Bill Text: FL S0768 | 2011 | Regular Session | Comm Sub
Bill Title: Seaports
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 3-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-05-02 - Read 2nd time -SJ 676 [S0768 Detail]
Download: Florida-2011-S0768-Comm_Sub.html
Florida Senate - 2011 CS for CS for CS for SB 768 By the Committees on Budget; Transportation; and Commerce and Tourism; and Senator Ring 576-04643-11 2011768c3 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to seaports; amending s. 373.406, 3 F.S.; exempting overwater piers, docks, and structures 4 located in deepwater ports from stormwater management 5 system requirements under specified conditions; 6 amending s. 373.4133, F.S.; providing exceptions to 7 time limitations for the Department of Environmental 8 Protection to issue a notice of intent to issue a port 9 conceptual permit; providing that a third party who 10 challenges the issuance of a port conceptual permit 11 has the ultimate burden of proof and the burden of 12 going forward with the evidence in the first instance; 13 deleting the requirement to publish notice of the 14 department’s intent to issue or deny a port conceptual 15 permit; amending s. 403.813, F.S.; exempting specified 16 seaports and inland navigation districts from 17 requirements to conduct maintenance dredging under 18 certain circumstances; providing that ditches, pipes, 19 and similar linear conveyances are not receiving 20 waters; authorizing public ports and inland navigation 21 districts to use sovereignty submerged lands in 22 connection with maintenance dredging; providing an 23 additional exemption from permitting requirements to 24 allow the disposal of spoil material on a self 25 contained, upland spoil site if certain conditions are 26 met; requiring notice to the department of intent to 27 use the exemption; providing conditions; amending s. 28 310.002, F.S.; redefining the term “port” to include 29 Port Citrus; amending s. 311.09, F.S.; including a 30 representative of Port Citrus as a member of the 31 Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic 32 Development Council; amending s. 374.976, F.S.; 33 conforming provisions to include Port Citrus in 34 provisions relating to the authority of inland 35 navigation districts; amending s. 403.021, F.S.; 36 conforming provisions to include Port Citrus in 37 legislative declarations relating to environmental 38 control; amending s. 403.061, F.S.; conforming 39 provisions to include Port Citrus in provisions 40 relating to powers of the Department of Environmental 41 Protection; amending s. 403.813, F.S.; conforming 42 provisions to include Port Citrus in provisions 43 relating to permits issued at Department of 44 Environmental Protection district centers; amending s. 45 403.816, F.S.; conforming provisions to include Port 46 Citrus in provisions relating to certain maintenance 47 projects at deepwater ports and beach restoration 48 projects; providing an effective date. 49 50 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 51 52 Section 1. Subsection (12) is added to section 373.406, 53 Florida Statutes, to read: 54 373.406 Exemptions.—The following exemptions shall apply: 55 (12) An overwater pier, dock, or a similar structure 56 located in a deepwater port listed in s. 311.09 is not 57 considered to be part of a stormwater management system for 58 which this chapter or chapter 403 requires stormwater from 59 impervious surfaces to be treated if: 60 (a) The port has a stormwater pollution prevention plan for 61 industrial activities pursuant to the National Pollutant 62 Discharge Elimination System Program; and 63 (b) The stormwater pollution prevention plan also provides 64 similar pollution prevention measures for other activities that 65 are not subject to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination 66 System Program and that occur on the port’s overwater piers, 67 docks, and similar structures. 68 Section 2. Subsection (8) of section 373.4133, Florida 69 Statutes, is amended to read: 70 373.4133 Port conceptual permits.— 71 (8) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the 72 following procedures apply to the approval or denial of an 73 application for a port conceptual permit or a final permit or 74 authorization: 75 (a) Applications for a port conceptual permit, including 76 any request for the conceptual approval of the use of 77 sovereignty submerged lands, shall be processed in accordance 78 with the provisions of ss. 373.427 and 120.60, with the 79 following exceptions:.80 1. An application for a port conceptual permit, and any 81 applications for subsequent construction contained in a port 82 conceptual permit, must be approved or denied within 60 days 83 after receipt of a completed application. 