10-002334 M.A.B.E. Properties, Inc. vs. Shannon Sue, Llc, Jupiter Hills Lighthouse Marina, Inc., And John And Barbara Canonico As Trustees Of The Barbara Canonico Revocable Trust, Department Of Environmental Protection, Board Of Trustees Of The Internal Improvement Trust Fund
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Thursday, November 4, 2010.


View Dockets  
Summary: Consent Order to resolve outstanding violations by marina was not shown to be an abuse of DEP's enforcement discretion.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8M.A.B.E. PROPERTIES, LLC, )

12)

13Petitioner , )

15)

16vs. ) Case No. 10 - 2334

23)

24SHANNON SUE, LLC, JUPITER HILLS )

30LIGHTHOUSE MARINA, INC., JOHN )

35AND BARBARA CANONICO, AS )

40TRUSTEES OF THE BARBARA )

45CANONICO REVOCABLE TRUST, )

49DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL )

53PROTECTION, AND BOARD OF )

58TRUSTEES OF THE INTERNAL )

63IMPROVEMENT TRUST FUND, )

67)

68Respondent s. )

71______________________________ _ )

74RECOMMENDED ORDER

76Pursuant to notice, this matter was heard before the

85Divisio n of Administrative Hearings by its assigned

93Administrative Law Judge, D . R. Alexander, on August 18 and 19 ,

1052010, in West Palm Beach, Florida.

111APPEARANCES

112For Petitioner: James M. Porter , Esquire

118James M. Porter, P.A.

1222950 Sun Trust International Center

127One Southeast Third Avenue

131Miami , Florida 33131 - 1712

136For Respondent s : Kirk S. White , Esquire

144(Department and Department of Environmental Protection

150Board) 3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

154Mail Station 35

157Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3000

162For Respondent s: John S. Yudin, Esquire

169( all others) Guy Yudin & Foster, LLP

17755 East Ocean Boulevard

181Stuart , Florida 34994 - 2214

186(appearance on August 18 only)

191STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

195The issue is whether a Consent Order executed by

204Respondents on March 25, 2010 , and by the Depar tment of

215Environmental Protection (Department) and the Board of Trustees

223of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund (Board) on A pril 1, 2010,

235is a reasonable exercise of the Department's enforcement

243authority.

244PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

246On March 25 and April 1 , 2 010, respectively, Respondents,

256who own and operate a commercial marina in Tequesta, Florida,

266and the Department and Board executed a Consent Order to resolve

277outstanding violations associated with the operation of the

285marina. On March 31, 2010, Petitione r, M.A.B.E. Properties, LLC

295(MABE), wh ich owns property immediately adjacent to the marina,

305filed its Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing (Petition)

313challenging the Consent Order on numerous grounds and requesting

322that it be modified or set aside as being arbitrary and

333capricious. The matter was referred by the Department to the

343Division of Administrative Hearings on April 27, 2010, with a

353req ues t that an administrative law judge conduct a formal

364hearing.

365By Notice of Hearing dated May 5, 2010, a f inal hearing was

378scheduled on June 28, 2010, in Tequesta, Florida. By agreement

388of the parties, the matter was rescheduled to August 18 - 20,

4002010, in West Palm Beach, Florida. A Joint Pre - Hearing

411Stipulation (Stipulation) was filed by the parties on Augus t 13,

4222010.

423By Order dated May 26, 2010, the Department's Motion to

433Strike Portions of the Petition that sought to modify the

443Consent Order, or to incorporate other alleged or known

452violations in the calculation of the penalty , w as granted. By

463Order dat ed August 13, 2010, three more allegations seeking to

474modify the Consent Order were stricken from the Petition .

484At the final hearing, Petitioner 's principal ,

491Edmund Brennen, testified and presented the testimony of

499Jason Andreotta, Jo s e ph Luri z , Paul A. Wi erzbicki, Leslie A.

513Smith, and John J. Long, Jr., all employees in the Department's

524Southeast District Office (District Office) in West Palm Beach .

534Also, it offered Petitioner's Exhibits 1 - 17, 20 - 30, 33, 35, 37,

54838, and 4 1 , which were received in evidence . The deposition of

561Donald H. Keirn, Jr. , and deposition exhibits 13 - 39, w ere also

574proffered as an exhibit for the purpose of establishing other

584violations that MABE contends should have been considered by the

594Department before executing the Consent Order . The Department

603and Board presented the te stimony of Donald H. Keirn, Jr., a

615Department Environmental Specialist III and accepted as an

623expert. Also, they offered Department Exhibits 1 - 3 , which were

634received in evidence. The other Respondents did not p articipate

644in the hearing. Finally, the undersigned granted the

652Department's Request for Official Recognition of Florida

659Administrative Code Rule Chapter 62 - 780. 1

667The Transcript of the hearing ( two volumes) was filed on

678September 2 1 , 2010. Proposed Fin dings of Fact and Conclusions

689of Law were filed by Petitioner and jointly by the Department

700and Board on October 2 2 , 2010, and they have been considered in

713the preparation of this Recommended Order.

719FINDINGS OF FACT

722Based upon all of the evidence, the fo llowing findings of

733fact are determined:

736A . History of the Proceeding

7421. A lengthy history precedes the execution of the Consent

752Order and c an be summarized as follows. S hannon Sue, LLC

764(Shannon Sue) is a Florida limited liability company and the

774curr ent owner of property located at 18261 Southeast Federal

784Highway, Tequesta, Florida , just north of the Martin County - Palm

795Beach County line . The property consists of 0.482 acres , is on

807the western bank of the Indian River Lagoon, and is adjacent to

819the Je nsen Beach - Jupiter Inlet Aquatic Preserve, an

829O u tstanding Florida Water . A commercial marina has been located

841on the upland property since at least the mid or late - 1980s .

8552. The Department has the power and duty to administer and

866enforce Chapters 373 , 376, and 403, Florida Statutes (2009) , 2 and

877the rules promulgated thereunder, including Chapter 62 - 780. The

887marina lies within the District Office's r egulatory

895jurisdiction.

