95-003712
William Nelson Edwards vs.
Southwest Land Developers, Inc., And Department Of Environmental Protection
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, December 29, 1995.
Recommended Order on Friday, December 29, 1995.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8WILLIAM NELSON EDWARDS, )
12)
13Petitioner, )
15)
16vs. ) CASE NOS. 95-3712
21) 95-3713
23DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL ) 95-3714
28PROTECTION and SOUTHWEST LAND )
33DEVELOPERS, INC., )
36)
37Respondents. )
39___________________________________)
40RECOMMENDED ORDER
42Final hearing in the above-styled case was held in Port Charlotte, Florida,
54on October 30 and 31, 1995, before Robert E. Meale, Hearing Officer of the
68Division of Administrative Hearings.
72APPEARANCES
73The parties were represented at the hearing as follows:
82For Petitioners: William Nelson Edwards, pro se
8927365 Jones Loop Road
93Punta Gorda, Florida 33982
97Sharon Winesett, pro se
10127650 Jones Loop Road
105Punta Gorda, Florida 33982
109Richard W. Winesett, pro se
1141574 Passaic Avenue
117Ft. Myers, Florida 33901
121For Southwest David K. Oaks
126Land Developers, Oaks and Johnson, P.A.
132Inc.: 252 West Marion Avenue
137Punta Gorda, Florida 33950
141For Department W. Douglas Beason
146of Environmental Assistant General Counsel
151Protection: Department of Environmental Protection
1563900 Commonwealth Boulevard
159Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
162STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
166The issue in this case is whether Southwest Land Developers, Inc. is
178entitled to a general permit for the operation of a construction and demolition
191debris disposal facility at the site of a previously permitted operation in Port
204Charlotte.
205PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
207By Notification of Intent to Use a General Permit for a Construction and
220Demolition Debris Disposal Facility dated June 5, 1995, Southwest Land
230Developers, Inc. requested that Department of Environmental Protection reissue a
240general permit to allow Southwest Land Developers, Inc. to continue to operate a
253construction and demolition debris disposal facility off Jones Loop Road in Port
265Charlotte.
266By letter dated July 18, 1995, Department of Environmental Protection
276informed Southwest Land Developers, Inc. that the agency did not object to use
289of the general permit.
293Each Petitioner timely filed a petition challenging the reissuance of the
304general permit. The petitions alleged that the facility emits odors, noise, and
316litter that adversely affects nearby property, including property owned by
326Petitioners, and Alligator Creek, a natural waterbody near the facility.
336The parties stipulated that Sherra Winesett is dropped from DOAH Case No.
34895-3714. Thus, she is no longer a party in any of these cases.
361Six weeks prior to the final hearing, Southwest Land Developers, Inc. filed
373an application with the Southwest Florida Water Management District for an
384environmental resource permit (formerly referred to as a permit for the
395management and storage of surface water) for the facility. As of the final
408hearing in the subject cases, the water management district had not yet acted on
422the application.
424At the hearing, Petitioners called nine witnesses and offered into evidence
43512 exhibits. Southwest Land Developers, Inc. called two witnesses and offered
446into evidence 10 exhibits. Department of Environmental Protection called no
456witnesses and offered into evidence no exhibits. All exhibits were admitted.
467The transcript was filed December 14, 1995. Rulings on timely filed
478proposed findings of fact are in the appendix.
486FINDINGS OF FACT
4891. Southwest Land Developers, Inc. (Applicant) is a Florida corporation
499whose shares are divided equally between Bruce Laishley and Rick Treworgy.
510Applicant owns and operates a construction and demolition debris disposal (C&D)
521facility located at 27595 North Jones Loop Road in Punta Gorda. Applicant's
533shareholders quitclaimed the property to Applicant on March 11, 1993.
543References to "Applicant" prior to this date are to Applicant's shareholders.
5542. Applicant intends to continue operating the facility under a general
565permit. Applicant filed a Notification of Intent to Use a General Permit for a
579Construction and Demolition Debris Disposal Facility dated June 5, 1995 (NOI)
590(Applicant Exhibit Number 1).
5943. The NOI describes the facility as a receiving site for construction and
607demolition materials for recycling and disposal. The NOI states that the
618facility shall be constructed 28 feet high and covered with two feet of clean
632soil and grass, thus reaching a total height of 30 feet above existing ground
646level.
6474. By letter dated July 18, 1995, Department of Environmental Protection
658(DEP) informed Applicant that the agency did not object to Applicant's use of
671the general permit through July 18, 2000, for the activities described in the
684NOI.
6855. Applicant opened the C&D facility in 1990 under a general permit.
697Applicant filed on May 30, 1990, a Notification of Intent to Use a General
711Permit for a Construction and Demolition Debris Solid Waste Facility (1990 NOI)
723(Petitioner Exhibit Number 5). The 1990 NOI states that the property consists
735of 19.18 acres, including two acres devoted to waste disposal. (A diagram
747accompanying the 1990 NOI accurately reports that the actual acreage is 18.18
759acres.) The 1990 NOI states that the planned active life of the facility would
773be two years.
7766. The general description of operations contained in the 1990 NOI
787mentions that two acres would be used for waste disposal. The 1990 NOI
800describes normal business hours as Monday through Saturday 7:30 am to 5 pm. The
8141990 NOI assures that gates would be used to prevent unauthorized dumping, only
827clean debris and C&D materials would be accepted, unauthorized materials would
838be transported to the County landfill, and all areas would be covered with two
852feet of clean soil and sodded or seeded to control erosion. After closure, the
8661990 NOI promises that: "All filled areas then will serve as a landscaped berm
880to provide a privacy barrier to future home owners."
8897. Two diagrams accompany the 1990 NOI. The first is a facility
901illustration depicting a rectangular piece of property with two proposed wooded
912homesites toward the front (north) facing North Jones Loop Road, an excavation
924site/lake taking up at least half of the back of the property, and a thin strip
940designated to receive C&D debris behind (and, for a short distance, alongside
952the rear of) the excavation site/lake. The first diagram also reveals that a
965creek (Alligator Creek) crosses the northwest corner of the property.
9758. The second diagram accompanying the 1990 NOI is a diagram of the
988proposed landscape berm running along the south property line behind the lake.
1000The proposed landscape berm is the above-described strip to be formed from C&D
1013debris. The strip is 80 feet wide running along 600 feet at the back of the
1029property and extending about 150 feet to the north at either end. and is tapered
1044with a 2:1 (two feet horizontal to one foot vertical) slope.
10559. The second diagram displays all elevations as "ELEV. x," such as the
1068high water table as "ELEV. 15.0'." The elevation of the ground is "ELEV. 21.0'"
1082to "ELEV. 17.0'." The elevation of the top of the C&D mound is "ELEV. 33.0',"
1097which includes two feet of clean fill capping the mound. Thus, the second
1110diagram represents that the C&D mound would extend from the high water table at
112415' NGVD to 33' NGVD for an apparent height, from existing ground, of 12-16
1138feet.
113910. The second diagram shows that the elevation of the proposed 8.18-acre
1151lake would be 15 feet NGVD. The second diagram also reveals a 10-foot wide
1165swale running between the strip and the south property line.
117511. Prior to authorizing Applicant to proceed under the general permit in
11871990, DEP required Applicant to obtain a permit for the management and storage
1200of surface water (MSSW) from the Southwest Florida Water Management District
1211(SWFWMD). Instead, Applicant obtained a letter from SWFWMD stating that the
1222project was exempt from permitting due to the small area of land involved.