84 2. The department may request additional information no 85 more than twice, unless the applicant waives this limitation in 86 writing. If the applicant does not provide a response to the 87 second request for additional information within 90 days or 88 another time period mutually agreed upon between the applicant 89 and the department, the application shall be considered 90 withdrawn.However,91 3. If the applicant believes that any request for 92 additional information is not authorized by law or agency rule, 93 the applicant may request an informal hearing pursuant to s. 94 120.57(2) before the Secretary of Environmental Protection to 95 determine whether the application is complete. 96 4. If a third party petitions to challenge the issuance of 97 a port conceptual permit by the department, the petitioner 98 initiating the action has the burden of ultimate persuasion and, 99 in the first instance, has the burden of going forward with the 100 evidence. 101(b) Upon issuance of the department’s notice of intent to102issue or deny a port conceptual permit, the applicant shall103publish a one-time notice of such intent, prepared by the104department, in the newspaper with the largest general105circulation in the county or counties where the port is located.106 (b)(c)Final agency action on a port conceptual permit is 107 subject to challenge pursuant to ss. 120.569 and 120.57. 108 However, final agency action to authorize subsequent 109 construction of facilities contained in a port conceptual permit 110 mayonlybe challenged by a third party only for consistency 111 with the port conceptual permit. 112 (c)(d)A person who will be substantially affected by a 113 final agency action described in paragraph (b)(c)must initiate 114 administrative proceedings pursuant to ss. 120.569 and 120.57 115 within 21 days after the publication of the notice of the 116 proposed action. If administrative proceedings are requested, 117 the proceedings are subject to the summary hearing provisions of 118 s. 120.574. However, if the decision of the administrative law 119 judge will be a recommended order rather than a final order, a 120 summary proceeding must be conducted within 90 days after a 121 party files a motion for summary hearing, regardless of whether 122 the parties agree to the summary proceeding. 123 Section 3. Subsection (3) of section 403.813, Florida 124 Statutes, is amended to read: 125 403.813 Permits issued at district centers; exceptions.— 126 (3) A permit is not required under this chapter, chapter 127 373, chapter 61-691, Laws of Florida, or chapter 25214 or 128 chapter 25270, 1949, Laws of Florida, for maintenance dredging 129conducted under this sectionby the seaports of Jacksonville, 130 Port Canaveral, Fort Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Everglades, Miami, 131 Port Manatee, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Port St. Joe, Panama City, 132 Pensacola, Key West, and Fernandina or by inland navigation 133 districts, if the dredging to be performed is no more than is 134 necessary to restore previously dredged areas to original design 135 specifications or configurations, if previously undisturbed 136 natural areas are not significantly impacted, and if the work 137 conducted does not violate the protections for manatees under s. 138 379.2431(2)(d). In addition: 139 (a) A mixing zone for turbidity is granted within a 150 140 meter radius from the point of dredging while dredging is 141 ongoing, except that the mixing zone may not extend into areas 142 supporting wetland communities, submerged aquatic vegetation, or 143 hardbottom communities. 144 (b) The discharge of the return water from the site used 145 for the disposal of dredged material shall be allowed only if 146 such discharge does not result in a violation of water quality 147 standards in the receiving waters. The return-water discharge 148 into receiving waters shall be granted a mixing zone for 149 turbidity within a 150-meter radius from the point of discharge 150 into the receiving waters during and immediately after the 151 dredging, except that the mixing zone may not extend into areas 152 supporting wetland communities, submerged aquatic vegetation, or 153 hardbottom communities. Ditches, pipes, and similar types of 154 linear conveyances are not considered receiving waters for the 155 purposes of this paragraph. 