Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 62B-56.020 - Definitions
(1) "Access" or "public access" as used in
section 161.053, F.S., means the
public's right to laterally traverse the sandy beaches of this state where such
access exists on or after July 1, 1987, or where the public has established a
shore normal accessway through private lands to lands seaward of the mean high
tide or water line by prescription, prescriptive easement, or any other legal
means.
(2) "Adjacent properties"
are properties next to the property where the construction activity is to take
place, including those properties separated by a road, right-of-way, or access
way, in all directions.
(3) "Agent"
is any person with the written power or authority to act on behalf of the
responsible entity for purposes of an application submitted under chapter 161,
F.S.
(4) "Applicant" is any person,
firm, corporation, county, municipality, township, special district, homeowners
association, or public agency, requesting a permit to reconstruct a dune system
seaward of the CCCL. The applicant must be a responsible entity and the owner
of record, leaseholder, or holder of any legal instrument which gives the
holder legal authority to undertake the construction for which a permit is
sought.
(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 permanent vegetation.
(6) "Beach-dune System" is that portion of
the coastal system where there has been or there is expected to be, over time
and as a matter of natural occurrence, cyclical and dynamic emergence,
destruction, and reemergence of beaches and dunes.
(7) "Beach quality sand" means sand that
maintains the general appearance, and the engineering and ecological functions
of the native sand occurring on the beach and in the adjacent dune and coastal
system. Such sand shall be predominately of carbonate, quartz or similar
material with a particle size distribution ranging between 0.062mm (4.0phi) and
4.76mm (-2.25phi) (classified as sand by either the Unified Soils or the
Wentworth classification), shall be similar in color and grain size
distribution (sand grain frequency, mean and median grain size and sorting
coefficient) to the material present on the beach berm seaward of the project
site and shall not contain:
(a) Greater than
five percent by weight of silt, clay or colloids passing the #230-sieve
(4.0phi);
(b) Greater than five
percent by weight of fine gravel retained on the #4-sieve (-2.25phi);
(c) Coarse gravel, cobbles or material
retained on the three-quarter inch sieve in a percentage or size greater than
found on the native beach, or
(d)
Construction debris, toxic material or other foreign matter; and shall not
result in cementation of the beach.
(8) "Beach scraping" is the process of
excavating or relocating sand from the foreshore or below mean high water and
placing it on the beach berm to facilitate dune recovery.
(9) "Bureau" is the Bureau of Beaches and
Coastal Systems of the Department of Environmental Protection.
(10) "Coastal Construction Control Line"
(CCCL) is the line established pursuant to the provisions of section
161.053, F.S., and recorded in
the official records of the county, which defines that portion of the
beach-dune system subject to severe fluctuations based on a one-hundred-year
storm surge, storm waves, or other predictable weather conditions.
(11) "Coastal system" includes: the beach and
adjacent upland dune system and vegetation seaward of the CCCL; 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 coastal construction.
(12) "Construction" is any work or activity,
including those activities specified in section
161.085(9),
F.S., that may have an impact as defined in this rule.
(13) "Construction debris" is discarded
material resulting from the installation of a reconstructed dune or demolition
of a structure.
(14) "Core of a
reconstructed dune" is a sand-filled geotextile container used as the base
structural component of a reconstructed dune project.
(15) "Department" is the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection.
(16)
"Dune" is a mound, bluff or ridge of unconsolidated sediment, usually
sand-sized sediment, lying upland of the beach and deposited by any natural or
artificial mechanism, which may be bare or covered with vegetation and is
subject to fluctuations in configuration and location. Types of dunes include:
(a) "Primary dune" is a significant dune
which has sufficient alongshore continuity to offer protective value to upland
property. The primary dune may be separated from the frontal dune by an
interdunal trough; however, the primary dune may be considered the frontal dune
if located immediately landward of the beach.
(b) "Reconstructed dune" is a man-made dune
feature that has a sand filled geotextile container as its core that is
continuously covered with a minimum of three feet of sand, meets the specific
design and siting criteria of this chapter, is contoured to minimize erosive
effects, and is vegetated with native beach-dune plants.