123512. The SWFWMD exemption letter was erroneously issued, based partly on a
1247confusion between the disposal area, which was below the MSSW threshold of ten
1260acres, and the total, contiguous land under common ownership, which exceeded the
127210-acre threshold. SWFWMD personnel also believed at the time that Applicant
1283proposed the "construction of a landscape berm and filling a borrow pit; not a
129730 foot high C&D Facility" (Petitioner Exhibit Number 4). In a letter dated
1310July 25, 1995, SWFWMD noted this misconception and determined that the project
1322was not exempt from the requirement of an MSSW permit.
133213. In any event, after receiving the SWFWMD exemption letter in 1990, DEP
1345allowed Applicant to construct the C&D facility under the general permit, which
1357remained effective for five years.
136214. The first phase of Applicant's activities on the site involved the
1374removal of marketable fill from the rear of the property. Most of the original
1388two-acre fill site was contained in this larger excavation area. During the
1400first phase of construction, no offsite material was used to fill the
1412excavation. Later, during the second phase of Applicant's activities, clean
1422offsite debris, consisting of earth and concrete, was added below the water
1434table. Once the fill reached the elevation of the water table, Applicant began
1447allowing the addition of construction and demolition debris. Applicant first
1457received construction and demolition debris at the end of 1993 or early 1994.
147015. Shortly after construction began on the facility, a DEP employee
1481noticed that the facility had exceeded what Applicant had described in the 1990
1494NOI. Instead of demanding a new NOI, the DEP employee told Applicant to supply
1508an engineering update.
151116. By letter to DEP dated September 25, 1991, Applicant provided new
1523drawings, showing, among other things, that all water was to be retained onsite
1536(1991 Update) (Petitioner Exhibit Number 2a). The 1991 Update contains three
1547drawings: a diagram of existing conditions with elevations, a diagram of
1558proposed conditions with elevations, and a cross-section of part of the second
1570diagram.
157117. The first diagram attached to the 1991 Update shows a rectangle of
1584land with prevailing elevations ranging from 10-12 feet. Perimeter elevations
1594are 18-22 feet. A large area inside the rectangle contains elevations of 2.3-
16075.8 feet. Absent dewatering, this large area would be a lake typically 9-12
1620feet deep. Compared with information from the 1990 NOI, the first diagram
1632reveals that Applicant had already removed about eight feet of fill from the
1645uplands and 15 feet of fill from the lake, which was somewhat smaller than the
1660ultimate size proposed in the first diagram of the 1990 NOI.
167118. The second diagram attached to the 1991 Update confirms substantial
1682departures from the plans contained in the 1990 NOI. The lake is relocated to
1696the north, still south of what was depicted as proposed homesites on the first
1710diagram of the 1990 NOI, and it is reduced from 8.18 acres to 2 acres.
172519. The second diagram of the 1991 Update reveals that the area designated
1738to receive C&D debris has been expanded. Formerly ending about 250 feet from the
1752southeast corner of the property, the area now extends to about 600 feet from
1766the southeast corner of the property.
177220. The second diagram reveals that the proposed C&D mound as grown by 17
1786feet since the 1990 NOI. Previously reaching a height of 33' NGVD, the proposed
1800mound in the 1991 Update would reach a height of 50' NGVD. As before, the mound
1816would be capped by two feet of clean fill. From existing ground level, the
1830height of the capped C&D mound has grown from 12 feet high in the 1990 NOI to 29
1848feet high in the 1991 Update, using the value of 21' NGVD from existing ground
1863level, as set forth in the 1990 NOI.
187121. As depicted in the 1991 Update, the fill area is expanded from an 80-
1886foot wide strip covering about two acres to a much larger area. The scale on
1901the diagrams showing existing and proposed conditions is wrong, due to reduction
1913in photocopying. The actual scale is one inch equals about 83 feet, as is
1927obvious in the relationship of the eight-inch south property line to the 662.3
1940feet it is intended to represent. (The 1199.89-foot measurement on the east
1952property line is inaccurate. It represents the entire east property line,
1963including the area reserved for homesites. See first diagram in 1990 NOI. The
1976area actually depicted on the two diagrams omits the northerly 162 feet of the
1990entire parcel.)
199222. The fill area in the second diagram attached to the 1991 Update is
20066.67 acres. About 3.5 acres of the fill area would be covered by 33 feet of C&D
2023fill, with the remainder under progressively less fill due to the tapering off
2036of the sides of the roughly 30-foot high mound. The first and second diagrams
2050reveal that the excavation area has consumed 75-100 feet of the area to the
2064north, which had been reserved for wooded homesites under the first diagram of
2077the 1990 NOI.
208023. The second diagram depicts a swale running along the entire south
2092perimeter and east and west perimeters north to the beginning of the relocated
2105lake, where the swale empties into the lake. The interior swale mound (closer
2118to the C&D fill) is a constant elevation of 20 feet NGVD.
213024. The third diagram attached to the 1991 Update shows that, although the
2143slope of the fill area is reduced to 3:1, the height of C&D debris is increased
2159from 31 feet NGVD to 48 feet NGVD. For stormwater calculations, the third
2172diagram projects that 1/2 inch retention over 18.18 acres would raise the lake
2185level by 4.5 inches, as opposed to merely 1.11 inches for the larger lake shown
2200in the second diagram of the 1990 NOI.
220825. Satisfied with the 1991 Update, despite the substantial changes in the
2220proposed project, DEP's representative merely added the three new drawings to
2231the file. The representative did not revisit the general permit under which
2243Applicant was then operating because DEP does not allow the modification of a
2256general permit.
225826. The NOI contains a narrative and illustrative description of the C&D
2270facility, as described above, including the 1991 Update. The first diagram of
2282the NOI is the second diagram of the 1991 Update, except for a correction in the
2298bottom elevation of the relocated lake. The second diagram of the NOI is the
2312third diagram of the 1991 Update.
231827. The third diagram of the NOI accurately depicts the changes through
2330the 1991 Update. The third diagram reveals that the northeast corner of the
2343facility is within 200 feet of a potable water well.
235328. The third diagram, which is entitled a Site & Closure Plan, states
2366that the north line of the permitted area, which does not include the proposed
2380wooded homesites to the north, depicts the "limits of original footprint."
2391Actually, the northeast corner of the permitted part of the property is almost
2404200 feet farther north than depicted in the first diagram of the 1990 NOI. In
2419the 1990 NOI, the northeast corner of the permitted area was about 450 feet from
2434the northeast corner of the property. In the 1991 Update, assuming that
2446Applicant could unilaterally extend the permitted area without a new notice of
2458intent, the northeast corner of the permitted area cannot be located with any
2471certainty due to the roughness of the hand- drawn perimeter in the first and
2485second diagrams and their failure to disclose the northeast property corner. In
2497the NOI, the northeast corner of the permitted area is less than 400 feet from
2512the northeast corner of the property.
251829. Other relevant features of the NOI are assurances in the operational
2530plan that no odor problems "are expected" due to the inert nature of the fill.
2545In the event of objectionable odors, Applicant promises to control them by
"2557covering any decaying materials periodically as required."
256430. The NOI summarizes the results of a geotechnical investigation, which
2575was a requirement added since the 1991 Update. The Summary states that the
2588report results lead Applicant to "anticipate the ground will have no problem
2600supporting the facility to a height of 30' above existing ground." The
2612geotechnical report indicates that the purpose of the investigation was to
2623determine the suitability of subsurface soils (to an excavation depth of 15-20
2635feet) for use as fill. The geotechnical report concludes that the "proposed
2647Quarry Development" is feasible, but recommends excavation no deeper than 15
2658feet, which would leave a three-foot undisturbed layer between the bottom of the
2671excavation and the top of the confining layer. In a subsequent addendum, the
2684report was amended to recommend excavating no deeper than 18 feet.