156 (c) The state may not exact a charge for material that this 157 subsection allows a public port or an inland navigation district 158 to remove. In addition, consent to use any sovereignty submerged 159 lands pursuant to this section is hereby granted. 160 (d) The use of flocculants at the site used for disposal of 161 the dredged material is allowed if the use, including supporting 162 documentation, is coordinated in advance with the department and 163 the department has determined that the use is not harmful to 164 water resources. 165 (e) The spoil material from maintenance dredging may be 166 deposited in a self-contained, upland disposal site. The site is 167 not required to be permitted if: 168 1. The site exists as of January 1, 2011; 169 2. A professional engineer certifies that the site has been 170 designed in accordance with generally accepted engineering 171 standards for such disposal sites; 172 3. The site has adequate capacity to receive and retain the 173 dredged material; and 174 4. The site has operating and maintenance procedures that 175 provide for discharge of return flow of water and prevent the 176 escape of the spoil material into state waters. 177 (f) The department must be notified of the intent to use 178 this exemption at least 30 days before the commencement of 179 maintenance dredging. The notice shall include, if applicable, 180 the professional engineer certification required by paragraph 181 (e). 182 (g)(e)This subsection does not prohibit maintenance 183 dredging of areas where the loss of original design function and 184 constructed configuration has been caused by a storm event, 185 provided that the dredging is performed as soon as practical 186 after the storm event. Maintenance dredging that commences 187 within 3 years after the storm event shall be presumed to 188 satisfy this provision. If more than 3 years are needed to 189 commence the maintenance dredging after the storm event, a 190 request for a specific time extension to perform the maintenance 191 dredging shall be submitted to the department, prior to the end 192 of the 3-year period, accompanied by a statement, including 193 supporting documentation, demonstrating that contractors are not 194 available or that additional time is needed to obtain 195 authorization for the maintenance dredging from the United 196 States Army Corps of Engineers. 197 Section 4. Subsection (4) of section 310.002, Florida 198 Statutes, is amended to read: 199 310.002 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, except where 200 the context clearly indicates otherwise: 201 (4) “Port” means any place in the state into which vessels 202 enter or depart and includes, without limitation, Fernandina, 203 Nassau Inlet, Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Canaveral, Port 204 Citrus, Ft. Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Everglades, Miami, Key 205 West, Boca Grande, Charlotte Harbor, Punta Gorda, Tampa, Port 206 Tampa, Port Manatee, St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Apalachicola, 207 Carrabelle, Panama City, Port St. Joe, and Pensacola. 208 Section 5. Subsection (1) of section 311.09, Florida 209 Statutes, is amended to read: 210 311.09 Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic 211 Development Council.— 212 (1) The Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic 213 Development Council is created within the Department of 214 Transportation. The council consists of the following 1817215 members: the port director, or the port director’s designee, of 216 each of the ports of Jacksonville, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, 217 Fort Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Everglades, Miami, Port Manatee, 218 St. Petersburg, Tampa, Port St. Joe, Panama City, Pensacola, Key 219 West, and Fernandina; the secretary of the Department of 220 Transportation or his or her designee; the director of the 221 Office of Tourism, Trade, and Economic Development or his or her 222 designee; and the secretary of the Department of Community 223 Affairs or his or her designee. 224 Section 6. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section 225 374.976, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 226 374.976 Authority to address impacts of waterway 227 development projects.