Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 62B-41.002 - Definitions
(1) "Accretion" is the buildup of land or
accumulation of unconsolidated material within the coastal system caused by
wind and wave action, storm surge, or tidal or littoral currents. Accretion
includes:
(a) Waterward horizontal movement of
the mean high-water line or beach profile.
(b) Volumetric gain of sediment to the
coastal system.
(2)
"Agent" is any person with the written power or authority to act on behalf of
the applicant for purposes of an application submitted under chapter 161,
F.S.
(3) "Applicant" is any person,
firm, corporation, county, municipality, township, special district, any public
agency, or their agent, having authority pursuant to section
161.041, F.S., to request a
permit to conduct any coastal construction activities upon sovereignty lands of
Florida, below the mean high-water line of any tidal water of the
State.
(4) "Armoring" is a manmade
structure designed to either prevent erosion of the upland property or protect
eligible structures from the effects of coastal wave and current action.
Armoring includes certain rigid coastal structures such as geotextile bags or
tubes, seawalls, revetments, bulkheads, retaining walls, or similar structures
but does not include jetties, groins or other construction whose purpose is to
add sand to the coastal system, alter the natural coastal currents or
stablilize the mouths of inlets.
(5) "Beach" is the zone of unconsolidated
material that extends landward from the mean low-water line to the place where
there is marked change in material or physiographic form, or to the line of
vegetation.
(6) "Breakwater" is a
structure which has the effect of protecting shoreline areas, harbors, inlets
or basins from the forces of currents and wave action.
(7) "Bulkhead" is a structure or vertical
partition designed primarily to retain or prevent slumping of the upland soil
mass. A bulkhead may also provide a level of protection against erosion by wave
or current action.
(8) "Coastal
Construction" includes any work or activity on or encroaching upon sovereignty
lands of Florida, below the mean high-water line of any tidal water of the
state, which is likely to have a material physical effect on existing coastal
conditions or natural shore and inlet processes.
(9) "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 and zones of primary tidal
influence, and all other associated natural and manmade topographic features
and structures.
(10) "Comparable
Alternative Access" is public access provided by the applicant that is similar
in size and functionality to the public access being replaced. Such access
proposed by the applicant shall be within walking distance from the public
access that was permanently lost due to the coastal construction project.
Comparable alternative access must not expose the user to unsafe conditions,
must be clearly identified, and must include authorization from the upland
property owner.
(11) "Department"
is the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The head of the
Department is the Secretary.
(12)
"Eligible Structures" are public infrastructure and private structures
qualified for armoring as follows:
(a) Public
infrastructure includes those roads designated as public evacuation routes,
public emergency facilities, bridges, power facilities, water or wastewater
facilities, other utilities, hospitals, or structures of local governmental,
state, or national significance.
(b) Private structures include:
1. Non-conforming habitable
structures;
2. Major non-habitable
structures, which are not expendable;
3. Expendable major structures which are
amenities necessary for occupation of the major structure; and,
4. Expendable major structures whose failure
would cause an adjacent upland non-conforming habitable structure or major
non-habitable structure, which is not expendable, to become vulnerable to
damage from frequent coastal storms.
(c) Eligible structures do not include minor
structures.
(13)
"Environmentally Sensitive Area" is a part of the coastal system which the
Department of Environmental Protection, in consultation with the Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission, according to section
379.2431, F.S., has determined
to be of such significance that application of a proposed new technology poses
an unacceptable risk to the ecology.
(14) "Erosion" is the wearing away of land or
the removal of consolidated or unconsolidated material from the coastal system
by wind or wave action, storm surge, tidal or littoral currents or surface
water runoff. Erosion includes:
(a) Landward
horizontal movement of the mean high-water line or beach profile.
(b) The vertical lowering or volumetric loss
of sediment from the beach and dune or the offshore
profile.
(15) "Erosion
Control Line" is the line determined in accordance with the provisions of
sections 161.141-.211, F.S., and recorded pursuant to section
161.181, F.S., in connection
with beach restoration projects. Where established, an erosion control line
represents the landward extent of the claims of the state in its capacity as
sovereign title holder of the submerged bottoms and shores of the Atlantic
Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, the Straits of Florida, and the bays, lagoons, and
other tidal reaches thereof.
(16)
"Excavation" is any mechanical or manual removal of consolidated or
unconsolidated soil or rock material from the coastal system.
(17) "Groin" is a structure built (usually
perpendicular to the shoreline) to trap or alter alongshore movement of
sediment or to retard erosion of the coastal system.