269531. Since beginning operation in 1990, the C&D facility has received
2706discarded construction materials, as intended. Applicant recycles some of the
2716materials that it receives, such as copper, aluminum, and steel. Two years ago,
2729DEP prohibited C&D facilities from accepting containers, so Applicant placed a
2740dumpster in the front to collect containers for later removal to approved sites.
275332. In the typical transaction, a spotter employed by Applicant meets the
2765truck in the staging area for unloading. The spotter determines that the load
2778is in compliance before permitting the truck driver to dump. If the load is
2792completely unacceptable, the spotter orders the truck driver to leave the site
2804without dumping.
280633. Otherwise, the spotter tells the driver to discard all containers in
2818the dumpster in the front of the facility. Then, after the remaining load is
2832dumped, the spotter removes recyclables and places them in a temporary storage
2844area before they are taken by contractors or transported to approved locations
2856elsewhere. The spotter also removes unauthorized items, such as appliances,
2866hazardous materials, tires, furniture, batteries, and oil-based paint, and sets
2876these materials aside in a designated area for transporting to approved
2887locations elsewhere.
288934. Next, Applicant's equipment operator crushes the load. If he sees
2900anything unauthorized in the pile, he orders the spotter to remove it.
291235. In the five years that the C&D facility has operated, there have been
2926two cited violations. Neither is indicative of a intentional or reckless
2937disregard of the law. It is questionable whether the violations even suggest
2949negligence on the part of the operator of the facility.
295936. The first violation involved a 55-gallon drum of lacquer thinner,
2970which the spotter had detected and placed to one side while the manager decided
2984how to dispose of it properly. Due to its surveillance of the customer who left
2999the drum, DEP inspected the facility immediately after Applicant's facility
3009received the drum and issued a warning letter to Applicant dated December 22,
30221992. Applicant complied with DEP's orders and disposed of the drum correctly.
303437. The other violation involved the acceptance of containers. Due to a
3046misunderstanding of a change in the law, Applicant allowed containers to be
3058dumped, as it had previously done lawfully. DEP inspected the facility in mid-
30711993 and informed Applicant that it could not accept containers anymore.
3082Applicant removed all of the accessible containers, and DEP reinspected and
3093determined that the facility was in compliance.
310038. Applicant's employees remove litter from Jones Loop Road, 1.5 miles in
3112one direction and one mile in the other, three days a week. Applicant operates
3126the facility from 7 am to 5 pm Monday to Friday and 7 am to 2 pm on Saturday,
3145which represents one-half hour less weekly than permitted (three hours less on
3157Saturday, but one-half hour more each weekday, as the facility was to open at
31717:30 am, not 7 am).
317639. During the two summers since Applicant began accepting C&D debris--
31871994 and 1995--strong, noxious odors have emanated from the site. Smelling like
3199sewage or sludge, the odors irritate the throats and trigger headaches of nearby
3212persons. One of the Petitioners noted that the odor permeated the air
3224conditioning ducts of a nearby home if the garage door were left open.
323740. The source of the odor is unknown, but is suspected to be some form of
3253sulphur, perhaps leaching from the gypsum in the drywall debris. There were no
3266odor problems before Applicant began accepting C&D debris and dramatically
3276deepened the retention pond. Applicant has spent up to $15,000 trying to
3289eliminate the odor, but has not yet succeeded.
329741. There are other complaints concerning offsite runoff and groundwater
3307contamination involving Alligator Creek and nearby property not owned by
3317Applicant. The evidence in the record concerning these matters is anecdotal and
3329best reserved for more systematic consideration in the MSSW permit (now known as
3342environmental resource permit) for which Applicant from SWFWMD.
335042. By letter dated September 22, 1995, SWFWMD acknowledged that it is
3362reviewing Applicant's application for an MSSW permit and requested Applicant to
"3373[c]urtail all landfill activity to the greatest extent possible until the
3384permit application has been approved by the District."
3392CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
339543. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction over the
3405subject matter. Sections 120.57(1) and 403.814(3), Florida Statutes. (All
3414references to Sections are to Florida Statutes. All references to Rules are to
3427the Florida Administrative Code.)
343144. In the absence of DEP rules, Section 403.707 requires no permit for
3444C&D facilities, as long as the activity does not create a "public nuisance or
3458any condition adversely affecting the environment or public health" and the
3469activity does not violate other state or local laws. The presence of the strong
3483odor at Applicant's facility means that a permit would be required, even if DEP
3497had promulgated no rules.
350145. Section 403.707(9) authorizes DEP to deny a permit to an
"3512irresponsible" owner or operator. An irresponsible owner or operator includes
3522any entity, such as a corporation or its shareholders holding more than 50
3535percent of the stock, that has "repeatedly violated pertinent statutes, rules,
3546or orders or permit terms or conditions relating to any solid waste management
3559facility . . .."
356346. Section 403.707 effectively prohibits the operation of a C&D facility,
3574if the facility generates the kinds of odors that Applicant's facility has
3586generated. There are repeated instances of the generation of such odors over
3598two periods of time separated by nearly a year. Despite Applicant's otherwise
3610responsible operation of the facility, the repeated odors emanated from the
3621facility, which have not been corrected by Applicant, render Applicant an
"3632irresponsible" owner or operator. Thus, Applicant is not entitled to a permit
3644under Section 403.707.
364747. In fact, DEP has promulgated rules governing C&D facilities. Rule 62-
3659710.200(19) defines construction and demolition debris as
3666materials generally considered to be not water
3673soluble and non-hazardous in nature, including
3679but not limited to steel, glass, brick,
3686concrete, asphalt material, pipe, gypsum wall-
3692board, and lumber, from the construction or
3699destruction of a structure as part of a con-
3708struction or demolition project or from the
3715renovation of a structure. The term includes
3722rocks, soils, tree remains, trees, and other
3729vegetative matter which normally results from
3735land clearing or land development operations
3741for a construction project including such
3747debris from construction structures at a site
3754remote from the construction or demolition
3760project site. Mixing of construction and
3766demolition debris with other types of solid
3773waste, including material which is not from
3780the actual construction or destruction of a
3787structure, will cause it to be classified as
3795other than construction and demolition debris.
380148. Rule 62-701.200(1) defines "clean debris" to include any solid waste
3812that is "virtually inert," not a pollution threat to groundwater or surface
3824water, not a fire hazard, and likely to retain its physical and chemical
3837structure under expected conditions of disposal or use, including brick, glass,
3848ceramics, and uncontaminated concrete, including embedded steel or pipe.
385749. Rule 62-701.803(1) requires an owner or operator of a C&D facility to
3870notify DEP in writing of the intent to use a general permit. The notification
3884must be signed and sealed by a professional engineer and must include a site
3898plan, geotechnical investigation meeting the criteria of Rule 62-701.420,
3907statement of the planned active life and height of the facility, and a plan for
3922the operation and closure of the facility.
392950. Rule 62-701.320(9) states that DEP shall issue a permit to an existing
3942facility "which is being operated in accordance with this chapter at the time
3955for permit renewal" or deny the permit if the owner or operator does not provide
"3970reasonable assurances" that the requirements of Chapters 62-4 and 62-701 will
3981be satisfied.
398351. DEP may deny the permit even if the applicant is not an
"3996irresponsible" owner or operator. Rule 62-701.320(3) provides that, in
4005determining if an applicant has provided reasonable assurances that DEP
4015standards will be met, DEP shall determine if the owner or operator is an
"4029irresponsible person" by considering there exist "repeated violations of
4038applicable statutes, rules, orders, or permit conditions caused by a permit
4049applicant after October, 1988, relating to the operation of any solid waste
4061management facility in this state ...." The owner or operator includes
4072shareholders of a corporate owner or operator if the shareholders own more than
4085half of the stock of the corporation. The clear implication is that the issue of
4100repeated violations is merely one factor for DEP to consider in determining
4112whether to issue a general permit.