— 228 (1) Each inland navigation district is empowered and 229 authorized to undertake programs intended to alleviate the 230 problems associated with its waterway or waterways, including, 231 but not limited to, the following: 232 (c) The district is authorized to aid and cooperate with 233 the Federal Government; state; member counties; nonmember 234 counties that contain any part of the intracoastal waterway 235 within their boundaries; navigation districts; the seaports of 236 Jacksonville, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, Fort Pierce, Palm 237 Beach, Port Everglades, Miami, Port Manatee, St. Petersburg, 238 Tampa, Port St. Joe, Panama City, Pensacola, Key West, and 239 Fernandina; and local governments within the district in 240 planning and carrying out public navigation, local and regional 241 anchorage management, beach renourishment, public recreation, 242 inlet management, environmental education, and boating safety 243 projects, directly related to the waterways. The district is 244 also authorized to enter into cooperative agreements with the 245 United States Army Corps of Engineers, state, and member 246 counties, and to covenant in any such cooperative agreement to 247 pay part of the costs of acquisition, planning, development, 248 construction, reconstruction, extension, improvement, operation, 249 and maintenance of such projects. 250 Section 7. Subsection (9) of section 403.021, Florida 251 Statutes, is amended to read: 252 403.021 Legislative declaration; public policy.— 253 (9)(a) The Legislature finds and declares that it is 254 essential to preserve and maintain authorized water depth in the 255 existing navigation channels, port harbors, turning basins, and 256 harbor berths of this state in order to provide for the 257 continued safe navigation of deepwater shipping commerce. The 258 department shall recognize that maintenance of authorized water 259 depths consistent with port master plans developed pursuant to 260 s. 163.3178(2)(k) is an ongoing, continuous, beneficial, and 261 necessary activity that is in the public interest; and it shall 262 develop a regulatory process that shall enable the ports of this 263 state to conduct such activities in an environmentally sound, 264 safe, expeditious, and cost-efficient manner. It is the further 265 intent of the Legislature that the permitting and enforcement of 266 dredging, dredged-material management, and other related 267 activities for Florida’s deepwater ports pursuant to this 268 chapter and chapters 161, 253, and 373 shall be consolidated 269 within the department’s Division of Water Resource Management 270 and, with the concurrence of the affected deepwater port or 271 ports, may be administered by a district office of the 272 department or delegated to an approved local environmental 273 program. 274 (b) The provisions of paragraph (a) apply only to the port 275 waters, dredged-material management sites, port harbors, 276 navigation channels, turning basins, and harbor berths used for 277 deepwater commercial navigation in the ports of Jacksonville, 278 Tampa, Port Everglades, Miami, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, Ft. 279 Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Manatee, Port St. Joe, Panama City, St. 280 Petersburg, Pensacola, Fernandina, and Key West. 281 Section 8. Subsection (26) of section 403.061, Florida 282 Statutes, is amended to read: 283 403.061 Department; powers and duties.—The department shall 284 have the power and the duty to control and prohibit pollution of 285 air and water in accordance with the law and rules adopted and 286 promulgated by it and, for this purpose, to: 287 (26)(a) Develop standards and criteria for waters used for 288 deepwater shipping which standards and criteria consider 289 existing water quality; appropriate mixing zones and other 290 requirements for maintenance dredging in previously constructed 291 deepwater navigation channels, port harbors, turning basins, or 292 harbor berths; and appropriate mixing zones for disposal of 293 spoil material from dredging and, where necessary, develop a 294 separate classification for such waters. Such classification, 295 standards, and criteria shall recognize that the present 296 dedicated use of these waters is for deepwater commercial 297 navigation. 298 (b) The provisions of paragraph (a) apply only to the port 299 waters, spoil disposal sites, port harbors, navigation channels, 300 turning basins, and harbor berths used for deepwater commercial 301 navigation in the ports of Jacksonville, Tampa, Port Everglades, 302 Miami, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, Ft. Pierce, Palm Beach, Port 303 Manatee, Port St. Joe, Panama City, St. Petersburg, Port Bartow, 304 Florida Power Corporation’s Crystal River Canal, Boca Grande, 305 Green Cove Springs, and Pensacola. 306 307 The department shall implement such programs in conjunction with 308 its other powers and duties and shall place special emphasis on 309 reducing and eliminating contamination that presents a threat to 310 humans, animals or plants, or to the environment. 