(1) "Annual Funding Request" is the document
submitted by a local sponsor which includes a detailed description for the next
fiscal year's funding request and a schedule for the disbursement of funds to
be requested for beach or inlet management projects or related activities over
a given period of time. Only projects consistent with the Strategic Beach
Management Plan will be considered for funding. These projects will be ranked
and placed on either the beach or inlet management list submitted to the
Legislature for funding consideration.
(2) "Area of Inlet Influence" is the distance
along the adjacent sandy shorelines where sediment transfer and shoreline
location are physically altered due to the presence of the inlet and any
associated structures or improvements which alter the natural functioning of
the inlet. The area of inlet influence will be determined using a feasibility
or an inlet management study.
(3)
"Beach Management" is protecting, maintaining, preserving, or enhancing
Florida's beaches. Activities included are restoring or nourishing beach and
dune systems, dune protection and restoration, restoration of natural shoreline
processes, removal of derelict structures and obstacles to natural shoreline
process in conjunction with restoration or nourishment, and construction of
erosion control structures. These activities include feasibility, engineering,
design and environmental studies, post-construction monitoring and mitigation
to support such activities.
(4)
"Contractual Services" are the provision of engineering, professional, or
scientific services for eligible activities as otherwise described in this
chapter. Such activities may be performed by a private company or individual,
or, if approved by the Department, pursuant to subsection
62B-36.007(6),
F.A.C., the local sponsor.
(5)
"Critically Eroded Shoreline" is a segment of shoreline where natural processes
or human activities have caused, or contributed to, erosion and recession of
the beach and dune system to such a degree that upland development,
recreational interests, wildlife habitat or important cultural resources are
threatened or lost. Critically eroded shoreline may also include adjacent
segments or gaps between identified critical erosion areas which, although they
may be stable or slightly erosional now, their inclusion is necessary for
continuity of management of the coastal system or for the design integrity of
adjacent beach management projects.
(6) "Department" is the Department of
Environmental Protection.
(7)
"Inlet" is a coastal barrier waterway connecting a bay, lagoon, or similar body
of water with the Gulf of Mexico, the Straits of Florida, or the Atlantic Ocean
and all related flood and ebb tidal shoals and the inlet shorelines. Improved,
altered or modified inlets are those where stabilizing rigid coastal structures
have been constructed, or where inlet related structures or features such as
channels have been constructed or are actively maintained and the channel depth
is greater than the inlet system would support in a natural state.
(8) "Inlet Management" is comprised of
actions taken to minimize, eliminate, or mitigate the effects of the inlet on
the adjacent shorelines including feasibility, engineering, design,
environmental studies, construction, and post-construction monitoring to
support such activities.
(9) "Local
Sponsor" is any state, county, municipality, township, or special district
created pursuant to part II, chapter 161, F.S., having authority and
responsibility for preserving and protecting the coastal system, and any state,
county, municipality, township, and inlet and navigational districts having
authority and responsibility for management of an inlet. The local sponsor is
responsible for the balance of the non-state cost share.
(10) "Local Long Range Budget Plan" is a
document that projects the ten-year planning needs for federal, state, and
local governments necessary to implement the strategies outlined in the
Strategic Beach Management Plan for a specific project. The document lists five
years of anticipated project costs followed by the next five years of
anticipated planning phases. The document is submitted by local sponsors to the
Department along with annual funding requests.
(11) "Project Agreement" is a contract
executed between the Department and the local sponsor that explicitly defines
the terms and conditions under which the project shall be conducted.
(12) "Project Boundary"for ranking purposes,
means the sandy shoreline fronting the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, or the
Straits of Florida, of the beach management project and the first row of
residential or commercial development immediately landward of the beach
vegetation line or beach erosion control line (ECL), whichever is further
landward. The first row of development may be separated from the shoreline by
recreational amenities, roadways or parking areas as long as there is dedicated
public access. The area of inlet influence shall be the project boundary for
inlet projects.
(13) "Project
Length" is the along-shore length of shoreline in the project design, including
tapers, or as otherwise delineated by the ECL.
(14) "Project Phase" is a step required in
developing and implementing a project. The following phases will be considered
for funding:
(a) "Feasibility" - is the
characterization of the erosion problem and constraints on remediation
alternatives, development and analysis of alternatives to address the problem,
including taking no action, data collection in support of the analysis, and
selection of the cost-effective, environmentally sound alternative that avoids
or minimizes adverse impacts.
(b)
"Design" - is the development of design studies, data collection, plans,
specifications, permit applications, and financial planning for the
project.
(c) "Construction" - is
the execution of the selected project, including contractor services, contract
management, construction oversight, and construction-related monitoring
required by permit or contract.
(d)
"Post-Construction Monitoring" - is the collection and analysis of physical and
biological data required by state or federal permits on an annual or periodic
basis following the completion of the construction phase.
(15) "Public Beach Access" is an entry zone
and associated parking under public ownership or control which is specifically
used for providing access to the adjacent sandy beach for the general public.
The access must be signed, maintained and clearly visible from the adjacent
roadway. The parking spaces counted for eligibility must be within one-quarter
mile walking distance of a lateral entry zone and available to the general
public. The types of public beach access sites are:
(a) "Primary Beach Access" is a site with at
least 100 units, as defined in subsection
62B-36.007(1),
F.A.C., and public restrooms;
(b)
"Secondary Beach Access" is a site that may have parking and amenities, but
does not qualify as a primary beach access.
(16) "Public Lodging Establishment" is any
business currently licensed by the Department of Business and Professional
Regulation in the classification of "hotel, " "motel, " or "vacation rental
condominium" with six or more units as designated by the Department of Business
and Professional Regulation, or campgrounds. Public Lodging Establishments must
be located on the beachfront or within one-quarter mile walking distance of a
public access.
(17) "Rank Score" is
calculated by dividing a project's rank (n
i), or
position of its value in a sequential list of all project values, by the total
number of values included in the evaluation (N), then multiplying by the
maximum points available for the metric, such that:
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The list of values shall be in an order (e.g., ascending or
descending, depending on the metric) that assigns the value worth the most
points as N. If two or more projects have an equal value, these projects will
receive the same score.
(18)
"Sediment Budget" is the mass balance between inputs and outputs of sediment in
the inlet system, including all related flood and ebb tidal shoals, inlet
shorelines and inland waterways, and the adjacent open coast beaches within the
area of inlet influence.
(19)
"Statewide Long Range Budget Plan" is the document produced by the Department
that projects the ten-year planning needs for federal, state, and local
governments necessary to implement the Strategic Beach Management Plan. The
document lists five years of anticipated project costs followed by the next
five years of anticipated planning phases for all beach and inlet management
projects statewide. It is developed in coordination with local sponsors based
on their Local Long Range Budget Plans and is submitted to the Legislature
annually as a companion document to the Local Government Funding
Request.
(20) "Strategic Beach
Management Plan" is the Department's adopted plan for management of the
critically eroded shoreline of the state and those components of feasibility or
inlet management studies that minimize the erosive effects of inlets.
(21) "Threatened or endangered species" is an
animal species that is identified as threatened or endangered by the United
States Fish and Wildlife Service or National Marine Fisheries
Service.