8963 . MABE is a Florida limited liability corporation with

906its principal place of business in Martin County. It owns a

917small parcel of property located at 18245 Southeast Federal

926Highway, Tequesta, which is adjacent to , and immediately north

935of , the marina. Edmund Brennen is an officer and director of

946MABE and has resided at that s ite for twenty years. Besides his

959residence, Mr. Brennan has two boat slips for rent and two

970floors of commercial office space on the property , which is

980zoned commercial/residential . Over the last twenty years, MABE

989has had tenants who have historically used the dock and the

1000aquatic preserve for fishing, boating, and other recreational

1008activities. Although currently vacant, MABE plans to continue

1016to lease its property to residential or commercial tenants.

10254 . Shannon Sue currently leases the marina prope rty to

1036Jupiter Hills Lighthouse Marina, Inc. (JHLM) , a Florida

1044corporation with its principal place of business in Martin

1053County . JHLM has operate d the marina since at least the 1990s.

10665 . The property was owned by John and Barbara Canonico

1077(husband a nd wife), as Trustees of the Barbara Canonico

1087Revocable Trust , from 1988 until November 21, 2002, when title

1097was transferred to Shannon Sue. John Canonico is an officer ,

1107director , and registered agent of JHLM and Barbara Canonico is a

1118manager and register ed agent of Shannon Sue.

11266 . The record reflects that a dock and slips were located

1138on the property for a number of years. On July 29, 1992, JHLM

1151applied for a wetland resource permit to expand the existing

1161dock to provide for additional mooring and to substantially

1170reconfigure the existing dock . On December 13, 1994, the

1180Department issued an Intent to Issue Permit No. 432170499

1189(Permit) to JHLM allowing the expansion of the existing dock

1199from 6 to 18 slips. See Petitioner's Exhibit 1. 3 The Permit was

1212eventually issued on July 1, 1996. See Petitioner's Exhibit 2.

1222The P ermit included a number of general and specific conditions,

1233including S pecific C onditions 8 and 12, which required the

1244installation of a stormwater exfiltration system to provide

1252treatm ent for the first inch of runoff, and prohibited any boat

1264maintenance or repair activities except those that were "minor"

1273or necessitated by "emergency conditions." There is no record

1282of any objection to the issuance of the permit being filed by

1294any per son .

12987 . Although authorized to do so, for unknown reasons, JHLM

1309did not make the changes authorized by the P ermit. In March

13211998, it submitted a new application for a Standard General

1331Environmental Resource Permit (ERP) seeking to expand the number

1340of we t slips from six to twelve and to reconfigure the existing

1353dock. See Petitioner's Exhibit 3. One - half of the slips would

1365be used by powerboats while t he other six would be for sailboat

1378mooring only. Under the new permit, the applicant would be

1388allowed t o remove the existing docks and construct a new access

1400dock and terminal platform and add six new finger piers . On

1412August 16, 1999, the Department approved the application and

1421issued Standard General ERP No. 43 - 0114838 - 001 . See

1433Petitioner's Exhibit 4. L ike Specific Condition 8 in the 1996

1444permit, Specific Condition 14 was included in the new permit for

1455the purpose of improving water quality and required the

1464applicant to "install a stormwater exfiltration system" to

"1472provide treatment for [the first inch of runoff from] all paved

1483surfaces on the property." The system was to be constructed and

1494certified as complete by a registered professional engineer

1502before the permit became effective; it was to be cleaned monthly

1513or after major rainfall events and inspe cted annually by a

1524professional engineer; and annual reports were to be filed each

1534year by th at engineer . Also, Specific Condition 24 prohibited

1545any boat repair work other than minor or emergency repairs .

1556Acting on behalf of the Board, which has the resp onsibility for

1568overseeing state owned lands, the Department also entered into a

1578five - year leas e with the Canonico Trustees (Trustees) to use

1590sovereign submerged lands . See Petitioner's Exhibit 5. Among

1599other s , Condition 1 of t he lease specifically pro hib it ed the

1613mooring of commercial vessels at the facility. Id. Again, the

1623Permit was not opposed by any third party.

16318 . In 2001, Chris Baker, identified as a "purchaser of the

1643site" but more than likely a prospective purchaser, authorized a

1653firm known as E nvironmental Matters to conduct a "Phase I and

1665Limited Phase II Environmental Site Assessment" of the property.

1674The consultant's Environmental Assessment R eport (Report) , dated

1682June 2001, indicated , among other things, that there were

1691concentrations of me tals and petroleum hydrocarbons on the site ;

1701that some of the concentrations exceeded Department standards ;

1709that the soils were "contaminated throughout the Site" ; an

1718abandoned water well and septic tank system were on the site ;

1729and that a 1,000 - gallon abo veground unleaded gasoline storage

1741tank had been installed in 2001 without the required secondary

1751containment , but no leaks were observed. See Petitioner's

1759Exhibit 38. The report noted that during the assessment,

1768Mr. Canonico acknowledged that all ty pes of boat maintenance

1778took place on the site, including scraping boat hulls , and that

1789the waste was discharged (or allowed to run off) into the basin.

18019 . On March 14, 2003, former counsel for MABE sent a

1813three - page letter to the District Office advising that since

1824JHLM received a permit in 1994, the marina had been operated in

1836a manner that constituted violations of the permit conditions

1845and lease. The letter described in detail what the author

1855perceived to be violations of the law. In addition, a copy of

1867the 2001 R eport was enclosed with the letter. The letter asked

1879that the Department initiate an enforcement action against the

1888marina and that the unlawful practices be halted.

18961 0 . A Department memorandum dated March 28, 2003,

1906indicates that the let ter and R eport were reviewed by a District

1919employee , who considered the R eport to be incomplete in certain

1930respects, and that "without appropriate measurement tools and

1938additional information, it is not possible to state that the

1948site is contaminated based upon the sludge analysis." See

1957Petitioner's Exhibit 37. The memorandum conceded , however, that

1965further investigation was needed and that the report "provides

1974an indication of a petroleum related discharge." Id. The

1983memorandum recommended that JHLM be given a copy of the Report

1994and the D istrict Office memorandum, that JHLM su bmit a Discharge

2006Reporting Form pursuant to Rule 62 - 761.900(1), that the marina's

2017stormwater drain be cleaned, and that JHLM contact the D istrict

2028Office to discuss the voluntary imp lementation of Best

2037Management Practices for on - site operations. Id. Because the

2047Report "[had] no laboratory reports and no method detection

2056limits," the District Office d ecided n ot to conduct any follow -

2069up inspections of the marina property at that time .