411852. Applicant must provide reasonable assurances as to compliance with
4128Rule 62-701.300, as well as Chapters 62-4 and 62- 701. Rule 62-701.803(3) adds
4141that Rules 62-701.330 through 62- 701.630 do not apply to C&D facilities, except
4154that there may be no violations of the prohibitions set forth in Rule 62-701.300
4168or the water quality standards set forth in Chapters 62-3 and 62- 302.
418153. Unless a facility is authorized by a DEP permit or site certification
4194in effect on January 6, 1993, Rule 62-701.300(2)(c) prohibits the storage or
4206disposal of solid waste within 500 feet of an existing or approved potable water
4220well unless the facility was originally permitted before the well was drilled.
4232However, this prohibition does not apply to the renewal of an existing permit if
4246the renewal does not involve "lateral expansion" or "vertical expansion." In
4257this case, Applicant has expanded the facility laterally and vertically since
4268the 1990 NOI, which Applicant now seeks to renew. Although not strictly
4280relevant, Applicant has possibly expanded the facility laterally since the 1991
4291Update. The facility is about 200 feet from a potable water well, so it
4305violates this prohibition as well.
431054. Unless a facility is authorized by a DEP permit or site certification
4323in effect on January 6, 1993, Rule 62-701.300(2)(e) and (f) bar the storage or
4337disposal of solid waste in an area subject to frequent and periodic flooding
4350unless flood-control measures are in place and in any natural or artificial body
4363of water including groundwater. There is some evidence of flooding of the site,
4376but insufficient evidence of the frequency of such flooding to find a violation
4389of this rule. The evidence is unclear as to flooding. However, factual issues
4402concerning flooding may be addressed in the SWFWMD permitting review, which, as
4414noted below, must precede the issuance of this general permit.
442455. Rule 62-701.803(4) requires that stormwater be controlled in
4433accordance with Chapters 62-25 and 62-330. The owner or operator must supply
4445DEP with a copy of any stormwater permit to DEP or documentation that no permit
4460is required "before the facility receives waste for disposal." Applicant lacks
4471the required MSSW or environmental resource permit. DEP proposes issuing the
4482general permit, but prohibiting work in reliance upon the new general permit
4494until Applicant acquires the MSSW or environmental resource permit. The rule
4505may permit such an approach in appropriate cases, but the piecemeal review that
4518this C&D facility has received requires DEP to demand that Applicant obtain the
4531required permit from the SWFWMD before issuing the general permit in this case.
4544This project has proceeded under piecemeal review, especially of its substantial
4555modifications in the 1991 Update and the erroneous SWFWMD determination that the
4567project was exempt from the requirement of an MSSW permit. The project has
4580produced noxious fumes the only two summers of its current operation. These
4592facts demand that DEP give the proposed project more systematic review, which is
4605facilitated by allowing SWFWMD first to perform its review of the project's
4617stormwater management elements.
462056. Applicant has the burden of proof of entitlement to the general
4632permit. Department of Transportation v. J. W. C. Company, Inc., 396 So. 2d 778
4646(Fla. 1st DCA 1981). For the grounds set forth above, Applicant has failed to
4660provide the reasonable assurances necessary that it is entitled to the general
4672permit due to the repeated noxious odors emanating from the facility,
4683Applicant's resulting status as an "irresponsible" owner or operator, the
4693location of the facility relative to the potable water well, and the absence of
4707an MSSW or environmental resource permit from SWFWMD for the project.
4718RECOMMENDATION
4719It is
4721RECOMMENDED that the Department of Environmental Protection enter a final
4731order denying the subject general permit.
4737ENTERED on December 29, 1995, in Tallahassee, Florida.
4745___________________________________
4746ROBERT E. MEALE, Hearing Officer
4751Division of Administrative Hearings
4755The DeSoto Building
47581230 Apalachee Parkway
4761Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550
4764(904) 488-9675
4766Filed with the Clerk of the
4772Division of Administrative Hearings
4776this December 29, 1995.
4780APPENDIX TO THE RECOMMENDED ORDER IN
4786CASE NO. 95-3712, 95-3713 and 95-3714
4792Rulings on Petitioners' Proposed Findings
47971-4: adopted or adopted in substance, except that discrepancies between
4807the proposal and actual work is rejected as irrelevant. Such matters are
4819appropriate to enforcement proceedings, not permitting proceedings.
48265 (first sentence): adopted or adopted in substance.
48345 (second sentence): rejected as irrelevant. The original individual
4843applicants remained liable on the original general permit until they notified
4854DEP and obtained DEP's consent to the transfer. Rule 62-4.120(5). This
4865violation of Chapter 62-4 is thus technical and not a suitable basis on which to
4880deny a new permit.
48845: rejected as unnecessary.
48886: adopted or adopted in substance.
48947-8: rejected as irrelevant. See ruling on 1-4 above.
49039: adopted or adopted in substance.
490910: rejected as unsupported by the appropriate weight of the evidence, as
4921to proposed implication that this incident constitutes evidence of Applicant's
"4931irresponsibility." The sole evidence of "irresponsibility" is based on the
4941repeated noxious odors.
494411: rejected as unsupported by the appropriate weight of the evidence.
495512: rejected as irrelevant. See ruling on 5 (second sentence) above.
4966Rulings on Applicant's Proposed Findings
49711a: adopted or adopted in substance, except as to acreage.
49811b-1f: adopted or adopted in substance.
49871g: rejected as unsupported by the appropriate weight of the evidence, as
4999to characterization of minor violations noted in the recommended order.
50091h: rejected as unsupported by the appropriate weight of the evidence.
50201i: rejected as irrelevant, unsupported by the appropriate weight of the
5031evidence, and recitation of evidence.
50361j: rejected as irrelevant.
5040COPIES FURNISHED:
5042Kenneth Plante, General Counsel
5046Department of Environmental Protection
50503900 Commonwealth Blvd.
5053Tallahassee, FL 32399-3000
5056Virginia B. Wetherell, Secretary
5060Department of Environmental Protection
50643900 Commonwealth Blvd.
5067Tallahassee, FL 32399-3000
5070W. Douglas Beason
5073Assistant General Counsel
5076Department of Environmental Protection
50803900 Commonwealth Blvd.
5083Tallahassee, FL 32399-3000
5086Southwest Land Developers, Inc.
5090c/o Bruce Laishley
509328062-A Mitchell Ave.
5096Punta Gorda, FL 33982
5100William Nelson Edwards
510327365 Jones Loop Rd.
5107Punta Gorda, FL 33982
5111Sharon B. Winesett
511427650 Jones Loop Rd.
5118Punta Gorda, FL 33982
5122Richard W. and Sherra Winesett
51271574 Passaic Ave.
5130Ft. Myers, FL 33901
5134NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
5140All parties have the right to submit written exceptions to this Recommended
5152Order. All agencies allow each party at least 10 days in which to submit
5166written exceptions. Some agencies allow a larger period within which to submit
5178written exceptions. You Should contact the agency that will issue the final
5190order in this case concerning agency rules on the deadline for filing exceptions
5203to this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be
5215filed with the agency that will issue the final order in this case.
