Bill Text: FL S0832 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Implementation of the Recommendations of the Blue-Green Algae Task Force
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-1)
Status: (Failed) 2022-03-14 - Died in Appropriations [S0832 Detail]
Download: Florida-2022-S0832-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2022 SB 832 By Senator Stewart 13-00423A-22 2022832__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to implementation of the 3 recommendations of the Blue-Green Algae Task Force; 4 amending s. 381.0065, F.S.; requiring owners of 5 certain onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems 6 to have the systems periodically inspected, beginning 7 on a specified date; requiring the Department of 8 Environmental Protection to administer the inspection 9 program; requiring the department to implement program 10 standards, procedures, and requirements; providing for 11 rulemaking; amending s. 403.067, F.S.; requiring new 12 or revised basin management action plans to include a 13 list that identifies and prioritizes certain spatially 14 focused projects; requiring the department to assess 15 certain projects; providing an effective date. 16 17 WHEREAS, Governor Ron DeSantis created the Blue-Green Algae 18 Task Force in 2019 to “improve water quality for the benefit of 19 all Floridians,” and the task force’s consensus report was 20 issued in October 2019, with multiple recommendations for basin 21 management action plans (BMAP), agriculture, human waste, 22 stormwater, technology, public health, and science, and 23 WHEREAS, the Legislature recognizes that in June 2020, 24 Governor DeSantis signed Senate Bill 712, the Clean Waterways 25 Act, which implemented many of the recommendations of the task 26 force, and 27 WHEREAS, full implementation of the task force’s 28 recommendations will require enactment of additional substantive 29 legislation, NOW, THEREFORE, 30 31 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 32 33 Section 1. Present subsections (5), (6), and (7) of section 34 381.0065, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (6), 35 (7), and (8), respectively, and a new subsection (5) is added to 36 that section, to read: 37 381.0065 Onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems; 38 regulation.— 39 (5) PERIODIC INSPECTIONS.—Effective July 1, 2025, the owner 40 of an onsite sewage treatment and disposal system, excluding a 41 system required to have an operating permit, must have the 42 system inspected at least once every 5 years to assess the 43 fundamental operational condition of the system, prolong the 44 life of the system, and identify any failure within the system. 45 The department shall administer an onsite sewage treatment and 46 disposal system inspection program for such periodic 47 inspections. The department shall implement the program 48 standards, procedures, and requirements and adopt rules that 49 must include, at a minimum, all of the following: 50 (a) A schedule for a 5-year inspection cycle. 51 (b) A county-by-county implementation plan phased in over a 52 10-year period, with first priority given to those areas within 53 a priority focus area for springs identified by the department. 54 (c) Minimum standards for a functioning system. 55 (d) Requirements for the pumpout or repair of a failing 56 system. 57 (e) Enforcement procedures for failure of a system owner to 58 obtain an inspection of the system and failure of a contractor 59 to timely report inspection results to the department and the 60 system owner. 61 Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section 62 403.067, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 63 403.067 Establishment and implementation of total maximum 64 daily loads.— 65 (7) DEVELOPMENT OF BASIN MANAGEMENT PLANS AND 66 IMPLEMENTATION OF TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOADS.— 67 (a) Basin management action plans.— 68 1. In developing and implementing the total maximum daily 69 load for a water body, the department, or the department in 70 conjunction with a water management district, may develop a 71 basin management action plan that addresses some or all of the 72 watersheds and basins tributary to the water body. Such plan 73 must integrate the appropriate management strategies available 74 to the state through existing water quality protection programs 75 to achieve the total maximum daily loads and may provide for 76 phased implementation of these management strategies to promote 77 timely, cost-effective actions as provided for in s. 403.151. 78 The plan must establish a schedule implementing the management 79 strategies, establish a basis for evaluating the plan’s 80 effectiveness, and identify feasible funding strategies for 81 implementing the plan’s management strategies. The management 82 strategies may include regional treatment systems or other 83 public works, when appropriate, and voluntary trading of water 84 quality credits to achieve the needed pollutant load reductions. 