20791 1 . In response to the Department's memorandum and Report ,

2090o n June 3, 2003, Mr. Canonico filed a Discharge Report Form

2102indicating that there was "no known discharge" on the property.

2112He also enclosed a copy of a letter he signed on December 7,

21251994, pr esumably in conjunction with his application for Permit

2135No. 432170499 , in which he describe d the maintenance schedule

2145for the facility's stormwater exfiltration system and agree d to

2155conform to that schedule, as generally required by Specific

2164C ondition 7 of the original permit . Also, on August 5, 2003,

2177the facility's contractor advised the District Office by letter

2186that "[t]he work authorized in Permit #43 - 0114834 - 001 has [been]

2199commenced and completed in full, with the exception of the

2209demolition of the fi nger pier, which we seek to remain." See

2221Petitioner's Exhibit 6. This was pr obably in reference to the

2232facility's intent to file an application to modify its 1999 ERP.

2243There is no indication that any further action was taken by the

2255Department in respons e to the MABE complaint.

22631 2 . In November 2003, JHLM filed an application with the

2275District Office seeking to modify its 1999 ERP by allowing an

2286existing 4 - foot by 24 - foot finger pier to remain in place (the

23011999 ERP required that it be removed) , and to in stall a

2313retractable wheelchair ramp to allow vessel access for wheel -

2323chair bound individuals . The application was unopposed. On

2332January 22, 2004, the Department approved the application. See

2341Petitioner's Exhibit 7. Except for the addition of three

2350spec ific conditions (32, 33, and 34) , a ll other terms and

2362conditions remained the same. Id. The finger pier was intended

2372to be used for passenger loading of rental vessels stored on the

2384uplands.

23851 3 . Even though ownership of the property had been

2396transferred to Shannon Sue in 2002, o n August 2 6, 2004, the

2409Department, on behalf of the Board , renewed submerged land lease

241943003006 with the Trustees for another ten years , or until

2429August 16, 2014 . See Petitioner's Exhibit 8. The renewed lease

2440contains the same terms and conditions as the 1999 lease ,

2450including the condition that the facility be restricted to

2459mooring recreational vessels .

24631 4 . On July 3, 2008, MABE, through its former counsel ,

2475sent the Department a verified complaint against the marina

2484under Sec tion 403.412, Florida Statutes (200 8 ). See

2494Petitioner's Exhibit 25. The complaint sought to compel the

2503Department to take action to address alleged violations of the

2513ERP conditions and the submerged land lease. Under the statute,

2523an agency has 30 days a fter receipt of a complaint in which "to

2537take appropriate action" against the alleged violator, or the

2546complaining party may then institute judicial proceedings.

25531 5 . Following receipt of the complaint, on July 10, 2008,

2565representatives of the District O ffice conducted an inspection

2574of the marina property. The case manager was Donald H. Keirn,

2585Jr., a n Environmental Specialist III , who is responsible for,

2595among other things, compliance enforcement in a large, heavily -

2605populated multi - county area . Another inspection was conducted

2615o n July 22, 2008 . During those visits, Mr. Keirn noted

2627significant evidence of major boat repairs on the premises,

2636freshly spilled oil, and hull scraping. In fact, Mr. C a nonico

2648admitted to Mr. Keirn that the facility had been per forming

2659major boat repairs since the original permit had been issued.

26691 6 . Based on these inspections, o n July 2 9 , 2008, the

2683D istrict Office initiated an enforcement action by sending a

2693Warning Letter to the Canonicos advising them that Specific

2702Conditio ns 11, 14, 15, and 24 of the ERP had been violated, and

2716that the lease of submerged lands must be transferred to the

2727current owner. See Petitioner's Exhibit 9. Condition 11

2735required the placement of channel markers; Conditions 14 and 15

2745required an exfil tration system to be constructed, certified by

2755a professional engineer as complete as indicated on the permit

2765drawings, maintained for the life of the system, cleaned

2774monthly, and inspected by a professional engineer annually with

2783follow - up annual reports; and Condition 24 prohibited repairs to

2794vessels other than minor or emergency repairs , so as to prevent

2805the discharge of hazardous materials into the aquatic preserve .

2815The record does not show what action, if any, Respondents took

2826after receiving the W arn ing L etter.

28341 7 . F rustrated by Respondents' inaction, and their

2844repeated disregard of Permit and Lease conditions over the

2853years, i n the fall of 2008 MABE hired an outside consult ing firm

2867(E Sciences , Inc. ) to collect and analyze samples of soil and

2879water from both the MABE property as well as Shannon Sue's

2890property. (Authorization to enter Shannon Sue's property was

2898pursuant to a court order.) The report was completed on

2908October 16, 2008, and concluded that since the 2001 assessment

2918was performed, the c oncentrations of petroleum and metals had

2928increased . It further concluded that the marina activities

2937during th ose years had adversely impacted the soil and sediment

2948at both the marina and MABE's adjacent property. See

2957Petitioner's Exhibit 37. A copy of the report was provided to

2968both the D istrict Office and Shannon Sue.

29761 8 . After receiving the report, on November 14, 2008, the

2988District Office staff conducted another inspection to "identify

2996any potential hazardous waste material discharge(s) or source(s )

3005of contamination at the property." The staff found evidence of

3015leaking containers, an engine " bone yard " along the fence line

3025with the MABE property, unlabeled containers, and stains under

3034the fuel tank. The inspection essentially confirmed the

3042finding s of E Science , Inc. ; accordingly , the District Office

3052concluded that a Site Assessment Report (SAR) under Chapter 62 -

3063780 was necessary in order to determine the extent of

3073contaminants on the property. A SAR assesses and describes the

3083extent of contaminat ion and makes recommendations as to how to

3094address it. On February 24, 2009, t he District Office sent a

3106letter to the Canonicos , as registered agents for Shannon Sue

3116and JHLM, advising them that "contaminants may have been

3125released or discharged into the environment." The letter

3133requir ed Shannon Sue and JHLM to initiate a s ite assessment

3145within 60 days , and to file a S AR that complied with the

3158requirements of Chapter 62 - 780 no later than July 13, 2009 . See

3172Petitioner's Exhibit 26. The D istrict Office su bsequently

3181extended the due date for the SAR to October 1, 2009.

