83-001913 Gulf Hydro-Farms, Inc. vs. Harper Brothers, Inc., And South Florida Water Management District
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Monday, August 20, 1984.


View Dockets  
Summary: Issue surface water permit for mining operation subject to conditions in the Recommended Order.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8GULF HYDRO-FARMS, INC., )

12)

13Petitioner, )

15)

16vs. ) CASE NO. 83-1913

21)

22HARPER BROTHERS, INC., and )

27SOUTH FLORIDA WATER MANAGEMENT )

32DISTRICT, )

34)

35Respondents. )

37___________________________________)

38RECOMMENDED ORDER

40Pursuant to notice, this cause came on for formal hearing before P. Michael

53Ruff, duly designated Hearing Officer of the Division of Administrative

63Hearings, on March 13, 1984, in Fort Myers, Florida. The appearances were as

76follows:

77APPEARANCES

78For Petitioner: W. E. Connery

83Gulf Hydro-Farms, Inc.

86Post Office Box 148

90Estero, Florida 33928

93For Respondent, John A. Noland, Esquire

99Harper Brothers, Post Office Box 280

105Inc. Fort Myers, Florida 33902

110For Respondent, Michael S. Tammaro, Esquire

116South Florida Water South Florida Water

122Management District: Management District

126Post Office Box "V"

130West Palm Beach, Florida 33402-4238

135This cause arose upon an application for a surface water management permit

147filed by Harper Brothers, Inc., seeking authorization for the construction and

158operation of a surface water management system from the Respondent, South

169Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) for a project known as "Green Meadow

181Mine." The application is for authorization to construct and operate a surface

193water management system serving the 405 acre existing mining operation. The

204system will consist of dykes, pumps, culverts, a weir structure and a 155-acre

217water retention area. The project is located in all or parts of Sections 2 and

2323, Townships 45 and 46 South, Range 26 East, Lee County, Florida. The existing

246mining operation operates under Permit No. 36-00260-W issued to Harper Brothers,

257Inc., on September 10, 1981, and reissued August 12, 1983, which was designed

270and is operated to retain all of the dewatering discharges (water pumped out of

284the active mine pit) in an on-site retention area (except that water pumped for

298use on Harper Brothers farm operation for irrigation).

306Upon receipt of the application, an extensive review of the information

317submitted as part of the application was conducted by the Respondent SFWMD's

329staff with the ultimate result that notice of intent to issue the surface water

343management permit sought herein was served with certain conditions and addenda

354effective June 3, 1983. Petitioner Dale Rickards, by petition of June 7, 1983,

367requested a formal proceeding on the permit application and Petitioner Gulf

378Hydro-Farms, Inc., requested a formal hearing on the application by petition

389dated June 6, 1983. Lee County had already requested a formal proceeding.

401Lee County withdrew its petition on June 9, 1983, and Dale Rickards filed a

415notice of voluntary dismissal and was dismissed with prejudice on August 29,

4271983. By order of January 16, 1984, after the case had already been set for

442hearing previously and continued by agreement of the parties, Chris and Susan

454Harrington were permitted to intervene on behalf of the Petitioner. The case

466was again set for hearing on January 16, 1984, but by agreement of the parties

481was continued once again to the ultimate hearing date.

490At the hearing, the Petitioner, Gulf Hydro-Farms, Inc., called two

500witnesses. The Respondent Harper Brothers, Inc., called four witnesses and the

511Respondent SFWMD called one witness, as did the Intervenor. The Petitioner

522presented Exhibits A through F, all of which were admitted save Exhibit D.

535Intervenor's Exhibit G-1 was admitted into evidence. Respondent Harper Brothers

545submitted eight exhibits, all of which were admitted into evidence, and the

557Respondent SFWMD submitted Exhibits 9, 10 and 11 which were admitted.

568Petitioner's witness Ronald C. Bruns was accepted as an expert witness in the

581field of civil engineering and surface water management engineering and "the

592district's design criteria." Respondent Harper Brothers' witness Dennis Roza,

601was accepted as an expert in civil engineering. Harper Brothers' witness Scott

613Glaubitz was accepted as an expert in civil engineering and water resources

625engineering. Respondent Harper Brothers' witness Thomas M. Missimer was

634accepted as an expert witness in the field of hydrology and water quality, and

648Rebecca Serra, a witness for South Florida Water Management District as well as

661Respondent Harper Brothers, Inc., was accepted as an expert-in the field of

673surface water management design, surface water management permitting criteria,

682hydrology and hydraulics.

