Florida Administrative Code (Last Updated: November 11, 2024) |
62. Department of Environmental Protection |
62B. Beaches and Coastal Systems |
62B-49. Joint Coastal Permits And Concurrent Processing Of Proprietary Authorizations |
1For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply:
11(1) “Activity” is any construction, dredge and fill, or other action that requires a permit pursuant to Section 29161.041, F.S., 31an environmental resource permit pursuant to Part IV of Chapter 373, F.S., and a proprietary authorization to use sovereignty submerged lands pursuant to Chapter 253 or 258, F.S.
59(2) “Advance Nourishment” (fill) is the material placed seaward of the permitted design profile to allow for erosion between nourishment events.
80(3) “Agent” is any person with the written power or authority to act for the applicant for purposes of an application submitted pursuant to Section 105161.041, F.S., 107Part IV of Chapter 373, F.S., and Chapter 253 or 258, F.S.
119(4) “Applicant” is any person, firm, corporation, county, municipality, township, special district, or any public agency having authority, pursuant to Section 140161.041, 141Chapter 253 or 258 and Part IV of Chapter 373, F.S., to request a permit and authorization to conduct activities upon sovereignty submerged lands of Florida.
167(5) “Board of Trustees” or “Trustees” is the Governor and Cabinet sitting as the Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund.
190(6) “Coastal System” is the beach and adjacent upland dune system and vegetation; swash zone; surf zone; breaker zone; offshore and longshore shoals; reefs and bars; tidal, wind and wave driven currents; longshore and onshore/offshore drift of sediment materials; inlets and their ebb and flood tide shoals; all other associated flora and fauna, and natural and manmade topographic features and structures.
251(7) “Department” is the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The head of the Department is the Secretary.
268(8) “Joint Coastal Permit” (JCP) or “Permit” is a document authorizing an applicant to conduct an activity pursuant to Section 288161.041, F.S., 290Part IV of Chapter 373, F.S., and authorization to use a soverign submerged land pursuant to Chapter 253, F.S.
309(9) “Mean High-Water Line” is the intersection of the tidal plane of mean high-water (as defined in Chapter 177, F.S.) with the beach.
332(10) “Notice to Proceed” is the formal notification from the Department authorizing a permitted activity to commence.
349(11) “Proprietary Authorization” or “Authorization” is the necessary instrument providing authorization to conduct activities on sovereignty submerged land pursuant to Chapter 253, F.S. and, if applicable, Chapter 258, F.S.
378(12) “Request for Additional Information” or “RAI” is a written document from the Department to an applicant identifying errors, omissions or clarifications in the application information that must be corrected or provided by the applicant to complete the application.
417(13) “Substantial Revision” is a request by the applicant to 427revise a pending permit application such that the proposed changes would alter the nature or extent of a proposed activity to such a degree that the Department would need additional time to reevaluate the expected performance or impacts of the project. Requested revisions that only decrease the degree or extent of impacts at the same sites, and do not require a reanalysis to confirm this decrease, would not be considered Substantial Revisions.
499Rulemaking Authority 501161.055(1), 502(2), 503373.427(1) FS. 505Law Implemented 507161.055(1), 508(2), (3), 510373.427(1), 511(2), (3), (4), (6) FS. History–New 10-12-95, Amended 2-19-98, 5-17-07, 11-19-15.
Historical Versions(2)
Select effective date to view different version.Related Statutes:
Related DOAH Cases (2)
- 10-000516 Roland Guidry And Oceania Owner&Apos;S Association, Inc. vs. Okaloosa County And Department Of Environmental Protection And Board Of Trustees Of The Internal Improvement Trust Fund
- 10-000515 David H. Sherry, Rebecca R. Sherry, And John S. Donovan vs. Okaloosa County And Department Of Environmental Protection And Board Of Trustees Of The Internal Improvement Trust Fund