319219 . By letter dated April 24, 2009, the Department also

3203advised the Canonicos that a n "ongoing investigation ,"

3211preliminary to agency action, revealed the possible mooring of

3220commercial ves sels at the dock on two occasions , which was

3231prohibited under the submerged land lease . ( Based upon visual

3242sightings confirmed by photographs , MABE had earlier advised the

3251District Office that this occurred on a frequent basis , but

3261subsequent inspections by the District Office resulted in only

3270two observations of commercial vessels at the dock . ) The letter

3282further reminded the Canonicos that , pursuant to Specific

3290Condition 24, boat repairs with the potential to discharge

3299pollutants or hazardous substances into the adjacent waters w ere

3309prohibited under the ERP. See Petitioner's Exhibit 21. As

3318noted above, d uring the July 2008 inspections, Mr. Canonico

3328admitted to Mr. Keirn that there were "multiple violations" of

3338that condition , including multiple dischar ges of oil and grease

3348associated with engine repairs.

33522 0 . Assuming t hat the matter could be resolved by consent

3365order, o n November 18, 2009, Mr. Keirn submitted for review by

3377his supervisor a "Civil Penalty Authorization Southeast Florida

3385District," which outlined the nature of the violations observed

3394and proposed penalties for those violations. See Petitioner's

3402Exhibit 12. By now, additional violations had been observed

3411through more inspections, including , as noted above, the mooring

3420of commercial vesse ls at the marina; a failure by JHLM to

3432construct an " exfiltration trench" as required by the original

34411996 permit, file annual reports for that system, and regularly

3451maintain the system; a failure to notify staff of the

3461commencement of construction; and a failure to maintain used oil

3471storage containers within secondary containment structures and

3478to legibly label them.

34822 1 . The Department has issued a n Administrative Directive

3493entitled Settlement Guidelines for Civil and Administrative

3500Penalties (Settlemen t Guidelines) , effective July 17, 2007,

3508which contains guidelines that "are intended to provide a

3517rational, fair and consistent method for determining the

3525appropriate amount of civil and administrative penalties the

3533Department should seek from responsible parties in settling

3541enforcement actions." See Department Exhibit 3. They are

3549intended only "for internal staff guidance," and the District

3558Office is authorized "to deviate from these guidelines . . .

3569when doing so will result in better compliance and bet ter

3580capability for carrying out the mission of the agency." Id. at

35912. Relying in part upon that document, Mr. Keirn recommended a

3602$27,500.00 civil penalty for violations of permit conditions ,

3611$2,500.00 for the lease violation, and $500.00 for investigati ve

3622costs, or a total civil penalty of $30,500.00. The Penalty

3633Rationale is found on page 3 of that exhibit. This

3643recommendation was approved by the District Office Director o n

3653December 11, 2009 , and was incorporated into a proposed consent

3663order . As poi nted out by Mr. Keirn, the purpose of the proposed

3677settlement was not to collect fines, but to restore and protect

3688the environment .

36912 2 . By email dated January 11, 2010, Mr. Keirn provided

3703the Canonicos with a copy of the draft consent order. See

3714Petition er's Exhibit 13. He asked that they review it and be

3726prepared to discuss the violations and penalties the following

3735week. A series of emails between the parties ensued over the

3746next month or so for the purpose of discussing the cited

3757violations and relat ed penalties . Mr. Keirn's email also

3767advised them to "get [the SAR] in ASAP" by mail, hand - delivery,

3780or email. The next day, January 12, 2010, the Canonicos

3790submitted a SAR to the Department.

37962 3 . On January 26 and February 1, 2010, the Canonicos sent

3809emails to Mr. Keirn providing their explanation for each

3818violation "in the hope of reducing the penalties outlined in the

3829Consent Order." See Petitioner's Exhibits 14 and 15. One

3838explanation for violating the prohibition against major repairs

3846(Specific C ondition 24) was a statement that the Canonicos

3856believed that engine repairs, scraping of boat hulls, and the

3866like were "minor" repair work. Mr. Keirn noted in an email to

3878his supervisor that the Canonicos' proposed "amounts are

3886seriously too low[,]" that "the statements are skewed to their

3897position," and that "[the explanations ] are not a logical reason

3908for reduction." See Petitioner's Exhibit 15.

39142 4 . By letter dated March 29, 2010, the Department advised

3926the C a nonicos that the SAR submitted on Januar y 12, 2009,

3939contained a number of deficiencies, that additional work must be

3949undertaken, and that an Addendum to the SAR must be submitted

3960within sixty days, or by the end of May 2010. See Petitioner's

3972Exhibit 28.

39742 5 . A round the same time that the Depart ment requested an

3988Addendum to the SAR, o n March 25 and April 1 , 2010, Respondents

4001executed a Consent Order to resolve all outstanding violations.

4010John and Barbara Canonico signed the Consent Order on behalf of

4021the non - agency Respondents.