685At the conclusion of the proceeding, the parties requested a transcript of

697the proceeding and an extended briefing schedule, simultaneously waiving the 30-

708day requirement for rendition of the Recommended Order contained in Rule 28-

7205.402, Florida Administrative Code. Proposed findings of fact and conclusions

730of law and memoranda were timely submitted.

737Prior to the hearing, the issues to be resolved were substantially narrowed

749and all parties entered into a prehearing stipulation which was filed prior to

762hearing. The ultimate issue to be resolved concerns whether the surface water

774management permit should be granted to Harper Brothers, Inc., pursuant to Rule

78640E-4.301, Florida Administrative Code. The specific issues which remained to

796be resolved at the outset of the hearing were stipulated to be as follows:

8101) Whether reasonable assurances have been

816given that post-development discharges off-

821site will not exceed the pre-development

827water discharge to any significant degree, so

834as to prevent additional flooding to the

841access road to Petitioner's property.

8462) Whether reasonable assurances have been

852given that historical drainage patterns will

858not be significantly altered by development

864of Respondent Harper Brothers, Inc.'s

869property so as to cause additional flooding

876to Petitioner's access road.

8803) Whether reasonable assurances have been

886given that commingling of dewatering water

892and storm water discharges in the retention

899area will not alter the pH of the receiving

908waters of "no-name" slough, when such com-

915mingled water is discharged off-site, to

921such an extent as to violate water quality

929rules of Chapter 17-3, Florida Administra-

935tive Code.

937FINDINGS OF FACT

9401. The Respondent Harper Brothers, Inc., operates a farming and limestone

951mining operation in Lee County, Florida. It has filed a surface water

963management permit application for a project to be operated as an adjunct to the

977mining operation at Green Meadows Mine owned by Harper Brothers. The Respondent

989Harper Brothers retained consultants in the general fields of engineering,

999hydrology, surface water management and hydraulics to assist in the formulation

1010of a surface water management plan for the development and operation of their

1023mining site. As a culmination of this effort, Respondent Harper Brothers filed

1035its application for a surface water management system, and permit therefor, with

1047the district. The SFWMD (District), upon receiving applications for surface

1057water management systems and related permits evaluates water quantity, quality

1067and various environmental concerns related to water resources mandated by

1077Chapter 373, Florida Statutes, Chapter 40E, Florida Administrative Code and

1087Chapter 17-3, Florida Administrative Code. Such an application must meet

1097district criteria contained in the statutes and rules in order for the surface

1110water management permit to be issued. The district's staff makes a

1121recommendation to its governing board for approval or denial of such permits,

1133and often with related conditions attached. In the instant case, after review

1145of the various water quality and environmental criteria, the recommendation of

1156the governing board of the agency was for approval of the permit with certain

1170conditions.

1171THE PROJECT

11732. The project which is the subject matter of this proceeding is a rock

1187mining operation for the mining of limestone in Lee County, Florida. The

1199application is for the construction and operation of a surface water management

1211system to serve a 405-acre mining operation which, in essence, involves the

1223management of the water produced by "de-watering," or pumping-out of the active

1235rock pit, through use of a retention area, dykes, pumps, culverts and a weir

1249structure; with a view toward keeping the water pumped from the pit (dewatering

1262water), and stormwaters which fall on the site, contained in a retention area

1275which has been designed to retain all the dewatering discharge. The only water

1288discharge envisioned off the site represents the volume of stormwater which

1299falls thereon. The stormwater which would be discharged off the site is that

1312water which actually falls as rain onto the retention area as well as stormwater

1326that is pumped into the retention area from the pit through the use of the two

1342existing dewatering pumps.

13453. During excavation of the rock pit, water is discharged from the pit

1358into the on-site retention area through use of these two pumps. An existing

1371weir structure allows some water from the retention area to flow through a ditch

1385to a small lake on the Respondent Harper Brothers' property. Water from the

1398lake is used at the rock mine and some existing farmland of Harper Brothers is

1413supplied irrigation water from it. At present, some farmland is supplied

1424irrigation water through a pump from the retention area and some receives

1436irrigation from the mine pit itself through another pump. The remaining water

1448discharged from the mine pit is held in the retention area where it infiltrates

1462into the ground.