(18) "Impacts" are defined as follows:
(a) "Adverse Impacts" are those impacts
caused by coastal construction that have a reasonable potential of causing a
measurable interference with the natural functioning of the coastal system,
damage to existing structures or properties, or denial or restriction of
lateral beach access. The active portion of the coastal system extends offshore
to the seaward limit of sediment transport and includes ebb tidal shoals and
offshore bars.
(b) "Cumulative
Impacts" are impacts resulting from the short-term and long-term impacts and
the direct and indirect impacts the activity would cause in combination with
existing structures in the area and any other similar activities already
permitted or for which a permit application is pending within the same fixed
coastal cell. The impact assessment shall include the anticipated effects of
the construction on the coastal system and marine turtles. Each application
shall be evaluated on its own merits in making a permit decision, therefore, a
decision by the Department to grant a permit shall not constitute a commitment
to permit additional similar construction within the same fixed coastal
cell.
(c) "De Minimis Impacts" are
impacts that are insignificant and do not have a measurable adverse impact
either individually or cumulatively.
(d) "Significant Adverse Impacts" are adverse
impacts of such magnitude that they are expected to alter the coastal system in
a manner that results in either:
1. An
increase in the rate of erosion;
2.
Rendering the coastal system unstable or vulnerable to the effects of coastal
storms or interfere with its ability to recover from the effects of a coastal
storm; or
3. A take, as defined in
subsection 62B-41.002(47),
F.A.C., unless, as provided for by the provisions of section
379.2431(1)(h),
F.S.
(19)
"Inlet, " also referred to as "Pass, " is a short narrow waterway including all
related flood and ebb tidal shoals and the inlet shorelines, connecting a bay,
lagoon, or similar body of water with a large parent body of water such as the
Gulf of Mexico, Straits of Florida, or the Atlantic Ocean. Inlets for the
purposes of this chapter are classified as follows:
(a) "Altered Inlets" also referred to as
modified or improved inlets, are those where stabilizing rigid coastal
structures have been constructed; or, unstabilized inlets, where inlet related
structures have been constructed and maintained and the channel depth or width
is greater than the inlet system would support in a natural
condition.
(b) "Natural Inlets" are
those which are not altered or maintained, and are shaped by natural coastal
processes.
(c) "Intermittent
Inlets" are natural inlets that may be closed, but are subject to periodic
opening under coastal processes and are inherently unstable and can be expected
to close again when conditions change.
(d) "Flushing Outlets" release water from
water bodies inland of the beach, and function to preserve or restore water
quality by conducting the flow of water from fresh water and estuarine systems
into marine systems, although during times of tidal flood, water may move from
marine systems into estuarine or fresh water systems.
(20) "Landward" is the direction away from
the sovereignty submerged lands of Florida toward the land above the mean
high-water line.
(21) "Major
Reconstruction" is the repair, replacement, or rebuilding, of an existing rigid
coastal structure which is no longer capable of providing its original level of
protection or which would change the alignment, design or level of protection
provided by the original structure.
(22) "Marine Turtle" is any turtle, including
all life stages from egg to adult, found in Florida waters or using the beach
as nesting habitat, including the following species: loggerhead
(Caretta caretta), green (Chelonia Mydas),
leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea), hawksbill
(Eretmochelys imbricata), and Kemp's ridley
(Lepidochelys kempi).
(23) "Mean High-Water" is the average height
of the high-waters over a 19-year period. For shorter periods of observation,
"mean high-water" is the average height of the high-waters after corrections
are applied to eliminate known variations and to reduce the results to the
equivalent of a mean 19-year value.
(24) "Mean High-Water Line" is the
intersection of the tidal plane of mean high-water with the beach.
(25) "Minor Reconstruction" is the repair or
routine maintenance of an existing rigid coastal structure necessary to retain
the structural and functional integrity of the structure against the storm
forces for which it was designed, including; cap repair, tie back replacement,
landward extensions of return walls and replacement of armor stone, none of
which change the original alignment, design, or level of protection.
(26) "Mitigation" is an action or series of
actions taken by the applicant that will offset adverse impacts caused by a
proposed or existing coastal construction project.
(27) "N.A.V.D." is the North American
Vertical Datum of 1988, established by the National Ocean Survey.
(28) "Nesting Activity" is nesting beach
selection, emergence of adult marine turtles from marine waters onto the beach,
nest site selection, transit to and from the nest site, nest excavation, egg
deposition, nest covering, incubation of eggs, hatching, hatchling emergence,
orientation and the transit of hatchlings into marine waters.
(29) "New Technology" is applied science
proposed to solve a specific coastal erosion or related problem in Florida,
about which the staff and professional engineering community have insufficient
available information to predict the performance reliability for general
applications under a range of anticipated operational conditions and potential
impacts to the coastal system.