40262 6 . In general terms, t he Consent Order noted that

4038Respondents collectively had failed to comply with the ERP

4047conditions in the following respects: they failed to construct

4056the stormwater system in accordance with the permit; they failed

4066to maintain the stormwater syst em, have it inspected by an

4077engineer on an annual basis, or have an engineer file annual

4088reports; they repeatedly conducted non - minor repairs,

4096maintenance, and painting of vessels resulting in unauthorized

4104discharges of contaminants ; they failed to install channel

4112markers; they failed to notify the Department of the ownership

4122transfer to Shannon Sue; they failed to submit written notice to

4133the Department at least 48 hours prior to the commencement of

4144construction of the project ; they failed to limit the use of the

4156marina to the mooring of recreational vessels; and they failed

4166to properly contain or maintain the used oil disposal storage

4176containers within a secondary storage structure. See Department

4184Exhibit 2 at 3. In addition, the Consent Order noted that based

4196upon the E Science , Inc. report, there were concentrations of

4206total recoverable hydrocarbons in soils that would reasonably

4214leach into groundwater; that a polluting condition had occurred;

4223and that Respondents had failed to submit a SAR by the

4234Octob er 1, 2009 deadline . Id. at 4. Finally, the Consent Order

4247noted that Shannon Sue had failed to obtain the required lease

4258since acquiring ownership of the property in 2002. Id.

42672 7 . Rather than imposing the $30,500.00 penalty originally

4278recommended by Mr. Keirn, a s a result of negotiations betwee n

4290the parties, the D epartment agreed to reduce the penalties in

4301the C onsent Order to $ 17, 750 .00 as settlement of the matter ,

4315including $500.00 in costs and expenses for investigating the

4324matter. The penalties w ere to be paid in installments , with the

4336first installment of $5,000.00 due immediately . This

4345installment has been paid. The Consent Order required

4353additional corrective action, the filing of a SAR, and the

4363obtaining of a lease by Shannon Sue within cert ain timeframes.

43742 8 . Because the Department's primary goals when resolving

4384enforcement actions are remediation and avoiding protracted

4391litigation rather than collecting fines , it is not unusual for a

4402final c onsent o rder to have a lower civil penalty than that

4415originally proposed. As explained by a Department witness, in

4424this case it s goals were (a) to avoid protracted litigation that

4436would delay the implementation of corrective actions; (b) to

4445require Respondents to quickly assess and begin the cleanup o f

4456contamination; (c) to restore and protect the environment as

4465quickly as possible; and ( d ) to require Respondents to remove

4477and contain all activities on the property that are prohibited

4487by the Permit and Lease. All of these considerations were taken

4498int o account in arriving at the terms and conditions of the

4510final Consent Order.

451329 . Immediately after the Consent Order was executed, MABE

4523timely filed its Petition challenging i t on numerous grounds

4533including a failure by the Department to address all viol ations

4544i n the Consent Order ; a failure to recognize continuing

4554violations; a failure to impose an adequate penalty; a failure

4564to incorporate language into the Consent Order to ensure that

4574all conditions will be met ; and a failure to consider all

4585relevant i nformation at the time the Consent Order was executed.

45963 0 . By letter dated June 29, 2010, the Department advised

4608the C a nonicos that no response to its March 29, 2010, letter had

4622been received, and that the SAR Addendum had not yet been filed.

4634The letter noted that even though the Consent Order had been

4645challenged, which "placed the timeframes contained therein in a

4654'proposed' status," the SAR Addendum was overdue and that it

4664must be submitted "immediately." See Petitioner's Exhibit 29.

4672The Canonicos did not respond to this letter. At hearing, a

4683Department employee interpreted th e language in the June 29

4693letter to mean that until this proceeding has been concluded,

4703the fine and corrective action are temporarily stayed.

4711Apparently , t he Canonicos have ass ume d the same thing and have

4724not performed any remedial action or pa id any further penalties

4735while this action is pending.

4740B. Rationale for the Consent Order

47463 1 . The Consent Order addressed the violations described

4756in Finding of Fact 2 6 , supra , and requi red Respondents to pay a

4770civil penalty of $2,000.00 for their failure to construct the

4781stormwater system in accordance with the Permit. There was no

4791negotiated reduction or increase in the $2,000.00 amount. Th is

4802amount was based on a provision in the Env ironmental Litigation

4813Reform Act (ELRA) codified in Section 403.121 , Florida Statutes.

4822That statute prescribes the penalties that must be imposed when

4832the Department pursues administrative remedies for violations of

4840Chapter 403. A Notice of Violation (NO V) must be issued to

4852trigger the ELRA process. In this case, the ELRA process was

4863not required since a NOV was never issued , but the Department

4874elected to impose that penalty .

48803 2 . The Consent Order requires Respondents to repair the

4891stormwater system a nd submit to the Department an as - built

4903certification form signed and sealed by a professional engineer

4912that the system meets or exceeds the requirements of the

4922permitted activity. In essence, Respondents are required to

4930re - build the system and certify that it is built consistent with

4943the Permit.

49453 3 . No water quality data was introduced indicating any

4956degradation of water quality at the marina from the exfiltration

4966system not being built according to the Permit.

49743 4 . To address Respondents' failure to maintain the

4984stormwater system, inspect it, and submit reports to the

4993Department, enforceable conditions were added to the Consent

5001Order, including the filing of reports that the Permit did not

5012previously contain, and a stipulated penalty of $100.00 per da y

5023for each day they fail to submit the required reports.

50333 5 . The Consent Order requires Respondents to pay a civil

5045penalty of $3,500.00 for their failure to maintain the

5055stormwater system, inspect it, and submit reports to the

5064Department. This amount was reduced in negotiations from an

5073initial amount of $7,000.00. Exercising its discretion, t he

5083Department did not consider economic gain by Respondents in

5092assessing the penalty. As noted earlier, t he Department's

5101primary goal in negotiating the Consent Ord er was to avoid a

5113long and uncertain litigation process that would delay an

5122enforceable order requiring Respondents to immediately implement

5129a Chapter 62 - 780 waste assessment and cleanup.

51383 6 . In order to address the finding that Respondents were

5150conductin g repairs and maintenance of vessels at the upland

5160portion of the marina in violation of the Permit, the Department

5171included language in the Consent Order that specifically defined

5180a "major repair," which was not included in the existing Permit.

5191This will make enforcement easier by clarifying any ambiguity

5200regarding what activities are prohibited. It also required that

5209any such activity must be conducted off - site, an additional

5220requirement that was not included in the existing Permit.

52293 7 . The Consent Ord er assessed a penalty of $5,000.00 for

5243the finding that Respondents were conducting repairs and

5251maintenance of vessels at the upland portion of the marina.