14654. The retention area will be surrounded by 3.5-foot high by 12-foot wide

1478dykes. Along the south side of the retention area a double dyke system is

1492proposed. The outer dyke will also be utilized as a road and varies from three

1507to four feet in height with a top width of 36 feet, which will be paved.

15235. Stormwater discharged from the retention area would flow through an

1534outfall structure located at a crest elevation of 26.75 feet, National Geodetic

1546Vertical Datum (NGVD). The controlled elevation in the retention area is 26.3

1558feet NGVD which is maintained by a 3.83-foot wide "bleeder notch." Discharge

1570from this structure would then be routed westward between double dykes under the

1583Harper Brothers' "north-south road" down a swale on the north side of its

1596entrance road to "no-name" slough, the ultimate "receiving waters."

16056. It was established by expert witness Missimer, for Respondent Harper

1616Brothers, that the dewatering discharge which would be held in the retention

1628area will infiltrate into the ground at a rate of approximately 43,000 gallons

1642per day per acre per a one-foot elevation in water level. The rate of

1656infiltration in the ground is directly proportional to the "head" increase so

1668that for a two-foot water level with the resulting increased pressure or "head,"

1681the infiltration rate would be 86,000 gallons per day per acre. Based on the

1696presently permitted maximum monthly withdrawal rate, at a point of equilibrium

1707would be reached at a water depth in the retention area of 1.3 feet, whereby the

1723rate of water pumped into the retention area equals the rate of infiltration

1736into the ground without considering additionally any evaporation into the

1746atmosphere. Thus, the bleeder notch would be set at the above elevation so that

1760all dewatering discharges from the mine (which may contain rock and other

1772sediments) are effectively retained on site.

1778PRE-DEVELOPMENT VS. POST-DEVELOPMENT DISCHARGES

17827. The SF design criteria contained in Chapter 40E, Florida Administrative

1793Code, the applicability of which is not in dispute in this proceeding, provides

1806that the volume of stormwater discharged from such a project cannot exceed the

1819volume of such discharges from the same surface area in its pre-development

1831condition. The development referred to in this instance is, of course, the

1843development of the mine and the related retention area and other water

1855management installations or "improvements."

18598. Expert witnesses Glaubitz and Serra testifying for the Respondent

1869Harper Brothers and SFWMD established that the quantity of pre-development

1879discharge from the subject site or surface area, was calculated based upon a

"1892design storm event." This means that the pre-development discharge from the

1903Harper Brothers' mine site was calculated, based upon reviews of the watershed

1915boundary, the slope, the vegetation types, and the hydrologic length of the

1927watershed in the geographical area, as well as through the use of aerial

1940photography and U.S. Geological Survey maps, to show the amounts of surface and

1953stormwaters discharged from this site, or its pre-development surface area,

1963during a 25-year, 3-day duration storm event, meaning a storm lasting for a

1976duration of three days of rain of a severity that has been experienced,

1989according to meteorological records, an average of once in 25 years in the

2002subject geographical area. Based upon these calculations of pre-development

2011discharge rate or volume during a 25-year, 3-day storm event, the pre-

2023development discharge from the Harper Brothers' mine site was calculated to be a

2036volume of 10 cubic feet of water per second (cfs).

20469. "Post-development discharge" is the rate of discharge taking into

2056account the same 25-year, 3-day storm event, which is allowed to discharge off

2069the project site after development is completed. The calculation of post-

2080development discharge was computed by taking into account such factors as soil

2092storage capability, stage discharge and calculation of the amount of retention

2103or detention of storm water required on the site. Thus, the calculated post-

2116development discharge of stormwater from the site as it is proposed to be

2129designed, is nine cubic feet per second during such a 25-year, 3-day severe

2142storm, which capability is designed into the proposed project. Thus, the post-

2154development discharge of stormwater off the project site does not exceed, and in

2167fact is less than, the pre-development discharge of stormwater from the site.

217910. Included within the calculations by these two experts, concerning

2189post-development volume of stormwater to be discharged, is an analysis of the

2201quantity of water to be retained in the retention area of the proposed project.

2215The discharge from the retention area is controlled by the above-mentioned weir

2227and bleeder notch. The retention area proposed by the applicant is to be used

2241both for discharge of dewatering water from the mine pit (under the previously

2254issued industrial water permit) as well as for retention of stormwater. This

2266weir and bleeder notch is designed to be at an elevation which only allows

2280discharge of a volume of water representing the volume of stormwater entering

2292the retention area over a given period of time, and not the dewatering water

2306from the site, which may contain rock, dust in suspension, and other sediments.