5228=================================================================
5229AGENCY FINAL ORDER
5232=================================================================
5233STATE OF FLORIDA
5236DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION
5240WILLIAM NELSON EDWARDS, )
5244)
5245Petitioner, )
5247) OGC Case No. 95-1599
5252vs. ) DOAH Case Nos. 95-3712
5258) 95-3713
5260DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL ) 95-3714
5265PROTECTION and SOUTHWEST )
5269LAND DEVELOPERS, INC., )
5273)
5274Respondent, )
5276_______________________________)
5277FINAL ORDER
5279On December 29, 1995, a Hearing Officer with the Division of Administrative
5291Hearings (hereafter DOAH), submitted his Recommended Order to the Respondent,
5301Department of Environmental Protection (hereafter Department). Copies of the
5310Recommended Order were simultaneously served on the Petitioners William Nelson
5320Edwards, Sharon Winesett, and Richard W. Winesett, and on, the Co-Respondent,
5331Southwest Land Developers, Inc. (hereafter Southwest). A copy of the
5341Recommended Order is attached hereto as Exhibit A.
5349On January 12, Petitioner Richard W. Winesett (hereafter Petitioner) filed
5359with the Department his Exceptions to the Recommended Order. On January 16, the
5372Department and Southwest filed Exceptions to the Recommended Order. All
5382Exceptions were timely filed. The Department filed a Response to Petitioner's
5393Exceptions on September 25, 1995. The matter is `now before the Secretary of
5406the Department for final agency action.
5412BACKGROUND
5413Southwest filed a Notification of Intent to Use a General Permit for a
5426construction and demolition debris disposal facility on June 5, 1995. This
5437facility is currently operating off Jones Loop Road in Port Charlotte, Florida,
5449and has been operating under a general permit from the Department since 1990.
5462On July 18, the Department informed Southwest by letter that it had no objection
5476to the use of the general permit. The Department also published notice in a
5490local newspaper of receipt of Southwest's Notification, thus creating a point of
5502entry for substantially affected persons in accordance with Section 403.814,
5512Florida Statutes (F.S.)
5515Petitioners timely filed challenges in accordance with sections 403.814 and
5525120.57, F.S. The petitions were consolidated for purposes of hearing. A formal
5537administrative hearing was held in these consolidated cases before DOAH Hearing
5548Officer Robert E. Meale on October 30-31, 1995, in Port Charlotte, Florida.
5560Proposed recommended orders were timely filed by Petitioner and Southwest after
5571the completion of the formal hearing.
5577The Hearing Officer found that Southwest had not provided reasonable
5587assurance of entitlement to a general permit. The reasons for these findings
5599were summaried by the Hearing Officer as the repeated noxious odors emanating
5611from the facility, Applicant's resulting status as an irresponsible owner or
5622operator, the location of the facility relative to the potable water well, and
5635the absence of an MSSW or environmental resource permit frog SWFWMD for the
5648project. The Hearing Officer thus recommended, that the Department enter a
5659Final Order denying the general permit.
5665Preface to Rulings on Exceptions
5670The parties filed several exceptions taking issue with certain findings of
5681fact and conclusions of law in the Recommended Order. As a preface to the
5695rulings on these exceptions it is appropriate to comment on the standard of
5708review imposed by law on an agency in reviewing recommended orders submitted by
5721DOAH hearing officers.
5724Under Section 120.57(1)(b)10, F.S., a reviewing agency may reject or modify
5735the conclusions of law and interpretations of administrative rules contained in
5746the recommended order of an administrative hearing officer. However, these
5756statutory provisions mandate that an agency may not reject or modify findings of
5769fact made by a hearing officer, unless a review of the complete record
5782demonstrates that such findings were not based on competent substantial evidence
5793or that the proceedings on which the findings were based do not comply with the
5808essential requirements of law. See Freeze v. Dept. of Business Relation, 556
5820So.2d 1204 (Fla. 5th DCA 1990); Florida Department of Corrections v. Bradley,
5832510 So.2d 1122 (Fla. 1st DCA 1987).
5839The agency reviewing, a recommended order may not reweigh the evidence,
5850resolve conflicts therein or judge the credibility of witnesses, as those are
5862evidentiary matters within the province of the hearing officer as the trier of
5875the facts. Heifetz v. Dept. of Business Regulation, 475 So.2d 1277 (Fla. 1st
5888DCA 1985). Consequently, if the record of the DOAH proceedings discloses any
5900competent, substantial evidence to support a finding of fact made by the hearing
5913officer, the reviewing agency, is bound by such finding. Bradley, supra, 1123.
5925The transcript in these proceedings wad rendered in two volumes, each
5936numbered separately. References to the transcript of October 30 are labeled t-1
5948while references to the transcript of October 31 are labeled t-2.
5959Rulings on Southwest's Exceptions
5963Exceptions 1, 2, 5, 7, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, and 21
5975These exceptions contend that the Hearing Officer made minor errors in his
5987Findings of Fact, are simply statements of opinion,, or raise constitutional
5998issues. While there may be some merit to some of these contentions, they are
6012all irrelevant to the ultimate outcome and are thus rejected.
6022Exceptions 3, 4, and 20
6027Southwest objects to the Hearing Officer's Findings of Fact No. 11 and 12,
6040and Conclusion of Law No. 55, all of which relate to the ultimate conclusion
6054that the piecemeal review that this C&D facility has received requires DEP to
6067demand that Applicant obtain the required (MSSW) permit from the SWFWMD before
6079issuing the general permit in this case.
6086When Southwest first notified the Department of its intent to use a general
6099permit for this facility in 1990, it obtained a letter from the Southwest
6112Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) stating that the project was exempt
6123from Management and Storage of Surface Waters (MSSW) permitting due to its small
6136size. This letter satisfied the Department's rules at this time, and Southwest
6148was allowed to operate the facility under a general permit. In 1995, the SWFWMD
6162determined that the letter had been issued in error, and that a MSSW permit
6176would be required.
6179Rule 62-701.803(4), F.A.C., which is currently part of the Department's
6189general permit requirements, states: A copy of any permit for stormwater
6200control, or documentation that no permit, is required, shall be submitted to the
6213Department before the facility receives waste for disposal. Case law in Florida
6225makes it clear that, absent some delegation or agreement between agencies, the
6237Department may not enforce the rules of another governing body, nor may it deny
6251a permit for failure to comply with such rules. Council of the Lower Keys v.
6266Charley Toppino & Sons, 429 So.2d 67 (3rd DCA 1983); Taylor v. Cedar Key Special
6281Water & Sewerage District, 590 So.2d 482 (1st DCA 1991,). For this reason, the
6296cited rule was carefully worded to avoid this kind of problem, since it clearly
6310makes compliance with stormwater rules a condition for operation, not a
6321condition precedent to the issuance of the permit. Whether or not the review of
6335this facility can accurately be called piecemeal is irrelevant; the Department
6346has no authority to deny the general permit simply because the applicant, has
6359not yet received all other required authorizations. For this reason, I reject
6371the Hearing Officer's recommendation that the permit be denied because of the
6383lack of a MSSW permit, and accept Southwest's Exceptions.
6392Exceptions 6, 8, 9, 10, and 19
6399In these exceptions, southwest takes issue with the Hearing Officer's
6409findings regarding the manner in which the department permitted the facility,
6420whether the facility has expanded outside of its permitted footprint, and
6431whether any such expansion is relevant to the current permitting process.
6442Specifically, Southwest disagrees with the Hearing Officer's finding that the
6452facility has expanded laterally since 1990, and his conclusion that such
6463expansion within 500 feet of a potable water well is grounds for denying the
6477permit.