5261Th is amount was obtained using the Settlement Guidelines. Under

5271the Penalty Matrix in that documen t, which classifies violations

5281at three levels of potential for harm (major, moderate, and

5291minor), t he violation was identified as major , resulting in an

5302amount of $10,000.00 . This amount was later reduced to

5313$5,000.00 during negotiations. However, t he D epartment achieved

5323its goal of binding Respondents to an enforceable agreement that

5333would require them to immediately implement a Chapter 62 - 780

5344assessment and cleanup.

53473 8 . In order to address the violation that Respondents

5358failed to install channel marke rs, the Consent Order contained a

5369provision that required them to apply for the required permits

5379and install the markers within 30 days of receipt of the

5390permits . The Consent Order also contained a stipulated penalty

5400paragraph where Respondents would pay $100.00 per day for each

5410day of failing to comply with the marker requirements. The

5420Department is not precluded by the stipulated penalties from

5429pursuing any statutory remedies or other penalty options

5437available to it.

544039 . The Consent Order assessed a $7 50.00 penalty for

5451Respondents' failure to install the channel markers , which was

5460less than the original proposed fine of $2,000.00 based on ELRA

5472guidelines. To avoid uncertain and costly litigation, however,

5480and to get Respondents under an enforceable agr eement to

5490implement a Chapter 62 - 780 assessment and cleanup, the

5500Department reduced the penalty.

55044 0 . In order to address the finding that Respondents

5515failed to notify the Department of its ownership transfer to

5525Shannon Sue, the Consent Order required pa yment of $250.00 .

5536Although ELRA guidelines specified a $1,000.00 penalty, this

5545amount was lowered during negotiations to avoid protracted

5553litigation and to get Respondents under an enforceable agreement

5562to implement Chapter 62 - 780. The Consent Order also requires

5573submission of a $555.00 processing fee along with supporting

5582documents for assignment of the lease to the proper party. In

5593addition, a penalty of $500.00 was assessed for failure to

5603obtain the required lease after ownership transfer, along with

5612stipulated penalties of $100.00 per day for failure to do so.

56234 1 . For Respondents' failure to notify the Department

5633within 48 hours prior to commencing construction at the marina,

5643there is no corrective action required. However, the Department

5652assessed a $250.00 penalty, which was lowered during

5660negotiations from the ELRA penalty of $1,000.00 for the reasons

5671expressed above.

56734 2 . For Respondents' unauthorized mooring of commercial

5682vessels, the Consent Order requires a penalty of $2,500.00,

5692which was based on a second violation under Rule 18 - 14.002(4).

5704Although MABE submitted an affidavit, dated photographs, and

5712testimony to establish multiple violations of the rule, the

5721Department opted to rely only upon the two violations that its

5732inspector observed.

57344 3 . For Respondents' used oil violation, the Consent Order

5745requires removal of all containers, material, or equipment at

5754the marina that handle or contain petroleum or hazardous

5763substance s greater than one quart in quantity, unless they are

5774maintained in the ir original container or an independent and

5784secondary containment system which is designed to contain

5792discharges to the environment and is secure from the weather.

5802The assessed penalty of $2,000.00 was lowered from the ELRA

5813penalty of $4,000.00 during ne gotiations for the reasons

5823expressed above.

58254 4 . To address the finding that a polluting condition had

5837occurred at the marina and a SAR was not timely submitted, the

5849Department negotiated an enforceable agreement that requires

5856Respondents to commence and complete all tasks required under

5865Chapter 62 - 780 within certain timelines. A penalty was not

5876assessed because the Department desired to get Respondents under

5885an enforceable agreement to immediately implement the assessment

5893and cleanup corrective actions. In addition, by not imposing a

5903fine, the violator has more resources to assess and remediate

5913any contamination, which is often a very expensive undertaking.

59224 5 . U nder Rule 18 - 14.002, a person is subject to a fine of

5939up to $10,000.00 for each offense cons tituting a knowing refusal

5951to comply or a willful violation of the provisions of Chapter

5962253, Florida Statutes. The Department may impose fines not to

5972exceed $2,500.00 for the first offense; otherwise, approval of

5982the Board is required. Subsequent offens es carry a fine of

5993$1,000.00 to $10,000.00. In this case, the Consent Order

6004imposed a $2,500.00 fine for violation of the Lease and a

6016$500.00 fine for violating Section 253.77, Florida Statutes.

6024Neither fine was shown to be unreasonable under the

6033circums tances.

60354 6 . The penalty amounts, plus $500.00 for Department

6045costs, were mistakenly summed as $17,750.00 in paragraph 25 of

6056the Consent Order. The correct amount is $17,250.00.

60654 7 . In summary, t he Consent Order was issued to settle

6078existing outstandin g violations of law and requires Respondents

6087to pay penalties, reimburse Department costs, and take

6095corrective measures . It also establishes a framework for

6104compliance. Taking into consideration all of the circumstances,

6112t he terms are a reasonable exerci se of the Department's

6123enforcement discretion.

61254 8 . Having incurred substantial expenditures in legal fees

6135and site assessment costs in attempting to bring its neighbor

6145into compliance (which probably total much more than the civil

6155penalties assessed again st Respondents) , and waiting years for

6164the Department to take action, MABE is understandably

6172dissatisfied with many of the terms and conditions of the

6182Consent Order. One of MABE's concerns is that given

6191Respondents ' history of failing to comply with ERP a nd lease

6203conditions for more than a decade, they will not comply with the

6215assessment and remediation requirements of Chapter 62 - 780.

6224However, the Consent Order is an enforceable agreement that

6233compels immediate compliance with those rules. The Consent

6241Or der spells out in clear terms the ability of the Department to

6254seek the judicial imposition of damages or civil penalties , or

6264other appropriate relief, for any violations of the Consent

6273Order. Becaus e of Respondents' prior conduct, which amounted to

6283a cle ar disregard of permit terms and conditions, i t is presumed

6296that the Department will respond quickly t o reported violations,

6306if any occur, and take appropriate action.