2319The previous permit granted to the applicant, as well as the permit sought in

2333this proceeding, would require (as all parties agree) that the dewatering volume

2345of water, representing the water pumped from the mine pit, will totally remain

2358on the site. The project as designed is reasonably assured to be capable of

2372retaining all such dewatering mine pit water on-site.

238011. One critical factor considered in determining the design and site for

2392the retention area (155 acres) and in setting the bleeder notch elevation for

2405discharge of stormwater volume, is the infiltration rate from the retention area

2417into the ground beneath it. The Respondent Harper Brothers established (through

2428these uncontradicted expert witnesses) that the infiltration rate is 43,000

2439gallons per day per acre of the retention area for a one-foot elevation of water

2454in that retention area. One of the factors computed into the infiltration rate

2467calculation is the "transmissivity rate." The transmissivity rate is 200,000

2478gallons per day per foot in the shallow or surface aquifer at the project site.

2493Petitioner's expert, Mr. Bruns, conceded that if that rate is correct, as it was

2507established to be, that the post-development volume of discharge leaving the

2518project site would not exceed the pre-development volume of discharge, if the

2530maximum pumpage rate into the retention area from the pit did not exceed 8.5

2544million gallons per day, and it is so found. Parenthetically, it should be

2557noted that the Petitioner presented no testimony of its own concerning

2568infiltration rates or transmissivity rates. Neither did the Petitioner's expert

2578Mr. Bruns make any calculations of quantity of discharge from the site in either

2592a pre-development condition or post-development condition, nor was a water

2602management or hydrologic study of the drainage basin (approximately 6 square

2613miles) made by Petitioner's expert witness, to assist in analyzing quantity of

2625discharge.

262612. Under certain hypothetical conditions it would be possible for

2636dewatering discharge water from the mine, as a volume of water, to be

2649discharged, commingled with stormwater discharge, from the retention area.

2658Thomas Missimer, testifying as an expert witness in the fields of hydrology and

2671water quality for Harper Brothers, was uncontradicted. His studies and

2681calculatiops in evidence established that, with regard to the infiltration rate

2692downward into the soil under the retention area, and the amount of water pumped

2706into the retention area, that equilibrium is reached when pumping into the

2718retention area reaches 8.5 million gallons per day. That is, approximately 8.5

2730million gallons per day infiltrate downward into the soil and thus leave the

2743retention area and thus an 8.5 million gallon pumpage rate per day would result

2757in a static water level in the retention area, aside from evaporation. If the

2771Respondent pumped in excess of this figure, which might be possible under its

2784present mine dewatering industrial use permit, then the pumpage figure might

2795exceed the equilibrium figure and cause the volume of water discharged off the

2808site to exceed that volume which only represents stormwater. Accordingly, the

2819parties stipulated that the maximum daily pumpage rate of 8.5 million gallons

2831per day would be included as a condition in the permit, if it were issued to the

2848Respondent, such that, based upon the uncontradicted infiltration data, that the

2859limitation to a maximum pumpage rate into the retention area of 8.5 million

2872gallons per day from the mine pit, would be permissible. In view of this

2886stipulation, Petitioner withdrew its contention that the post-development volume

2895of discharge water leaving the site would exceed the pre-development volume of

2907discharge. It was thus shown that at the maximum pumpage rate of 8.5 million

2921gallons per day no mine dewatering discharge (as a volume of water) will leave

2935the retention area.

2938NON-ALTERATION OF HISTORICAL DRAINAGE PATTERNS

294313. The Petitioners also contend that the supposed alteration of

2953historical drainage patterns by this development at the site will cause

2964additional flooding to the Petitioner's access road to their property (residence

2975and nursery) by the road known as Mallard Lane. In that connection, the

2988historic pattern of stormwater discharge off the project site or its

2999geographical area, is figured into the analysis of pre-development water volume

3010discharge versus post-development discharge. This project, like others of its

3020type, is mandated by the rules at issue to not alter the pre-development

3033patterns of water discharge off the site area so as to adversely affect the

3047property and landowners off the site. Although the pre-development discharge is

3058generally observed and calculated by looking at a site before the development

3070involved in a permit application takes place, in the instant case, Harper

3082Brothers, Inc., by the authority of its previously issued dewatering and

3093industrial water use permit had already initiated its mining operation and so

3105pre-development conditions as they relate to this permit were not directly,

3116physically observable. Accordingly, a hydrologic study of the drainage basin in

3127which this project is located was performed, and, in conjunction with the use of

3141aerial photography and U.S.G.S. quadrangle maps, the perimeter of the basin was

3153determined and an analysis of the historical pattern of flow in the drainage

3166basin was done.

