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Environmental Resource Permitting Rules About To Change




by:
Rick J. Burgess
Gunster - Fort Lauderdale Office

Terry Cole
Gunster - Tallahassee Office

Luna Ergas Phillips
Gunster - Fort Lauderdale Office

Kellie Denise Scott
Gunster - Tallahassee Office

 
August 16, 2012

Previously published on August 13, 2012

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is currently involved in an extensive rulemaking effort relating to the Environmental Resource Permitting (ERP) program.
 
The Department plans on consolidating several rule chapters, as well as water management district (WMD) rules, into Chapter 62-330, Florida Administrative Code, which would then control the ERP program statewide.
 
Thus far, the Department has proposed rules changes that would:

  • create several new exemptions to the rule;
  • set new statewide permitting thresholds;
  • establish several new and amended general permits;
  • create new criteria for conceptual permits;
  • require certification of ownership for issuance of permits; and
  • change the process for delineation in some instances.

To date, the proposed rule remains unfinished. The rule revision requires rewriting the handbooks for the ERP program, both on the Department and WMD levels. The new rule and the Department handbook will function as the implementing guide for most ERP regulation across the state.
 
Because there will be no statewide storm water rule, the WMD handbooks will continue to reflect the differences in the nature of storm water quality, quantity and flood protection criteria that have led to each WMD having their own design and performance standards. The WMD handbooks will also address other WMD distinctions such as special basins and minimum levels and flows.
 
The Joint Application for ERP Permit/Authorization to Use State-Owned Submerged Lands/Federal Dredge and Fill Permit is undergoing extensive revision as well. The goal of the Department is to have an application with easy-to-understand sections that are activity-based. The activity-based application would allow less regulated activities to take up only certain specified portions of the application, instead of the entire application.
 
A draft memo on fee categories was also provided by the Department, but the actual fees for each category have not yet been set. Fees set by the Department and the WMDs will continue to differ.
 
The Department’s original aggressive rulemaking time line would have required the final draft of the rule be completed by September 3, and on track for adoption the first week of January 2013. But because there is no final draft of the rule or other materials and the Department has not had the opportunity to undertake an analysis of estimated regulatory costs, the rulemaking schedule has been pushed back.
 
A final rulemaking workshop is set for September 20, 2012, with the remainder of the adoption activities scheduled accordingly.



 

The views expressed in this document are solely the views of the author and not Martindale-Hubbell. This document is intended for informational purposes only and is not legal advice or a substitute for consultation with a licensed legal professional in a particular case or circumstance.
 

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