Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 14-57.014 - Crossing Management of Department - Owned Active and Inactive Rail Corridors
(1) Definitions
for Use in Part III.
(a) "Applicant" means any
person or local governmental entity requesting a rail corridor opening or
closure on a Department-owned inactive rail corridor.
(b) "Application" means the Rail Corridor
Crossing Permit Application for Department-Owned Inactive Rail Corridor, DOT
Form 725-080-86, Rev. 01/13, incorporated herein by reference
https://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-02403,
and available from http://www.dot.state.fl.us/rail/
or the Central Rail Office, Department of Transportation, 605 Suwannee Street,
MS #25, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0450.
(c) "Active Rail Corridor" means
Department-owned lineal property acquired from a railroad that is operational
for the use of rail transportation.
(d) "Inactive Rail Corridor" means
Department-owned lineal property acquired from a railroad that is not
incorporated into the state highway system and is abandoned or does not
currently operate rail transportation service. Inactive rail corridors may be
unused property, kept intact for future state highway expansion, or used by
local governmental entities for recreational or other purposes.
(e) "Department" means the Florida Department
of Transportation.
(f) "Local
Governmental Entity" means as defined in Section
334.03, F.S.
(g) "Rail Corridor Crossing" means either a
public or private travel way intended to be used for vehicular ingress and
egress to and from a state, county, city, or private roadway across a
Department-owned active or inactive rail corridor.
(h) "State Highway" means a component of the
State Highway System as defined in Section
334.03, F.S.
(2) Existing Rail Corridaor Crossings. The
Department recognizes existing public and private rail corridor crossings
identified and described by a railroad at the time an active or inactive rail
corridor is transferred from a railroad to the Department. All other rail
corridor crossings shall be closed if rail corridor crossing permits are not
obtained within twelve months of acquisition of the rail corridor by the
Department.
(3) Rail Corridor
Crossing Permits. New rail corridor crossing permits for public or private
roadways are prohibited on active rail corridors. The issuance of a rail
corridor crossing permit on a Department-owned inactive rail corridor does not
create a property right or vested interest in a rail corridor crossing and such
permit is revocable in accordance with the provisions of this rule chapter.
Potential applicants are encouraged to contact the Department Central Rail
Office to inquire as to the feasibility of a proposed rail corridor crossing
before submitting an application.
(a) Public
Crossing. An application by a local governmental entity for a rail corridor
crossing permit for an inactive rail corridor will be evaluated and conditioned
upon the following criteria:
1. The local
governmental entity's jurisdiction over the county or city street at the
proposed rail corridor crossing and acceptance of maintenance responsibility
for the county or city street, including the rail corridor crossing
area.
2. A demonstrated
transportation need on the part of the public for the rail corridor
crossing.
3. Consistency with the
applicable Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) long range plans and local
governmental entity comprehensive plans.
4. Closure of an existing public rail
corridor crossing for each new public rail corridor crossing.
5. Construction of the crossing in a way that
is compatible with the present and future planned use of the rail
corridor.
6. Payment of
construction costs and responsibility for maintenance costs for the new public
rail corridor crossing, as well as any additional costs to modify the corridor
to accommodate its planned use.
(b) Private Crossing. An application for a
rail corridor crossing permit by a person who owns property abutting an
inactive rail corridor will be evaluated and conditioned upon the following
criteria:
1. The private property must have no
other legal access, including no access to frontage roads that exist or that
could be cost-effectively constructed.
2. The new private rail corridor crossing
will be consistent with applicable MPO long range plans and local governmental
entity comprehensive plans.
3. The
new private rail corridor crossing will be constructed in a way that is
compatible with the present and future planned use of the rail corridor, and
the design plans for the new private rail corridor crossing shall be signed and
sealed by a professional engineer registered in the State of Florida.
4. A private rail corridor crossing permit is
revocable, without compensation, upon a Department determination that the
private rail corridor crossing is incompatible with the Department's use of the
corridor, and with written notice of not less than 30 days.
5. The owner must indemnify, defend, and hold
the Department harmless from any and all claims arising out of the use of the
new private rail corridor crossing.
(4) Installation of a Rail Corridor Crossing
on Inactive Rail Corridors.
When authorized by permit to install a rail corridor crossing, a local governmental entity or private crossing applicant must comply with the following, in addition to any terms specifically stated on the permit.