316914. The general flow of water in the drainage basin historically is from

3182northeast to southwest, with an ultimate discharge into the "no-name" slough, a

"3194cypress head" or slough which generally flows in a westerly and southwesterly

3206direction from the area immediately adjacent to the project site. Internally

3217within this drainage basin, some old pre-development north/south dykes have

3227blocked some of the westerly flow which historically existed at the site,

3239thereby causing some of the water to flow in a northwesterly direction until it

3253reaches the northern end of the north/south dykes, thence returning to the

3265generally southwesterly drainage pattern, ultimately ending up in the slough

3275system. A small area of farm fields was located north of the east/west access

3289road to the site, and southerly of an existing east/west line of farm dykes, and

3304may have drained in a southerly direction before development. There is

3315currently no information and no evidence of record concerning how this farm

3327field area was drained. The drainage from this area now, however, is

3339insignificant and is calculated at approximately one cubic foot per second as a

3352maximum rate. As the calculated post-development discharge from this project

3362site is approximately 9 cubic feet per second, even if it be assumed that the

3377drainage from the old farm field should be added to the post-development

3389discharge rate from the project site itself, such an addition would only equal

3402and not exceed the historic, pre-development discharge rate of ten cubic feet

3414per second. The flows in a southerly direction are currently blocked by the

3427east/west access road to the Harper Brothers' site, used by Harper Brothers. In

3440a predevelopment condition however, the same situation existed since the

3450southerly flow was similarly blocked by farm dykes which existed in the pre-

3463development condition.

346515. The proposed facility is designed to have stormwater which falls on

3477the entire project site to be pumped into the retention area. The volume of

3491stormwater permitted to be discharged will discharge from the retention area via

3503the above-mentioned outfall structure and will be routed westward through the

3514double-dyke system down a drainage swale on the north side of the entrance road,

3528and ultimately into the no-name slough. Thus, the historic drainage pattern of

3540the basin from the northeast to the southwest will not be significantly altered

3553by the project as designed and proposed. The project generally preserves this

3565historic drainage pattern by discharging the drainage within the basin into the

"3577no-name" slough as occurred in the pre-development condition which, when the

3588above-described pre-development and post-development discharge rates are

3595compared reveals that there will be no adverse alteration in terms of either a

3609dearth of or excess of water supply to this natural slough system.

362116. The Petitioner's access road, North Mallard Lane, running from north

3632to south, accessing Petitioner's property west of the project site, is indeed

3644subject to inundation, but was subject to such inundation in the pre-development

3656condition of the project site. This is because the slough crosses this access

3669road. Since the post-development condition does not alter the historic patterns

3680of drainage to any significant degree, and does not represent an alteration in

3693the volume of discharge from the project site area over that in the historic,

3707pre-development condition, no additional flooding to the Petitioner's access

3716road will be caused as a result of the project installation and operation. The

3730flooding being caused to the Petitioner's access road, indeed was shown to be

3743related in part to culverts of insufficient size installed by Lee County, so

3756that water tends to stand on the road surface as opposed to draining under and

3771away from it.

3774NON-ALTERATION OF THE pH OF RECEIVING WATERS

378117. It is undisputed that the subject project, like all such projects,

3793under the permitting authority of SFWMD, must meet state water quality criteria

3805contained in Chapter 17-3, Florida Administrative Code. The design of such a

3817surface water management system must include "best management practices" (BMP's)

3827in order to satisfy the district's design criteria. BMP's are techniques which

3839are incorporated into the design of such a system to enhance water quality such

3853as the use of swales, retention ponds, and gravity structures. Given that the

3866project will utilize a retention area, grassed swales and other well accepted

3878water management structures, the design was shown to comport with "best

3889management practices."