(c) "Significant dune" is a dune that has
sufficient height and configuration or vegetation to offer a level of
protection to the beach-dune system.
(17) "Erosion" is the wearing away of land or
the removal of consolidated or unconsolidated material from the beach-dune
system by wind, water, or wave action. Erosion includes:
(a) Landward horizontal movement of the line
of mean high water or beach-dune system profile; and,
(b) Vertical lowering or volumetric loss of
sediment from the beach-dune system or the offshore
profile.
(18)
"Excavation" is any mechanical or manual removal or alteration of consolidated
or unconsolidated soil or rock material from or within the beach-dune
system.
(19) "Financial assurance"
is defined as a fully funded trust account for the benefit of the Department, a
surety payment bond or performance bond issued to the Department by a licensed
bonding company and accompanied by a standby trust agreement, or a letter of
credit to the Department issued by a financial institution authorized to do
business in the State of Florida and accompanied by a standby trust
agreement.
(20) "Fixed coastal
cell" is a geomorphological component of the coastal system that is closely
linked internally by active physical processes and is bounded by physical
features which exercise a major control on refraction patterns or which
compartmentalize or severely limit longshore sediment transport such as
headlands or inlets.
(21)
"Foundation" is the portion of a structure that transmits the associated dead
and live loads of the structure to the ground and includes, but is not limited
to, spread footings, foundation walls, posts, piers, piles, beams, girders,
structural slabs, cross bracing, and all related connectors. For pavements, the
foundation includes the subbase and base course layers supporting the pavement
layer.
(22) "Frequent coastal
storm" is defined as a storm event having a return period of less than or equal
to 25 years.
(23) "Frontal dune"
means the first natural or manmade mound or bluff of sand which is located
landward of the beach and which has sufficient vegetation, height, continuity,
and configuration to offer protective value.
(24) "Geotextile container" is a bag or tube,
made of blanket-like synthetic fibers manufactured in a woven or loose nonwoven
manner, used as an agent to hold together a large mass of sand forming a rigid
tubular structure.
(25) "Impacts"
are those effects, whether direct or indirect, short or long term, which are
expected to occur as a result of construction and are defined as follows:
(a) "Adverse impacts" are impacts to the
coastal system that may cause a measurable interference with the natural
functioning of the coastal system.
(b) "Significant adverse impacts" are adverse
impacts of such magnitude that they alter the coastal system by:
1. Measurably affecting the existing
shoreline change rate.
2.
Significantly interfering with its ability to recover from a coastal
storm.
3. Disturbing topography or
vegetation such that the dune system becomes unstable or suffers catastrophic
failure or the protective level of the dune system is significantly lowered,
or
(c) "Minor impacts"
are impacts associated with construction that are not considered adverse
impacts due to their magnitude or temporary nature.
(d) "Other impacts" are impacts associated
with construction that may result in damage to existing structures or property
or interference with public beach access.
(26) "Incidental Take Permit" is a permit
issued by the United States Fish and Wildlife Services.
(27) "Irreparable damage" is deterioration,
destruction or impairment of the sand-filled geotextile container system that
results in the failure of the structure to provide adequate protection to
upland properties based on the need for repair costs exceeding 50% of the
original construction cost.
(28)
"Major Structures" are structures that, as a result of design, location, or
size could cause an adverse impact to the beach and dune system. Major
structures include:
(a) Habitable major
structures that are houses, apartment buildings, condominiums, motels, hotels,
restaurants, towers, other types of residential, commercial, or public
buildings, or other structures designed primarily for human
occupancy;
(b) Nonhabitable major
structures which are designed primarily for uses other than human occupancy,
but are necessary for occupancy of a major habitable structure; and,
(c) Nonhabitable major structures which are
designed primarily for uses other than human occupancy, but whose failure would
cause an adjacent upland habitable major structure, public infrastructure or a
nonhabitable major structure necessary for occupancy of a habitable major
structure, to become subject to damage from frequent coastal storm
events.