85 2. A basin management action plan must equitably allocate, 86 pursuant to paragraph (6)(b), pollutant reductions to individual 87 basins, as a whole to all basins, or to each identified point 88 source or category of nonpoint sources, as appropriate. For 89 nonpoint sources for which best management practices have been 90 adopted, the initial requirement specified by the plan must be 91 those practices developed pursuant to paragraph (c). When 92 appropriate, the plan may take into account the benefits of 93 pollutant load reduction achieved by point or nonpoint sources 94 that have implemented management strategies to reduce pollutant 95 loads, including best management practices, before the 96 development of the basin management action plan. The plan must 97 also identify the mechanisms that will address potential future 98 increases in pollutant loading. 99 3. The basin management action planning process is intended 100 to involve the broadest possible range of interested parties, 101 with the objective of encouraging the greatest amount of 102 cooperation and consensus possible. In developing a basin 103 management action plan, the department shall assure that key 104 stakeholders, including, but not limited to, applicable local 105 governments, water management districts, the Department of 106 Agriculture and Consumer Services, other appropriate state 107 agencies, local soil and water conservation districts, 108 environmental groups, regulated interests, and affected 109 pollution sources, are invited to participate in the process. 110 The department shall hold at least one public meeting in the 111 vicinity of the watershed or basin to discuss and receive 112 comments during the planning process and shall otherwise 113 encourage public participation to the greatest practicable 114 extent. Notice of the public meeting must be published in a 115 newspaper of general circulation in each county in which the 116 watershed or basin lies at least 5 days, but not more than 15 117 days, before the public meeting. A basin management action plan 118 does not supplant or otherwise alter any assessment made under 119 subsection (3) or subsection (4) or any calculation or initial 120 allocation. 121 4.a. Each new or revised basin management action plan must 122shallinclude: 123 (I)a.The appropriate management strategies available 124 through existing water quality protection programs to achieve 125 total maximum daily loads, which may provide for phased 126 implementation to promote timely, cost-effective actions as 127 provided for in s. 403.151; 128 (II)b.A description of best management practices adopted 129 by rule; 130 (III)c.A list of projects in priority ranking with a 131 planning-level cost estimate and estimated date of completion 132 for each listed project; 133 (IV) A list that identifies and prioritizes spatially 134 focused suites of projects in areas likely to yield maximum 135 pollutant reductions; 136 (V)d.The source and amount of financial assistance to be 137 made available by the department, a water management district, 138 or other entity for each listed project, if applicable; and 139 (VI)e.A planning-level estimate of each listed project’s 140 expected load reduction, if applicable. 141 b. For each project listed pursuant to this subparagraph 142 which has a total cost that exceeds $1 million, the department 143 must assess through integrated and comprehensive monitoring 144 whether the project is working to reduce nutrient pollution or 145 water use, or both, as intended. These assessments must be 146 completed expeditiously and included in each basin management 147 action plan update. 148 5. The department shall adopt all or any part of a basin 149 management action plan and any amendment to such plan by 150 secretarial order pursuant to chapter 120 to implement this 151 section. 152 6. The basin management action plan must include milestones 153 for implementation and water quality improvement, and an 154 associated water quality monitoring component sufficient to 155 evaluate whether reasonable progress in pollutant load 156 reductions is being achieved over time. An assessment of 157 progress toward these milestones shall be conducted every 5 158 years, and revisions to the plan shall be made as appropriate. 159 Revisions to the basin management action plan shall be made by 160 the department in cooperation with basin stakeholders. Revisions 161 to the management strategies required for nonpoint sources must 162 follow the procedures in subparagraph (c)4. Revised basin 163 management action plans must be adopted pursuant to subparagraph 164 5. 165 7. In accordance with procedures adopted by rule under 166 paragraph (9)(c), basin management action plans, and other 167 pollution control programs under local, state, or federal 168 authority as provided in subsection (4), may allow point or 169 nonpoint sources that will achieve greater pollutant reductions 170 than required by an adopted total maximum daily load or 171 wasteload allocation to generate, register, and trade water 172 quality credits for the excess reductions to enable other 173 sources to achieve their allocation; however, the generation of 174 water quality credits does not remove the obligation of a source 175 or activity to meet applicable technology requirements or 176 adopted best management practices. Such plans must allow trading 177 between NPDES permittees, and trading that may or may not 178 involve NPDES permittees, where the generation or use of the 179 credits involve an entity or activity not subject to department 180 water discharge permits whose owner voluntarily elects to obtain 181 department authorization for the generation and sale of credits. 