389118. Water quality measurements for the only water quality parameter in

3902dispute, that of pH, were taken on the project site using standard, accepted

3915scientific methods and U.S. Geological Survey Water Quality Standard sampling

3925techniques. The tests revealed a pH in the retention area itself of 7.91 pH

3939units. The pH in the pit area was 7.8 pH units and in the off-site water in the

3957slough, the pH was 7.3 units. The water discharge from the retention area would

3971be a combination of stormwater (rain water) which is approximately 6 pH units in

3985the geographical area involved, and the retention area water at approximately

39967.8 pH units. The precise pH of this discharge water would depend on the

4010quantities of water from each source, but was shown to be almost neutral or

4024approximately at a pH of 7. Thus, the discharge from the retention area of the

4039commingled dewatering and stormwater, if such occurs, will not alter the

4050receiving waters one full pH unit. Upon issuance of the permit, the applicant

4063will still have to comply on a continuing basis with the water quality

4076parameters of Chapter 17-3, Florida Administrative Code, and the staff of SFWMD

4088will continue water quality monitoring after the permit is issued. There has

4100thus been no showing that commingling of dewatering water and stormwater in the

4113retention area and the discharge of such commingled waters to the receiving

4125waters of "no-name" slough would affect the pH of that receiving water in a

4139manner to exceed existing, permissible pH parameters and adversely affect water

4150quality. Expert witness Serra testifying for the district as well as for Harper

4163Brothers, has studied similar mining operations. Such operations, utilizing

4172similar water management procedures, have not caused any water quality

4182violations related to discharges of commingled dewatering and stormwater,

4191including no violations of the pH parameters. Finally, near the conclusion of

4203the proceeding, Petitioner, in effect, abandoned its dispute regarding the issue

4214of compliance with the pH water quality parameter.

4222CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

422519. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction of the

4235parties to and the subject matter of this proceeding. Subsection 120.57(1),

4246Florida Statutes (1983).

424920. Section 373.413(1) and (2), Florida Statutes, provides as follows:

4259Except for the exemptions set forth herein,

4266the governing board or the department may

4273require such permits and impose such reason-

4280able conditions as are necessary to assure

4287that the construction or alteration of any

4294dam, impoundment, reservoir, appurtenant

4298work, or works will not be harmful to the

4307water resources of the district. The depart-

4314ment or the governing board may delineate

4321areas within the district wherein permits

4327may be required.

4330A person proposing to construct or alter a

4338alter a dam, impoundment, reservoir,

4343appurtenant work, or works subject to such

4350permit shall apply to the governing board or

4358department for a permit authorizing such

4364construction or alteration. . . .

437021. The project to be constructed and operated, which is the subject

4382matter of this permit application, clearly falls within the ambient of this

4394section delineating projects for which surface water management permits are

4404required. The SFWMD has authority to adopt rules and regulations implementing

4415and supporting its responsibilities to implement this and other portions of Part

44274, Chapter 373, Florida Statutes, related to the management and storage of

4439surface waters under authority of Section 373.044, Florida Statutes (1983). In

4450furtherance of the statutory permitting authority referenced in Part 4 of

4461Chapter 373, Florida Statutes and the rulemaking authority embodied in the

4472statutory section cited last above, the SFWMD has adopted Chapter 40E-4, Florida

4484Administrative Code. Rule 40E-4.091, Florida Administrative Code, adopts the

4493publication of the district entitled "Basis of Review for Surface Water

4504Management Permit Applications Within the South Florida Water Management

4513District" by reference.

451622. Rule 40E-3.01(1), Florida Administrative Code, requires an applicant

4525for a surface water management permit to provide reasonable assurances that the

4537surface water management system:

4541. . . (b) will not cause adverse water

4550quality and quantity impacts on receiving

4556waters and adjacent lands regulated pur-

4562suant to Chapter 373, Florida Statutes,

4568(c) will not cause discharges which result

4575in any violation in surface waters of the

4583State, of the standards and criteria of

4590Chapter 17-3,

4592(d) will not cause adverse impacts on

4599surface and ground water levels and flows,

4606(e) will not cause adverse environmental

4612impacts,

4613* * *

4616(n) will meet the general and specific

4623criteria in the document described in

4629paragraph 40E-091(1)(a).

4631Because of the above three issues remaining in this proceeding, the above-quoted

4643portions of Rule 40E-4.301, Florida Administrative Code are the only portions of

4655the conditions for issuance of permits contained in that rule which remain at

4668issue in this case, and which relate to the stipulated issues delineated above.