631349 . MABE also questions the adequacy (and accuracy) of the

6324penalties. As explained in the Conclusions of Law, this issue

6334is a matter solely within the discretion of the agency. In the

6346same vein, MABE contends that the District Office did not take

6357into account all of the violations that have occurred over the

6368years , made mistakes in calcula ting the penalties, and failed to

6379consider the fact that Respondents have continued to violate

6388certain Permit and Lease conditions since the enforcement action

6397began. Although some violations were not addressed, some errors

6406in calculating penalties were m ade, and in some instances

6416multiple violations were counted as a single violation for

6425purposes of calculating a penalty, the Consent Order requires

6434that the violator undertake corrective actions that are designed

6443to remediate all prior violations , strictly comply with new

6452terms and conditions, and subject it to stern penalties should

6462future violations occur.

6465CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

64685 0 . The Division of Administrative Hearings has

6477jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties hereto

6486pursuant to Section s 120.569 and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes.

64955 1 . MABE is required to present evidence showing how its

6507substantial interests are affected by the terms and conditions

6516of the Consent Order. The evidence establishes that the

6525activities at the marina may have re sulted in contamination of

6536MABE's property, particularly at the fence line. MABE has

6545standing to initiate this proceeding.

65505 2 . A consent order is a consensual administrative order

6561authorized under Section 120.57(4), Florida Statutes, that is

6569agreed to by the Department and one or more respondents. There

6580are two types of consent orders, one that is a substitute for a

6593permit, the other that is designed to bring a violator back into

6605compliance with the law. See , e.g. , Williams v. Moeller and

6615Dep't of Env tl . Reg. , Case No s . 86 - 1095 and 86 - 1096 (DOAH Aug.

66346, 1986 ; DE R Nov. 4, 1986). In the latter type of case, the

6648scope of review focuses on whether the action taken by the

6659Department is a reasonable exercise of its enforcement

6667discretion. See Sarasota C ty. v . Dep't of Env tl . Reg. &

6681Falconer , Case No. 86 - 2462 (D OAH Jan. 22, 1987 ; DER Mar ch 8,

66961987). When a third party challenges a consent order, t he

6707Department has the burden of proving the consent order is a

6718reasonable exercise of its enforcement discretion. The

6725appropriate standard of review is whether the Department abused

6734its enforcement discretion in agreeing to the settlement. If

6743the Department is found not to have abused its discretion, the

6754consent order is adopted; if that burden of proof is not met,

6766then the consent order is voided. See Lambou, et al. v. Dep't

6778of Env tl . Protection, et al. , Case No. 02 - 4601 , 2003 Fla. ENV

6793LEXIS 209 at *4 ( DOAH June 23, 2003 ; DEP Sept. 22, 2003). If

6807the consent order is voided, the parties must re - enter

6818negotiations b efore a replacement consent order can be entered.

6828Id. at *6.

68315 3 . The abuse of discretion standard does not turn on

6843whether the consent order embodies the best possible settlement

6852or even whether a better settlement could have been reached.

6862Rather, the s ettlement that was reached must only be reasonable

6873under the circumstances. It merely needs to be appropriate

6882given all of the factors that must be considered by the agency

6894in reaching an agreement. In exercising its discretion, the

6903Department can consid er factors such as the nature of the

6914violation, the sufficiency of any penalty, the availability of

6923Department resources, Department enforcement priorities, and the

6930harm that might result from restoration. Id. at * 7. Depending

6941on those circumstances, th e Department may or may not seek total

6953restoration of damage caused by a violation. Enforcement

6961discretion also includes the decision to pursue enforcement in

6970the first instance.

69735 4 . The more persuasive evidence establishes that the

6983terms of the Consen t Order are a reasonable exercise of the

6995Department's enforcement discretion under the proven

7001circumstances. MABE did not present any evidence that the

7010corrective measures outlined in the Consent Order were

7018un reasonable.

70205 5 . MABE conten ds that , given R espondents flagrant

7031disregard of the law, the civil penalties in the Consent Order

7042are insufficient to deter Respondents from future violations of

7051the ERP and Lease. In its Proposed Recommended Order, it

7061devotes considerable argument for the purpose of de monstrating

7070that the penalties were improperly calculated , including

7077deviations from the Settlement Guidelines, mathematical errors,

7084the treatment of multiple violations as a single violation, and

7094a failure to address all violations. While Respondents' co nduct

7104was clearly reprehensible and even egregious at times, and

7113should have been curtailed years ago when first brought to the

7124attention of the Department in 2003 , the adequacy of penalties

7134lies within the discretion of the agency, rather than the

7144undersi gned. See North Fort Myers Homeowners Ass 'n v. Dep't of

7156Envtl. Reg. , Case No. 91 - 0235 (Recommended Order of Dismissal

7167Oct. 31, 1991), adopted , 1992 Fla. ENV LEXIS 14 (DER Jan. 29,

71791992) . Moreover, the Settlement Guidelines used by the

7188Department are not binding and allow the Department to deviate

7198from the m whenever this will result in better compliance. As to

7210a contention that the Department failed to consider all

7219violations, and thus lacked the necessary information to make an

7229informed decision before e xecuting the Consent Order, "with

7238regard to [a Consent Order's] claimed failure to address

7247violations not c overed under the Consent Order or potential

7257future violations, . . . [t]he decision to initiate enforcement

7267action is a matter that rests within the enforcement discretion

7277of the Department." Id. at *7.

72835 6 . The evidence supports a conclusion that the Consent

7294Order is a reasonable exercise of the Department 's enforcement

7304discretion and should not be voided .

7311RECOMMENDATION

7312Based on the foregoing Fin dings of Fact and Conclusions of

7323Law, it is

7326RECOMMENDED that the Department of Environmental Protection

7333enter a final order ratifying and approving Consent Order OGC

7343No. 08 - 1823 as final agency action of the Department.

7354DONE AND ENTERED this 4th day of Nov ember , 20 10 , in

7366Talla hassee, Leon County, Florida.

7371S

7372D . R. ALEXANDER

7376Administrative Law Judge

7379Division of Administrative Hearings

7383The DeSoto Building

73861230 Apalachee Parkway

7389Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3060

7394(850) 488 - 9675

7398Fax Filing (850) 921 - 6847

7404www.doah .state.fl.us

7406Filed with the Clerk of the

7412Division of Administrative Hearings

7416this 4th day of November, 2010.