(a) Traffic Signals and Other
Traffic Control Devices. Traffic signals and other traffic control devices,
installed by an applicant, shall conform to the Manual on Uniform Traffic
Control Devices as incorporated in Rule
14-15.010, F.A.C., and the
Manual of Uniform Minimum Standards for Design, Construction and Maintenance
for Streets and Highways as incorporated in Rule
14-15.002, F.A.C.
(b) Disruption of Traffic. For safety and
operational purposes, the Department will require or restrict hours of
construction if construction will cause disruption of traffic on a state
highway. When construction activity on a rail corridor crossing causes undue
disruption of traffic, or creates safety hazards on a state highway, the
permittee will be advised of the need for immediate corrective action by a
specified time and a stop work order will be issued if the permittee does not
comply.
(c) Time Limit.
Installation of a rail corridor crossing on an inactive rail corridor shall be
completed within one year of the date of issuance of the rail corridor crossing
permit. Failure to comply with the one year time limit shall result in an
automatic expiration of the rail corridor crossing permit. A stop work order
will be issued by the Department if work exceeds the imposed time restrictions.
For any rail corridor crossing permit which expires for failure to construct
the rail corridor crossing within the one year limit, a new application will be
required. The corridor right of way shall be returned to the condition existing
prior to the rail corridor crossing permit being issued, at the permittee's
expense, unless a new permit is obtained pursuant to this rule.
(d) Assurance of Performance. Assurance of
performance conforming to Section
334.187, F.S., and Rule
14-116.002, F.A.C., will be
required if the rail corridor crossing permit requires extensive work within
the right of way, such as relocation of structures or traffic signals.
1. Prior to the issuance of a rail corridor
crossing permit, the applicant shall provide a security instrument in the
estimated dollar amount of the improvements in the right of way. The Department
shall be named as the beneficiary. The security instrument shall be provided to
the Department before the rail corridor crossing permit is issued. The security
instrument shall be valid for the time of the construction and inspection of
the permitted work, but for not less than 18 months.
2. The applicant shall provide the estimated
cost of improvements on right of way in a document signed, sealed, and dated by
a professional engineer registered in the State of Florida.
3. Security Instrument Receipt, Form
850-040-20, Rev. 04/93, incorporated herein by reference and available from
http://www.dot.state.fl.us/rail/
or the Central Rail Office, Department of Transportation, 605 Suwannee Street,
MS #25, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0450 must be submitted by the
applicant.
4. Such security
instruments shall be required except when a performance bond covering the work
on the right of way is included as part of the bond necessary for development
approval by a local governmental entity and the Department is a named
beneficiary.
5. A security
instrument will not be required when there is an agreement with the local
governmental entity to withhold a certificate of occupancy until any problems
are corrected and there is no indication that the requirements of this rule
will be violated.
6. Upon
completion, the applicant must provide documentation by a professional engineer
registered in the State of Florida that construction was accomplished in
accordance with the requirements set out in the corridor crossing permit. The
security instrument will be returned to the applicant when final inspection by
the Department shows that the work has been completed as
permitted.
(e) Posting of
rail corridor crossing permit. The approved rail corridor crossing permit shall
be displayed in a prominent location in the vicinity of the crossing
construction.
(f) Governmental
entity permits or approval. The applicant is responsible for securing any
additional permit or local governmental entity approval needed for traffic
signalization and regulatory signing and marking.
(g) Utility and Right of Way User
Notification. The applicant has the responsibility to determine, and notify,
the users of the right of way of the permitted construction. The applicant
shall also resolve any conflicts within the right of way. Before a rail
corridor crossing permit is issued, the applicant shall provide documentation
of this notification and resolution of conflicts.
(h) Access Permitting. A rail corridor
crossing permit for a crossing that is intended to be used for vehicular
ingress and egress to and from a state highway is not a permit for a connection
to the state highway under Section
335.182, F.S., and a separate
access connection permit must be obtained pursuant to Rule Chapter 14-96,
F.A.C., prior to the construction of an access
connection.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 334.044(2) FS. Law Implemented 334.044(14), 337.242(3), (4), 341.302(10) FS.
New 8-14-06, Amended 10-9-11, 7-30-13.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.