182 8. The department’s rule relating to the equitable 183 abatement of pollutants into surface waters do not apply to 184 water bodies or water body segments for which a basin management 185 plan that takes into account future new or expanded activities 186 or discharges has been adopted under this section. 187 9. In order to promote resilient wastewater utilities, if 188 the department identifies domestic wastewater treatment 189 facilities or onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems as 190 contributors of at least 20 percent of point source or nonpoint 191 source nutrient pollution or if the department determines 192 remediation is necessary to achieve the total maximum daily 193 load, a basin management action plan for a nutrient total 194 maximum daily load must include the following: 195 a. A wastewater treatment plan developed by each local 196 government, in cooperation with the department, the water 197 management district, and the public and private domestic 198 wastewater treatment facilities within the jurisdiction of the 199 local government, that addresses domestic wastewater. The 200 wastewater treatment plan must: 201 (I) Provide for construction, expansion, or upgrades 202 necessary to achieve the total maximum daily load requirements 203 applicable to the domestic wastewater treatment facility. 204 (II) Include the permitted capacity in average annual 205 gallons per day for the domestic wastewater treatment facility; 206 the average nutrient concentration and the estimated average 207 nutrient load of the domestic wastewater; a projected timeline 208 of the dates by which the construction of any facility 209 improvements will begin and be completed and the date by which 210 operations of the improved facility will begin; the estimated 211 cost of the improvements; and the identity of responsible 212 parties. 213 214 The wastewater treatment plan must be adopted as part of the 215 basin management action plan no later than July 1, 2025. A local 216 government that does not have a domestic wastewater treatment 217 facility in its jurisdiction is not required to develop a 218 wastewater treatment plan unless there is a demonstrated need to 219 establish a domestic wastewater treatment facility within its 220 jurisdiction to improve water quality necessary to achieve a 221 total maximum daily load. A local government is not responsible 222 for a private domestic wastewater facility’s compliance with a 223 basin management action plan unless such facility is operated 224 through a public-private partnership to which the local 225 government is a party. 226 b. An onsite sewage treatment and disposal system 227 remediation plan developed by each local government in 228 cooperation with the department, the Department of Health, water 229 management districts, and public and private domestic wastewater 230 treatment facilities. 231 (I) The onsite sewage treatment and disposal system 232 remediation plan must identify cost-effective and financially 233 feasible projects necessary to achieve the nutrient load 234 reductions required for onsite sewage treatment and disposal 235 systems. To identify cost-effective and financially feasible 236 projects for remediation of onsite sewage treatment and disposal 237 systems, the local government shall: 238 (A) Include an inventory of onsite sewage treatment and 239 disposal systems based on the best information available; 240 (B) Identify onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems 241 that would be eliminated through connection to existing or 242 future central domestic wastewater infrastructure in the 243 jurisdiction or domestic wastewater service area of the local 244 government, that would be replaced with or upgraded to enhanced 245 nutrient-reducing onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems, 246 or that would remain on conventional onsite sewage treatment and 247 disposal systems; 248 (C) Estimate the costs of potential onsite sewage treatment 249 and disposal system connections, upgrades, or replacements; and 250 (D) Identify deadlines and interim milestones for the 251 planning, design, and construction of projects. 252 (II) The department shall adopt the onsite sewage treatment 253 and disposal system remediation plan as part of the basin 254 management action plan no later than July 1, 2025, or as 255 required for Outstanding Florida Springs under s. 373.807. 256 10. When identifying wastewater projects in a basin 257 management action plan, the department may not require the 258 higher cost option if it achieves the same nutrient load 259 reduction as a lower cost option. A regulated entity may choose 260 a different cost option if it complies with the pollutant 261 reduction requirements of an adopted total maximum daily load 262 and meets or exceeds the pollution reduction requirement of the 263 original project. 264 Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2022.