7422ENDNOTE S

74241/ All rule references are to the current version of the Florida

7436Administrative Code.

74382/ Unless otherwise noted, a ll statutory ref erences are to the

74502009 version of the Florida Statutes.

74563 / The Intent to Issue indicates that when the application was

7468filed, 12 wet slips and 25 dry storage slips existed at the

7480project site, and that 6 of the slips were in a marina basin and

7494would not be changed, while the other 6 wet slips were at a dock

7508outside the basin.

7511COPIES FURNISHED:

7513Lea Crandall, Clerk

7516Department of Environmental Protection

75203900 Commonwealth Boulevard

7523Mail Station 35

7526Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3000

7531Thomas M. Beason, Gen eral Counsel

7537Department of Environmental Protection

75413900 Commonwealth Boulevard

7544Mail Station 35

7547Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3000

7552James M. Porter , Esquire

7556James M. Porter , P.A.

75602950 SunTrust International Center

7564One Southeast Third Avenue

7568Miami , Florida 3 3131 - 1712

7574Francine M. Ffolkes, Esquire

7578Department of Environmental Protection

75823900 Commonwealth Boulevard

7585Mail Station 35

7588Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3000

7593John S. Yudin, Esquire

7597Guy, Yudin & Foster, LLP

760255 East Ocean Boulevard

7606Stuart, Florida 34994 - 221 4

7612NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

7618All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within 15

7629days of the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to

7640this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that will

7651render a final order in this matter.

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PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 02/01/2011
Proceedings: Department of Environmental Protection and Board of Trustees of the iNternal Improvement Trust Fund's Response to the Petitioner's Exceptions filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/01/2011
Proceedings: Petitioner's Exceptions to Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/01/2011
Proceedings: Agency Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/31/2011
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 11/04/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 11/04/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 11/04/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held August 13-14, 2010). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 10/22/2010
Proceedings: Department of Environmental Protection and Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/22/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/22/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/21/2010
Proceedings: Notice of Appearance (of F. Ffolkes) filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/27/2010
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Alexander from Karen Tyre regarding parties' have agreed to submit proposed recommended orders by October 22, 2010, filed.
Date: 09/21/2010
Proceedings: Transcript of Proceedings (Volume I and II) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/30/2010
Proceedings: Deposition of Donald Keirn filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/30/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript filed.
Date: 08/18/2010
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 08/13/2010
Proceedings: Order (on Department's motion for summary judgment and/or motion to strike and memorandum of law).
PDF:
Date: 08/13/2010
Proceedings: Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/12/2010
Proceedings: Order (granting Department's unopposed request for official recognition).
PDF:
Date: 08/12/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmaental Protection's Notice of Withdrawal on Objection and Motion to Quash Duces Tecum of Subpoena to Leslie Smith filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/11/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Request for Official Recognition filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/09/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Objection and Motion to Quash Duces Tecum of Subpoena to Leslie Smith filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/06/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing Affidavit of Edmund Brennen filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/05/2010
Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing (hearing set for August 18 through 20, 2010; 9:30 a.m.; West Palm Beach, FL; amended as to hearing room location).
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Memorandum of Law in Opposition to the Department's Motion for Summary Judgement and/or Motion to Strike filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/02/2010
Proceedings: Order (granting Petitioner's request for official recognition).
PDF:
Date: 07/30/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Request for Official Recognition filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/28/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion for Extension of Time to Respond to the Department's Motion for Summary Judgment and/or Motion to Strike filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/20/2010
Proceedings: Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion Summary Judgment and/or Motion to Strike filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/19/2010
Proceedings: Motion for Summary Judgment and/or Motion to Strike and Memorandum of Law filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/17/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Response to Petitioner's First Set of Interrogatories filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/17/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Emvironmental Protection's Second Supplemental Response to Petitioner's First Request for Production and First Response to Petitioner's Second Request for Production of Documents filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Supplemental Response to Petitioner's First Request for Production filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2010
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Privilege Log .
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2010
Proceedings: Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Response to Petitioner's First Request for Production filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2010
Proceedings: Respondent Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Response to Petitioner's Request for Admissions filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/26/2010
Proceedings: Order on Motions.
PDF:
Date: 05/20/2010
Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing (hearing set for August 18 through 20, 2010; 9:30 a.m.; Tequesta, FL; amended as to dates of hearing).
PDF:
Date: 05/19/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's First Request for Production of Documents to the Consent Order Respondents filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/19/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's First Set of Interrogatories to the Consent Order Respondents filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/19/2010
Proceedings: Joint Motion for Continuance filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/17/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Second Request for Production of Documents filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/10/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's First Set of Interrogatories filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/10/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's First Request for Admissions filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/10/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's First Request for Production of Documents filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/10/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Service of Discovery filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/06/2010
Proceedings: Notice of Appearance (of J. Yudin) filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/05/2010
Proceedings: Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 05/05/2010
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for June 28, 2010; 9:30 a.m.; Tequesta, FL).
PDF:
Date: 05/04/2010
Proceedings: Petitioner's Memorandum of Law in Opposition to the Department's Motion to Strike and Motion in Limine filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/04/2010
Proceedings: Joint Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/29/2010
Proceedings: Initial Order.
PDF:
Date: 04/27/2010
Proceedings: Motion to Strike Portions of Petition and Motion in Limine filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/27/2010
Proceedings: Consent Oder filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/27/2010
Proceedings: Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/27/2010
Proceedings: Request for Assignment of Administrative Law Judge and Notice of Preservation of Record filed.

Case Information

Judge:
D. R. ALEXANDER
Date Filed:
04/27/2010
Date Assignment:
04/29/2010
Last Docket Entry:
02/01/2011
Location:
West Palm Beach, Florida
District:
Southern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
 

Counsels

Related DOAH Cases(s) (2):

Related Florida Statute(s) (10):

Related Florida Rule(s) (1):