6478While there is some disagreement over the specific size of the property and
6491the disposal area, the history of the facility can be approximately described as
6504follows. In the 1990 Notice of Intent to Use a General permit (NOI), Southwest
6518indicated that the property consisted of 18 or 19 acres, and that the fill site
6533would be about two acres in 1991, Southwest submitted revised drawings
6544indicating that the fill size was actually between seven and ten acres. The
6557Department did not require a new NOI, but instead filed the new drawings and
6571allowed Southwest to continue operation under the general permit. There is no
6583finding or conclusion that the Department's actions were in error, and any such
6596finding would be irrelevant anyway. The 1995 NOI, which is at issue in this
6610case, apparently does not contemplate any lateral expansion of the disposal
6621area.
6622The Hearing Officer found that Southwest has expanded the facility
6632laterally and vertically since the 1990 NOI, which Applicant now sees to renew.
6645The Hearing Officer then concluded that such expansion violated Rule 62-
6656701.300(2)(c), F.A.C., which states:
6660(2) Disposal. Unless authorized by a Department
6667permit or site certification in effect on
6674January 6, 1993, no solid waste shall be stored
6683or disposed of by being placed:
6689(c) Within 500 feet of an existing or approved
6698potable water well unless disposal takes place at
6706a facility for which a complete permit application
6714was filed or which was-originally permitted before
6721the potable water well was in existence. This
6729prohibition shall not apply to any renewal of an
6738existing permit that does not involve lateral
6745expansion, nor to any vertical expansion at a
6753permitted facility;
6755Rule 62-701.200(43), F.A.C., defines a lateral expansion as any horizontal
6765increase in the dimensions of the waste boundary of an existing solid waste
6778disposal unit. The question at issue, then, is not whether the facility
6790expanded laterally since 1990, but whether Southwest proposes to expand outside
6801the footprint of its currently permitted area. It does not appear from the
6814Recommended Order or the record that this is the case. Expansion outside of its
6828originally permitted area, but within the' area authorized as a result of the
68411991 NOI, would not violate this prohibition, and would not be grounds for
6854denial of the general permit.
6859The Hearing Officer also found that Southwest has possibly expanded the
6870facility laterally since the 1991 Update. If true, Southwest may have violated
6882its permit conditions, and possibly violated the prohibition on disposal within
6893500 feet of a potable water well. The Hearing Officer's finding, however, is
6906not definitive enough to reach such a conclusion, and even if it were, it would
6921not necessarily result in denial of the general permit. As noted by the Hearing
6935Officer in his response to petitioner's proposed Findings No. 1-4, violations
6946are more properly dealt with in enforcement actions by the Department, and the
6959general permit might have authorized continued operations only within the
6969originally permitted area (as of 1991) or in other areas more than 500 feet from
6984the potable water well. Since the Hearing Officer did not make a definitive
6997finding on this matter, however, such speculation is irrelevant.
7006For these reasons, I reject the Hearing Officer's recommendation that the
7017general permit be denied because of a violation of Rule 62-701.300(2)(c),
7028F.A.C., and accept Southwest's Exceptions to that extent.
7036Exceptions 12, 15 and 18
7041Southwest takes exception to the Hearing Officer's findings and conclusions
7051that the general permit should be denied because of odor problems at the site,
7065as well as his characterization of Southwest as an irresponsible operator.
7076It is undisputed that strong, noxious odors have emanated from the facility
7088in the summers of 1994 and 1995. The source of these odors is unknown, but may
7104be related to either the disposal of drywall debris or the retention pond.
7117Southwest has spent considerable time and money trying to eliminate these odors
7129but with no success. The Department has not initiated enforcement actions
7140relative to this odor problem.
7145Southwest was issued two warning letters from the Department for possible
7156violations over the past five years. Neither was related to the odor problem,
7169and both were adequately resolved. The Hearing Officer found that neither
7180alleged violation was indicative of intentional or reckless disregard of the
7191law, and may not even have suggested negligence on the part of Southwest.
7204Neither alleged violation resulted in an official enforcement action by the
7215Department.
7216The Hearing Officer concludes that Southwest's failure to eliminate the
7226odor problem renders it an irresponsible owner or operator and thus not entitled
7239to a general permit. Whether or not Southwest may be considered irresponsible
7251in the dictionary sense of the word, it cannot be so considered under the legal
7266definition applicable here.
7269Section 403.707(9), F.S., provides that the Department may refuse to issue
7280a permit to an applicant who by past conduct in this state has repeatedly
7294violated pertinent statutes, rules, or orders or permit terms or conditions
7305relating to any solid waste management facility and who is deemed to be
7318irresponsible as defined by department rule. Rule 62-701.320(3)(b), F.A.C.,
7327provides that definition:
7330(b) Irresponsible means that an applicant
7336owned or operated a solid waste management
7343facility in this state, including
7348transportation equipment or mobile processing
7353equipment used by or on behalf of the applicant,
7362which was subject to a state or federal notice
7371of violation, judicial action, or criminal
7377prosecution for activities that constitute
7382violations of Chapter 403, F.S., or the rules
7390promulgated thereunder, and could have prevented
7396the violation through reasonable compliance
7401with Department rules.
7404There is no finding or evidence in the record that the owners or operators
7418of this facility were ever subject to any notice of violation, judicial action,
7431or criminal prosecution. The two warning letters mentioned above, by their very
7443language, do not constitute notices of violation, and were apparently not the
7455basis of the Hearing Officer's finding in any case. Southwest cannot be
7467considered irresponsible for purposes of Section 403.707(9), F.S., and I reject
7478the Hearing Officer's conclusion otherwise.
7483Even so, the applicant must still provide reasonable assurance that it
"7494will abide by relevant Department rules and standards before it may be
7506permitted to operate. Rule 62- 4.530(2), F.A.C., which is applicable to all
7518general permits, provides:
7521(2) A proposed project which may be reasonably
7529expected to violate air quality standards, water
7536quality standards, or drinking water standards or
7543which will not meet the public interest
7550requirements set forth in Chapter 403, F.S.,
7557shall not be entitled to use of a general permit.
7567In addition, Rule 62-4.540(4), F.A.C., states that a general permit does
7578not allow the permittee to cause pollution in contravention of Florida Statutes
7590and department rules. Pollution is defined in Section 403.031(7), F.S., to
7601include contaminants in the air which unreasonably interfere with the enjoyment
7612of life or property, including outdoor recreation. Finally, Rule 62-296.320(2),
7622F.A.C., prohibits a permittee from creating an objectionable odor, and is
7633considered an air quality standard by the Department.
7641In this case, Southwest has admitted that the facility has produced
7652objectionable odors over the past two summers, that the source is not known for
7666certain, and that efforts to control the odors have been unsuccessful.
7677Southwest believes that elimination of the retention pond as proposed in its
7689MSSW application will solve this problem; however, the Hearing Officer
7699apparently did not share this belief, or at least did not make a finding as to
7715how the odor might be controlled.
7721If a regular Department permit were at issue in this case, it might be
7735possible to insert special conditions in the permit requiring southwest to
7746control the odor, or perhaps to refrain from operating until the odor problem
7759was solved. However, it is not possible to put special conditions in a general
7773permit to deal with site-specific concerns. Section 403.814, F.S., and Chapter
778462-4, F.A.C., make it clear that a person is entitled to the use of a general
7800permit only upon demonstration of compliance with the conditions set forth in
7812the applicable rules, and that failure to make such a demonstration will result
7825in denial of the general permit. Section 403.814(1), F.S., states: Such rules
7837shall specify design or performance criteria which, if applied, would result in
7849compliance with appropriate standards. Thus the conditions of a general permit
7860are set forth by rule rather than on a case-by-case basis, on the assumption
7874that a person complying with these conditions can be expected to have a minimal
7888adverse environmental effect.
