permitting programs for which a permit or
1613conceptual approval has been obtained are not adversely
1614affected.
1615     Section 11.  Section 380.115, Florida Statutes, is amended
1616to read:
1617     380.115  Vested rights and duties; effect of size
1618reduction, changes in guidelines and standards chs. 2002-20 and
16192002-296.--
1620     (1)  A change in a development-of-regional-impact guideline
1621and standard does not abridge Nothing contained in this act
1622abridges or modify modifies any vested or other right or any
1623duty or obligation pursuant to any development order or
1624agreement that is applicable to a development of regional impact
1625on the effective date of this act. A development that has
1626received a development-of-regional-impact development order
1627pursuant to s. 380.06, but is no longer required to undergo
1628development-of-regional-impact review by operation of a change
1629in the guidelines and standards or has reduced its size below
1630the thresholds in s. 380.0651 of this act, shall be governed by
1631the following procedures:
1632     (a)  The development shall continue to be governed by the
1633development-of-regional-impact development order and may be
1634completed in reliance upon and pursuant to the development order
1635unless the developer or landowner has followed the procedures
1636for rescission in paragraph (b). Any proposed changes to those
1637developments which continue to be governed by a development
1638order shall be approved pursuant to s. 380.06(19) as it existed
1639prior to a change in the development-of-regional-impact
1640guidelines and standards, except that all percentage criteria
1641shall be doubled and all other criteria shall be increased by 10
1642percent. The development-of-regional-impact development order
1643may be enforced by the local government as provided by ss.
1644380.06(17) and 380.11.
1645     (b)  If requested by the developer or landowner, the
1646development-of-regional-impact development order shall may be
1647rescinded by the local government having jurisdiction upon a
1648showing that all required mitigation related to the amount of
1649development that existed on the date of rescission has been
1650completed abandoned pursuant to the process in s. 380.06(26).
1651     (2)  A development with an application for development
1652approval pending, and determined sufficient pursuant to s.
1653380.06 s. 380.06(10), on the effective date of a change to the
1654guidelines and standards this act, or a notification of proposed
1655change pending on the effective date of a change to the
1656guidelines and standards this act, may elect to continue such
1657review pursuant to s. 380.06. At the conclusion of the pending
1658review, including any appeals pursuant to s. 380.07, the
1659resulting development order shall be governed by the provisions
1660of subsection (1).
1661     (3)  A landowner that has filed an application for a
1662development-of-regional-impact review prior to the adoption of
1663an optional sector plan pursuant to s. 163.3245 may elect to
1664have the application reviewed pursuant to s. 380.06,
1665comprehensive plan provisions in force prior to adoption of the
1666sector plan, and any requested comprehensive plan amendments
1667that accompany the application.
1668     Section 12.  Paragraph (i) of subsection (2) of section
1669403.813, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
1670     403.813  Permits issued at district centers; exceptions.--
1671     (2)  A permit is not required under this chapter, chapter
1672373, chapter 61-691, Laws of Florida, or chapter 25214 or
1673chapter 25270, 1949, Laws of Florida, for activities associated
1674with the following types of projects; however, except as
1675otherwise provided in this subsection, nothing in this
1676subsection relieves an applicant from any requirement to obtain
1677permission to use or occupy lands owned by the Board of Trustees
1678of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund or any water management
1679district in its governmental or proprietary capacity or from
1680complying with applicable local pollution control programs
1681authorized under this chapter or other requirements of county
1682and municipal governments:
1683     (i)  The construction of private docks of 1,000 square feet
1684or less of over-water surface area and seawalls in artificially
1685created waterways where such construction will not violate
1686existing water quality standards, impede navigation, or affect
1687flood control. This exemption does not apply to the construction
1688of vertical seawalls in estuaries or lagoons unless the proposed
1689construction is within an existing manmade canal where the
1690shoreline is currently occupied in whole or part by vertical
1691seawalls.
1692     Section 13.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2006.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.