311 Section 9. Subsection (3) of section 403.813, Florida 312 Statutes, is amended to read: 313 403.813 Permits issued at district centers; exceptions.— 314 (3) For maintenance dredging conducted under this section 315 by the seaports of Jacksonville, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, 316 Fort Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Everglades, Miami, Port Manatee, 317 St. Petersburg, Tampa, Port St. Joe, Panama City, Pensacola, Key 318 West, and Fernandina or by inland navigation districts: 319 (a) A mixing zone for turbidity is granted within a 150 320 meter radius from the point of dredging while dredging is 321 ongoing, except that the mixing zone may not extend into areas 322 supporting wetland communities, submerged aquatic vegetation, or 323 hardbottom communities. 324 (b) The discharge of the return water from the site used 325 for the disposal of dredged material shall be allowed only if 326 such discharge does not result in a violation of water quality 327 standards in the receiving waters. The return-water discharge 328 into receiving waters shall be granted a mixing zone for 329 turbidity within a 150-meter radius from the point of discharge 330 during and immediately after the dredging, except that the 331 mixing zone may not extend into areas supporting wetland 332 communities, submerged aquatic vegetation, or hardbottom 333 communities. 334 (c) The state may not exact a charge for material that this 335 subsection allows a public port or an inland navigation district 336 to remove. 337 (d) The use of flocculants at the site used for disposal of 338 the dredged material is allowed if the use, including supporting 339 documentation, is coordinated in advance with the department and 340 the department has determined that the use is not harmful to 341 water resources. 342 (e) This subsection does not prohibit maintenance dredging 343 of areas where the loss of original design function and 344 constructed configuration has been caused by a storm event, 345 provided that the dredging is performed as soon as practical 346 after the storm event. Maintenance dredging that commences 347 within 3 years after the storm event shall be presumed to 348 satisfy this provision. If more than 3 years are needed to 349 commence the maintenance dredging after the storm event, a 350 request for a specific time extension to perform the maintenance 351 dredging shall be submitted to the department, prior to the end 352 of the 3-year period, accompanied by a statement, including 353 supporting documentation, demonstrating that contractors are not 354 available or that additional time is needed to obtain 355 authorization for the maintenance dredging from the United 356 States Army Corps of Engineers. 357 Section 10. Section 403.816, Florida Statutes, is amended 358 to read: 359 403.816 Permits for maintenance dredging of deepwater ports 360 and beach restoration projects.— 361 (1) The department shall establish a permit system under 362 this chapter and chapter 253 which provides for the performance, 363 for up to 25 years from the issuance of the original permit, of 364 maintenance dredging of permitted navigation channels, port 365 harbors, turning basins, harbor berths, and beach restoration 366 projects approved pursuant to chapter 161. However, permits 367 issued for dredging river channels which are not a part of a 368 deepwater port shall be valid for no more than five years. No 369 charge shall be exacted by the state for material removed during 370 such maintenance dredging by a public port authority. 371 (2) The provisions of s. 253.77 do not apply to a permit 372 for maintenance dredging and spoil site approval when there is 373 no change in the size or location of the spoil disposal site and 374 when the applicant provides documentation to the department that 375 the appropriate lease, easement, or consent of use for the 376 project site issued pursuant to chapter 253 is recorded in the 377 county where the project is located. 378 (3) The provisions of this section relating to ports apply 379 only to the port waters, spoil disposal sites, port harbors, 380 navigation channels, turning basins, and harbor berths used for 381 deepwater commercial navigation in the ports of Jacksonville, 382 Tampa, Port Everglades, Miami, Port Canaveral, Port Citrus, Ft. 383 Pierce, Palm Beach, Port Manatee, Port St. Joe, Panama City, St. 384 Petersburg, Port Bartow, Florida Power Corporation’s Crystal 385 River Canal, Boca Grande, Green Cove Springs, and Pensacola. 386 Section 11. This act shall take effect July 1, 2011.