4681The document referred to in paragraph (n) quoted above refers to the "basis of

4695review for surface water management permit applications . . ." referred to in

4708Rule 40E-4.091(1)(a). SFWMD has adopted specific criteria for determining water

4718quantity impacts caused by proposed water management systems in that "basis of

4730review for surface water management applications at paragraph 3.2.1.2. of the

"4741Basis of Review" it is provided:

4747Discharge - off-site discharge is limited to

4754amounts which will not cause additional

4760adverse off-site impact. These amounts are:

4766a. Historic discharges, or

4770b. Amounts determined in previous district

4776permit actions, or

4779c. Amounts specified in district criteria

4785Unless otherwise specified by previous dis-

4791trict permit, district criteria or local

4797government, a storm event of three day dura-

4805tion and 25 year return frequency shall be

4813used in computing off-site discharge.

4818In this proceeding the parties have agreed that water quantity impacts are

4830limited to the historic discharge criteria in subparagraph a. quoted above.

4841Historic discharges mean the predevelopment discharges as they existed before

4851the mine was developed by Harper Brothers. The post-development discharge off

4862the site cannot exceed the pre-development discharge. Thus, post-development

4871discharge is the rate of discharge during the 25-year, 3-day storm event which

4884is allowed to discharge off the project site once it is-completed. The

4896calculated post-development discharge of stormwater from the site as designed

4906would be, as found above, 9 cubic feet per second during a 25-year, 3-day design

4921storm event, thus it has been clearly established and affirmative reasonable

4932assurances have been provided that the post-development discharge will not

4942exceed the pre-development discharge of stormwater from the site, and indeed,

4953will actually be approximately one cubic foot per second less discharge than

4965existed in the pre-development stage of the subject geographical area.

497523. Included within the analysis of historic discharges is the analysis of

4987the historic pattern of that discharge of stormwater as that relates to the

5000second issue stipulated by the parties to be involved in this proceeding and

5013discussed above in the Findings of Fact. There is no particular point in time

5027which was referred to as the "historic" condition, as conditions gradually

5038change over the years. The historic condition referred to in this proceeding

5050concerning the geographical area involved in the application means the permanent

5061features of the land, such as old farm dykes and existing topography which were

5075essentially permanent in nature and which predated the development of the Green

5087Meadows Mine. The evidence adduced by both Harper Brothers and SFWMD was

5099unrefuted and clearly establishes reasonable assurance that historic drainage

5108patterns of discharge will not be significantly altered by the proposed project.

5120The general flow in the drainage basin was shown to be from northeast to

5134southwest, ultimately discharging in "no- name" slough. The facilities as

5144proposed call for stormwater falling on the project site to be pumped into the

5158retention area. The volume of stormwater permitted to be discharged will

5169discharge from the retention area through an outfall structure, and will be

5181routed westward between a double dyke system down a swale on the north side of

5196Harper Brothers' east--west entrance road and into the "no-name" slough. Flow

5207in a southerly direction is currently blocked by the east-west access road of

5220Harper Brothers. In pre-development historical conditions however, the flow in

5230a southerly direction was also blocked by farm dykes which existed in the pre-

5244development condition, so that no net change in flow patterns over that pre-

5257development condition will be effected by this project. The general historic

5268drainage pattern of the basin from northeast to southwest will thus not be

5281significantly altered and historic drainage patterns characterized by discharge

5290to "no-name" slough will be preserved so that this criteria in the "Basis of

5304Review," which in turn is incorporated by reference in the above rule, has been

5318satisfied.

531924. There remains to be discussed the issue of water quality, which has

5332been stipulated by the parties to only involve the issue of whether the pH of

5347the receiving waters of the "no-name" slough will be significantly altered by

5359the discharge attendant to this project. Section 3.2.2.1 of the "Basis of

5371Review" provides as to water quality:

5377State Standards - projects shall be designed

5384so that discharges will meet state water

5391quality standards, as set forth in Chapter 17-3.

539925. Regarding the issue of whether any adverse impact on the receiving

5411waters of "no-name" slough might occur, in terms of pH, Rule 17-3.121(22),

5423Florida Administrative Code, provides:

5427* * *

5430pH - pH of receiving waters shall not be

5439caused to vary more than one (1.0) unit

5447above or below normal pH of predominantly

5454fresh waters as defined in section 17-3.021,

5461F.A.C. . . . The lower value shall not be

5471less than six (6.0) in predominantly fresh

5478waters or less than six and one-half (6.5)

5486in predominantly marine waters and the upper

5493value not more than eight and one half (8.5).