(30)
"N.G.V.D." is the National Geodetic Vertical Datum, as established by the
National Ocean Survey (formerly called "mean sea level datum, 1929").
(31) "Nonconforming Structure" is any major
habitable structure which was not constructed pursuant to a permit issued by
the Department, in accordance with section
161.052 or
161.053, F.S., on or after March
17, 1985.
(32) "Notice to Proceed"
is the formal notification from the Department authorizing permitted coastal
construction to commence.
(33)
"Permit" is the authorization issued by the Department to conduct certain
specified construction, excavation or alteration activities at a specified
location on state sovereignty land seaward of the mean high-water line of any
tidal water.
(34) "Permit
Condition" is a statement or stipulation issued with, and appearing on or
referenced in, a coastal construction permit with which compliance is necessary
for continued validity of the permit.
(35) "Revetment" is a sloped facing structure
made of an armoring material designed to protect an escarpment or embankment,
or upland structure, from erosion by wave or current action.
(36) "Riparian Owner" is an owner of land
along, bordering upon, bounded by, fronting upon, abutting or adjacent and
contiguous to and in contact with the waters of the State of Florida.
(37) "Sand Bypassing" is the mechanical or
natural movement of sand from one beach adjacent to an inlet or from within an
inlet system, to another beach adjacent to the same inlet.
(38) "Scour" is erosion caused by waves and
currents or by the interaction of waves and currents with man-made structures
or natural features.
(39) "Seawall"
is a structure separating land from water areas, primarily designed to prevent
erosion and other damage due to wave or current action.
(40) "Seaward" is a direction toward the
sovereignty submerged lands of Florida from the land above the mean high-water
line.
(41) "Shoreline" is the
intersection of a specified plane of water with the shore or beach.
(42) "Staff" is the staff of the Division of
Water Resource Management.
(43)
"Storm Surge" is the rise of water above normal water level on the open coast
due to a number of factors, including the action of wind stress on the water
surface and the rise in water level due to atmospheric pressure
reduction.
(44) "Strategic Beach
Management Plan" is the adopted plan for management of the sandy beach and the
related coastal system pursuant to section
161.161, F.S.
(45) "Structure" is the composite result of
putting together or building related components in an ordered scheme. For
purposes of this chapter, "structure" includes:
(a) "Rigid Coastal Structures" which are
structures characterized by their solid or highly impermeable design or
construction. Typically included within this category are groins, breakwaters,
mound structures, jetties, weirs, seawalls, bulkheads and revetments.
(b) "Flexible Coastal Structures" which are
structures characterized by their frangible design or construction and ability
to become freely assimilated into the coastal system by natural coastal
processes. Typically included within this category are beach restoration and
beach nourishment, dune restoration and revegetation.
(c) "Inlet-Related Structures" are structures
typically constructed within an inlet, such as inlet bypassing systems, dredged
channels, and sand traps.
(d)
"Minor Coastal Structures" are structures designed to be expendable and to
minimize resistance to water forces associated with high frequency coastal
storms, and to break away when subjected to such forces and are of such size or
design that they have a de minimis impact on the coastal system.
(e) "Major Coastal Structures" are structures
whose design, location or size have the potential to cause an adverse impact to
the coastal system. Major structures include:
1. "Nonhabitable Major Structures" which are
designed primarily for uses other than human occupancy and have limited
potential for use as shelters. Typically included within this category are
roads, bridges, storm water outfalls, bathhouses, cabanas, swimming pools and
garages.
2. "Habitable Major
Structures" which are designed primarily for human occupancy and are potential
locations for shelter from coastal storms. Typically included within this
category are residences, hotels, commercial buildings, stores and
restaurants.
(f)
Enumeration of the types of structures in this subsection shall not be
construed as excluding from the application of this chapter any other structure
which by its usage, design, dimensions, or structural configuration meet the
general definition herein provided and would require engineering considerations
similar to the above listed structures.
(46) "Take" is an act that actually kills or
injures marine turtles, and includes significant habitat modification or
degradation that kills or injures marine turtles by significantly impairing
essential behavior patterns, such as breeding, feeding, or sheltering, as
defined in paragraph 379.2431(1)(c),
F.S.
(47) "Toe Scour Protection" is
supplemental armoring to protect the bottom surface in front of seawall or
bulkhead from scour due to wave or current action.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 161.041(1), 161.055(1), (2), 161.085(5) FS. Law Implemented 161.021(1), (6), (7), (9), 161.041(1), 161.051, 161.085(1), (2), 161.142(1), (2), (5), 161.143(1), 161.151(3), 161.161(1), 161.163, 379.2431(1) FS.
New 8-23-92, Formerly 16B-41.002, Amended 10-23-01, 11-17-11, 1-11-17.
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