7891It is true that the Hearing Officer did not specifically conclude that the
7904objectionable odors produced by this facility violated Rules 62-4.530(2), 62-
79144.540(4), or 62-296.320(2), F.A.C. However, he did find that the facility had
7926produced such odors, and concluded that this finding was sufficient to recommend
7938denial of the general permit. Section 120.57(1)10., F.A.C., authorizes the
7948Department to modify `the Hearing Officer's conclusions of law, which I
7959interpret to include citing specific rule references to support the conclusion.
7970Because this proposed project is reasonably expected to result ink
7980violations of Department air quality standards, I accept the Hearing Officer's
7991recommendation that the general permit be denied, and accordingly reject
8001Southwest's exceptions to this conclusion. I would note, however, that this
8012denial would not prevent Southwest from filing a new NOI for operation of a
8026construction and demolition debris disposal facility once it can demonstrate
8036that the odor problem has been resolved and that the facility would not be
8050expected to result in violations of any Department standards.
8059Rulings on Department's Exception
8063Exception 1
8065The Department takes exception to the Hearing Officer's categorization of
8075Southwest as irresponsible. For the reasons cited above, this exception is
8086accepted.
8087Rulings on Petitioner's Exceptions
8091Exception 1
8093Petitioner takes exception to the Hearing Officer's Finding of Fact No. 14,
8105in which he found that clean debris had been used to fill areas below the water
8121table. This finding is supported by competent substantial evidence in the
8132record, and while Petitioner may cite contradictory testimony, the Department
8142has no authority to reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of witnesses.
8155For this reason, the exception is rejected.
8162Exception 2
8164Petitioner takes exception to the Hearing Officer's Finding of Fact No. 39,
8176in which he states that Southwest accepted construction and demolition debris
8187only after 1994. This exception is similar to several of Southwest's
8198exceptions, and is rejected only as irrelevant to the ultimate outcome.
8209Petitioner also argues that the source of the odor problem at the facility was
8223the retention pond on-site. However, the Hearing Officer found that the source
8235of the odor was unknown, and this finding is supported by competent substantial
8248evidence. To the extent that this exception can be implied to take issue with
8262Finding of Fact No. 40, it is also rejected.
8271Exception 3
8273Petitioner takes exception to the Hearing Officer's rejection of
8282Petitioner's Proposed Findings No. 5 and No. 12. Petitioner argues that the NOI
8295which is the subject of this case should not be considered a renewal of the
8310original general permit.
8313The first basis for Petitioner's exception is that the original applicants
8324did not timely file a Notice of Transfer of the general permit when the current
8339applicant acquired the site. It appears from the record that the original
8351applicants were two individuals who subsequently incorporated and transferred
8360ownership of the facility to the corporation. The Hearing Officer concluded,
8371and I agree, that even if a technical violation of Chapter 62-4, F.A.C.,
8384occurred, it would not be a suitable basis for denial of the general permit.
8398The other basis for Petitioner's exception is unclear, but appears to relate to
8411the date the NOI was submitted in 1995. Presumably this is meant to imply that
8426southwest did not comply with Rule 62-4.540(13), F.A.C., which states that the
8438permittee shall give notice of continued use of a general permit thirty days
8451before it expires. Section 120.60(6), F.S., provides that when a permittee has
8463made timely and sufficient application for renewal of a permit, the existing
8475permit shall not expire until the application has been acted on by the agency.
8489While technically a Notice of Intent to Use a General Permit is not an
8503application, and technically the Department does not take final action if it has
8516no objection to the use of the general permit, the obvious intent of this
8530statute was to prevent agencies from effectively shutting down facilities while
8541it deliberated whether or not to renew the permit. Chapter 120, F.S., applies
8554generically to all agencies and all licensing procedures, while section 403.814,
8565F.S., creates a category of general permits specifically for the Department.
8576The Department has discretion to interpret these laws together in a manner which
8589implements the Legislative intent and allows for the orderly processing of
8600general permit renewals. Public Employees Relations Commission v. Dade County
8610Police Benevalent Association, 467 So.2d 987 (Fla. 1985). It is thus the
8622Department's interpretation that Section 120.60, F.S., provides that a general
8632permit authorized under Section 403.814, F.S., shall remain in effect until the
8644Department either denies the application or declines to object to the
8655application.
8656Rule 6-4.540(13), F.A.C., defines a timely application for renewal of a
8667general permit to mean that the notification of continued use of the general
8680permit must be submitted at least 30 days before expiration of the existing
8693general permit. While not specifically stated in the rule, it seems obvious
8705that this notification must also be sufficient to enable the Department to
8717determine whether or not the applicant complies with the requirements for a
8729general permit.
8731In this case, the applicant first submitted a complete NOI on July 3, 1990,
8745and the Department issued a no objection letter on July 20, 1990. (Pet. Ex. 1)
8760Section 403.814, F.S., provides that an applicant may use a general permit 30
8773days after providing the required notification to the Department, and that the
8785general permit is valid for five Years. The Department interprets this to mean
8798that the general permit is valid for five years from the date the applicant was
8813first allowed to use it. In this case, notwithstanding the Department's July 20
8826letter, the applicant was first allowed to use the general permit on August 2,
88401990, which thus expired August 2, 1995. The renewal notification was due 30
8853days before this, on July 3, 1995.
8860Southwest first filed its renewal notification on June 19, 1995. (t-1.
8871237) Apparently this notification was not sufficient, because Southwest filed
8881another notification on July 18, 1995. Since this second notification was not
8893accompanied by an additional fee, it was apparently considered a modification of
8905the original notification. The Department also issued a no objection letter on
8917July 18, 1995. Nothing in Department rules prohibits an applicant from
8928modifying its renewal notification, which was apparently done in this case. The
8940Department interprets Rule 62-4.540(13), F.A.C., to mean that an applicant must
8951file a renewal notification at least 30 days prior to expiration, and this
8964notification must either be sufficient when received, or be modified to be
8976sufficient prior to expiration of the general permit.
8984For these reasons, the Department considers that Southwest filed a timely
8995and sufficient application for renewal of its general permit, and that general
9007permit will not expire until the Department takes final agency action on the
9020notification. The exception is therefore rejected.
9026Exception 4
9028Petitioner takes exception generally to the Hearing Officer's rejection of
9038unspecified proposed findings relating to discrepancies at the facility.
9047Petitioner argues that these proposed findings tend to show that southwest is
9059irresponsible and that it somehow intended to obtain piecemeal review of its
9071various required permits.
9074The issue of whether Southwest can be considered irresponsible has been
9085dealt with above. Southwest's intent as regards how the Department and the
9097SWFWMD reviewed the various permit applications is clearly irrelevant in this
9108matter, and has also been addressed above. For these reasons, this exception is
9121rejected.
9122Exception 5
9124Petitioner takes exception to the Hearing Officer's rejection of its
9134Proposed Finding No. 5 (the second No. 5), in which Petitioner argued that solid
9148waste was disposed of at the facility within 200 feet of a water body in
9163violation of Rule 62-701.300(2)(g), F.A.C. The Hearing Officer rejected the
9173proposed finding as unnecessary.
9177Rule 62-701.300(2)(g), F.A.C., prohibits the disposal of solid waste
9186[w]ithin 200 feet of any natural or artificial body of water, including wetlands
9199within the jurisdiction of the Department, except bodies of water contained
9210completely within the property boundaries of the disposal site, which do not
9222discharge from the site to surface waters. It is undisputed that there is a
9236pond to the east of the site which is within 200 feet of the disposal area and
9253which is not within the boundaries of the disposal site. The question raised at
9267hearing was whether or not this pond is a water body within the meaning of the
9283rule.
9284A Department witness testified at hearing that a pond would not qualify as
9297a water body if it typically held water only during the rainy season. This
9311testimony was not disputed, and I accept it as a reasonable interpretation of
9324the rule. Obviously the prohibition would apply to seasonal ponds if they
9336qualified as a wetland within the jurisdiction of the Department.