(29) "Marine
turtle" is any turtle, including all life stages from egg to adult, of the
species Caretta caretta (loggerhead), Chelonia mydas (green), Dermochelys
coriacea (leatherback), Eretmochelys imbricata (hawksbill), and Lepidochelys
kempi (Kemp's ridley).
(30) "Marine
turtle nesting season" is the nesting period for marine turtles from May 1
through October 31 of each year for all counties except Brevard, Indian River,
St. Lucie, Martin, Palm Beach, and Broward. Nesting season for these counties
is the period from March 1 through October 31 of each year.
(31) "Mitigation" is an action or series of
actions taken by the responsible entity that will offset impacts caused by a
proposed or existing construction project.
(32) "Major modifications" are changes that
will affect the engineering performance of the structure or that will increase
the potential for adverse or other impacts.
(33) "Minor modifications" are changes that
will not affect the engineering performance of the structure and will not
increase the potential for adverse and other impacts.
(34) "Nesting state" means animals (including
mammals, birds, reptiles and invertebrates) listed by the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission as threatened or endangered and that nest,
breed, den or otherwise reside for the purposes of inhabiting or raising their
offspring within beach-dune, coastal berm, coastal grassland, coastal strand,
hammock, or other natural communities located seaward of the CCCL. Nesting
refers neither to loafing, migratory, or other casual occurrences in these
communities, nor to plants (See Table 1 provided in rule
62B-56.030, F.A.C).
(35) "Notice to Proceed" is the formal
notification from the Department authorizing all or portions of the permitted
construction to commence.
(36)
"One-hundred-year storm" is a shore-incident hurricane or any other storm with
accompanying wind, wave, and storm surge intensity having a one percent chance
of being equaled or exceeded in any given year.
(37) "One-time deferred removal cost" refers
to the cost of covering a dune with three feet of sand for the duration of the
marine turtle nesting season, and commencing removal and restoration after the
nesting season, where it has been determined that the geotextile container
shall be removed and the dune restored, but such removal and restoration
coincides with the marine turtle nesting season.
(38) "Permit" is the authorization issued by
the Department to conduct certain specified construction and maintenance in a
specified location.
(39) "Permit
condition" is a statement or stipulation issued with, and appearing in or
referenced in, a permit.
(40)
"Protective value" is the measurable protection level afforded by the dune
system to upland property and structures from the predictable erosion and storm
surge levels associated with coastal storm events.
(41) "Public infrastructure" means 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.
(42) "Repair" is the restoration of a portion
of an existing structure, including the foundation of the structure, to its
original design or an equivalent structural standard. Repair of a structure
assumes that a significant portion of the structure and its foundation remains
intact.
(43) "Responsible entity"
is defined as a single entity with financial and legal authority to perform
construction, maintenance, or other activities required by this chapter and is
responsible for verifying that information in the application is accurate.
These entities are:
(a) The property
owner.
(b) Local governmental units
including counties, municipalities, and Municipal Service Taxing
Units.
(c) State or federal
agencies, or
(d) Profit or
non-profit corporations such as homeowners associations, property owners
associations, condominium owners associations, or master
associations.
(44)
"Scour" is erosion caused by the interaction of waves and currents with
man-made structures or natural features.
(45) "Shoreline" is the intersection of a
specified plane of water with the beach. For example, the mean high water
shoreline is the intersection of the plane of mean high water with the
beach.
(46) "Shore-normal" is a
directional reference meaning approximately perpendicular to the
shoreline.
(47) "Significant beach
erosion" is major erosion to the beach-dune system causing recession that
significantly interferes with the beach-dune system's ability to recover, and
is:
(a) A measurable alteration in the
shoreline change rate, or
(b) A
disturbance to topography or vegetation such that the beach-dune system becomes
unstable or suffers catastrophic failure.
(48) "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.
(49) "Vulnerable structure" is an existing
major structure or public infrastructure located seaward of the CCCL, that is
subject to damage from frequent coastal storm events.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 161.053(20), 161.085(5) FS. Law Implemented 161.021, 161.053(2), (4), 161.085(7), (9) FS.
New 6-22-09.
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