5502The evidence adduced by Harper Brothers, Inc., as well as the SFWMD established

5515affirmative assurances that the pH standard embodied in the above rule will not

5528be violated by the quality of the water which may discharge into "no-name"

5541slough, the receiving surface waters of the state involved herein. Indeed, the

5553Petitioner stipulated that it abandoned the issue raised relating to alteration

5564of the pH of the waters in "no-name" slough provided the possibility of

5577enforcement against future water quality violations remains an option for the

5588district, which, of course, under the rules (40E-4.341, Florida Administrative

5598Code and 40E-1.609, Florida Administrative Code) clearly is within the authority

5609of the district. An ongoing monitoring of the discharge off the Harper

5621Brothers' site can, and should be accomplished. In that connection, the staff

5633report of the district staff, in evidence as Harper Brothers' Exhibit No. 2

5646contains 18 special and limiting conditions. The permit applicant has agreed to

5658accept all of those special and limiting conditions as part of its surface water

5672management permit should it be issued, and those conditions certainly should be

5684attached to a grant of the permit sought.

569226. In summary, with the imposition of the special and limiting conditions

5704contained in Exhibit 2, which are incorporated by reference herein, together

5715with two other special conditions delineated below, reasonable assurances that

5725the surface water management system proposed by Harper Brothers, Inc., meets the

5737requirements of Rule 40E-4.301, Florida Administrative Code, have clearly been

5747provided. Specifically, reasonable assurances have been provided that the

5756stormwater discharge from the Harper Brothers, Inc., site will not cause the

5768adverse water quantity or quality impacts off the site which are discussed in

5781more detail above. The special, additional conditions which should be imposed

5792upon a grant of the permit are as follows:

58011. Pumpage from the pit into the retention

5809area shall be limited to 8.5 million gallons

5817per day.

58192. In furtherance of special condition No. 2

5827regarding water quality and water quality data

5834monitoring delineated in Exhibit 2, and in

5841furtherance of Rule 40E-4.381(b), water quality

5847data for the water discharged from the permit-

5855tee's property shall be submitted to the

5862district on a quarterly basis, with those

5869parameters monitored and reported to the

5875district which are depicted in special

5881condition No. 2 of Harper Brothers'

5887Exhibit No. 2.

5890RECOMMENDATION

5891Having considered the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,

5902the candor and demeanor of the witnesses, the evidence of record and the

5915pleadings and arguments of the parties, it is, therefore

5924RECOMMENDED:

5925That a Final Order be entered by the South Florida Water Management

5937District authorizing issuance of a surface water management permit to the

5948applicant herein for the proposed surface water management system, imposing upon

5959the applicants the limiting and special conditions enumerated in the district

5970staff report depicted in Exhibit 2 and incorporated by reference herein, and

5982additionally, those two special conditions set forth immediately above.

5991DONE and ENTERED this 17th day of August 1984, in Tallahassee, Florida.

6003___________________________________

6004P. MICHAEL RUFF

6007Hearing Officer

6009Division of Administrative Hearings

6013The Oakland Building

60162009 Apalachee Parkway

6019Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550

6022(904) 488-9675

6024FILED with the Clerk of the

6030Division of Administrative Hearings

6034this 17th day of August 1984.

6040COPIES FURNISHED:

6042W. E. Connery

6045Gulf Hydro-Farms, Inc.

6048Post Office Boa 148

6052Estero, Florida 33928

6055John A. Noland, Esquire

6059Post Office Box 280

6063Fort Myers, Florida 33902

6067Michael S. Tammaro, Esquire

6071South Florida Water Management District

6076Post Office Box "V"

6080West Palm Beach, Florida 33403-4238

6085John R. Maloy, Executive Director

6090South Florida Water Management District

6095Post Office Box "V"

6099West Palm Beach, Florida 33402

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
Date: 06/21/1991
Proceedings: Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/11/1984
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 10/11/1984
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 08/20/1984
Proceedings: Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED.

Case Information

Judge:
P. MICHAEL RUFF
Date Filed:
06/16/1983
Date Assignment:
06/16/1983
Last Docket Entry:
06/21/1991
Location:
Tallahassee, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
 

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