9346Southwest presented the testimony of one of the owners that he believed the
9359pond was a retention pond in the summer months and did not hold water year-
9374round, and that one of the neighbors had asked him to dig it out deeper so that
9391it would hold water year-round. (t-1. 107) It introduced into evidence a quad
9404map which did not show the pond, although the probative value of this map was
9419questioned by the Hearing Officer. (t-1. 156) It also introduced into evidence
9431several photographs, but it is not clear whether they show water in the pond or
9446not, nor was there any testimony as to, their content. (App. ex. 9 a-d) The
9461Department presented the testimony of the permit processor that he was told by
9474southwest that the pond did not hold water year-round, and may have seen
9487pictures which tended to corroborate that. (t-2. 75) Petitioner presented
9497testimony from a neighbor that the pond was about 25 to 30 years old, and that
9513she thought it never went dry until the Southwest facility began excavation,
9525after which it went dry for about two years in a row during the dry season.
9541(t-2. 32) She also testified that she had asked one of the owners of the
9556facility to dig out the pond. (t-2.33) Petitioner also introduced into
9567evidence several photographs which showed water in the pond during the summer
9579months. (Pet. ex. 11 a-c)
9584The Hearing Officer did not rule directly on whether the pond was
9596considered a seasonal pond. However, his rejection of Petitioner's Proposed
9606Finding No. 5 as unnecessary implies that he did not believe that the
9619prohibition on disposal of solid waste within 200 feet of a water body was
9633applicable, and thus that the pond was not a water body within the meaning of
9648the rule. Although the evidence is far from certain, I cannot say that this
9662implied finding was not supported by competent substantial evidence. For this
9673reason, the exception is rejected.
9678Exception 6
9680Petitioner takes exception to the Hearing Officer's rejection of its
9690Proposed Finding No. 11, in which Petitioner argued that Southwest did not
9702include a geotechnical investigation in the NOI, or at least not one that met
9716the requirements of Rule 62-701.420, F.A.C. This exception expands upon the
9727Proposed Finding by arguing that the geotechnical investigation was inadequate.
9737The Hearing Officer found that a geotechnical investigation had been
9747submitted. While not specifically noting whether it was adequate or not, the
9759Hearing Officer did not conclude that any inadequacies were sufficient to
9770recommend denial of the general permit. I can only read this to imply that he
9785found it to be sufficient, a finding which would be supported by competent
9798substantial evidence in the record. I am not at liberty to reweigh the evidence
9812or overturn such a finding, implied or otherwise. For this reason, the
9824exception is rejected.
9827CONCLUSION
9828It is therefore ORDERED:
9832A. The Recommended Order of the Hearing Officer is adopted and incorporated
9844by reference herein, except where specifically noted.
9851B. General Permit Number SOO8-273049 is hereby DENIED.
9859Any party to this Order has the right to seek judicial review of the Order
9874pursuant to Section 120.68, Florida Statutes, by the filing of a Notice of
9887Appeal pursuant to Rule 9.110, Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure, with the
9899clerk of the Department in the Office of General Counsel, 3900 Commonwealth
9911Boulevard, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000; and by filing a copy of the Notice
9923of Appeal accompanied by the applicable filing fees with the appropriate
9934District Court of Appeal. The Notice of Appeal must be filed within 30 days
9948from the date this Order is filed with the clerk of the Department
9961DONE AND ORDERED this 12th day of February, 1996, in Tallahassee, Florida.
9973STATE OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT
9977OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
9980_________________________________
9981VIRGINIA B. WETHERELL
9984Secretary
9985Marjory Stoneman Douglas Building
99893900 Commonwealth Boulevard
9992Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
9995FILING AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT:
9998FILED, on this date, pursuant to
10004Section 120.52, Florida Statutes,
10008with the designated Department
10012Clerk, receipt of which is
10017hereby acknowledged.
10019CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
10022I CERTIFY that a true copy of the foregoing was mailed to:
10034Southwest Land Developers, Inc. William Nelson Edwards
10041c/o Bruce Laishley 27365 Jones Loop Road
1004828062-A Mitchell Ave. Punta Gorda, Florida 33982
10055Punta Gorda, Florida 33982
10059Sharon B. Winesett Richard W. and Sherra Winesett
1006727650 Jones Loop Road 1574 Passaic Ave.
10074Punta Gorda, Florida 33982 Ft. Myers, Florida 33901
10082David K. Oaks Robert E. Meale
10088252 West Marion Avenue Div. of Administrative Hearings
10096Punta Gorda, Florida 33950 DeSoto Building
101021230 Apalachee parkway
10105Tallahassee, Florida 32399
10108on this 13th day of February, 1996.
10115STATE OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT
10119OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
10122Assistant General Counsel
10125_________________________________
10126CHRIS MCGUIRE
10128Assistant General Counsel
10131Marjory Stoneman Douglas Building
101353900 Commonwealth Boulevard
10138Mail station 35
10141Tallahassee, Florida 32399
10144Telephone: (904) 488-9730
- Date
- Proceedings
- Date: 04/04/1996
- Proceedings: Final Order filed.
- Date: 03/08/1996
- Proceedings: Notice of Appeal (of Agency Final Order; 2nd DCA) filed.
- Date: 02/14/1996
- Proceedings: Final Order filed.
- Date: 01/19/1996
- Proceedings: Petitioners Exceptions to Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 01/12/1996
- Proceedings: Exceptions to Recommended Order; Cover Letter filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/29/1995
- Proceedings: Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held 10/30-31/95.
- Date: 12/26/1995
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Proposed Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law filed.
- Date: 12/22/1995
- Proceedings: (David K. Oaks) Recommended Order (for Hearing Officer signature); Cover Letter filed.
- Date: 12/14/1995
- Proceedings: (3 Volumes) Transcript of Proceedings filed.
- Date: 10/30/1995
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- Date: 10/27/1995
- Proceedings: Department of Environmental Protection's Prehearing Statement filed.
- Date: 10/23/1995
- Proceedings: Department of Environmental Protection's Preliminary Witness & Exhibit List filed.
- Date: 10/23/1995
- Proceedings: (Richard W. Winesett) Notice of Taking Depositions filed.
- Date: 10/18/1995
- Proceedings: Order Denying Continuance sent out. (motion denied)
- Date: 10/16/1995
- Proceedings: (Southwest Land Developers) Response to Motion for Continuance filed.
- Date: 10/03/1995
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion for Continuance filed.
- Date: 09/18/1995
- Proceedings: (SW Land Developers) Notice of Taking Depositions filed.
- Date: 08/18/1995
- Proceedings: (Respondents) Notice of Appearance; Southwest Land Developers, Inc`s Response to Initial Order; Letter to Hearing Officer from David K. Oaks Re: Response being filed late w/cover letter filed.
- Date: 08/14/1995
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for October 30 and 31, 1995; 10:30am; Port Charlotte)
- Date: 08/09/1995
- Proceedings: (3) Department of Environmental Protection's Response to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 08/09/1995
- Proceedings: Letter to Hearing Officer from Bruce Laishley Re: Response to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 08/09/1995
- Proceedings: Order of Consolidation And Prehearing Order sent out. (Consolidated cases are: 95-3712, 95-3713, 95-3714)
- Date: 08/04/1995
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Response to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 07/28/1995
- Proceedings: Initial Order issued.
- Date: 07/25/1995
- Proceedings: Request for Assignment of Hearing Officer and Notice of Preservation of Record; Agency Action Letter; Cover Letter From Bruce Laishley; Petition for Administrative Hearing filed.