Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H7053 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/13/2024

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 7053          PCB WST 24-01    Ratification of the Department of Environmental Protection's 
Rules Relating to Stormwater 
SPONSOR(S): Water Quality, Supply & Treatment Subcommittee, Altman 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: CS/SB 7040 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
Orig. Comm.: Water Quality, Supply & Treatment 
Subcommittee 
16 Y, 0 N Guy-Hudson Curtin 
1) Infrastructure Strategies Committee 	Guy-Hudson Harrington 
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
In 2020, the Legislature passed the Clean Waterways Act (Act) to address a number of environmental issues 
relating to water quality improvement. In pertinent part, for stormwater management systems, the Act requires 
the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and the Water Management Districts (WMDs) to initiate 
rulemaking to update stormwater design and operation regulations and the Environmental Resource Permit 
Program Applicant’s Handbook using the most recent scientific information available.    
 
The Act requires DEP to consider design best management practices (BMPs) and criteria that increase the 
removal of nutrients from stormwater discharges and address low-impact design BMPs. With respect to 
adopting new standards for pollutant loading reduction, the Act requires DEP to adopt measures for the 
consistent application of net improvement performance standards. The rules must increase the removal of 
nutrients from stormwater discharges in the state and ensure significant reductions of pollutant loadings to 
waterbodies.  
 
A statement of estimated regulatory costs (SERC) must be prepared if a proposed rule will have an adverse 
impact on small business or is likely to directly or indirectly increase regulatory costs in excess of $200,000 in 
the aggregate within one year after implementation. If the SERC shows that the adverse impact or regulatory 
costs of the proposed rule exceeds $1 million in the aggregate within five years after implementation, then the 
proposed rule must be submitted to the Legislature for ratification. DEP initiated rulemaking to update rules 62-
330.010, 62-330.050, 62-330.055, 62-330.301, 62-330.310, 62-330.311, 62-330.350, and 62-330.405, F.A.C. 
(collectively, “the stormwater rules”) in accordance with the Act. The SERC prepared by DEP for the 
stormwater rules indicated that the rules would require Legislative ratification in order to become effective. The 
stormwater rules were timely submitted to the Legislature for ratification.  
 
The bill ratifies rules 62-330.050, 62-330.055, 62-330.301, 62-330.310, 62-330.311, 62-330.350, and 62-
330.405, F.A.C. The bill also ratifies, with modifications, rule 62-330.010, F.A.C. Except for the modifications to 
rule 62-330.010, F.A.C., the bill serves no other purpose and will not be codified in the Florida Statutes. The bill 
specifies that after becoming law, its enactment and effective dates will be noted in the Florida Administrative 
Code, the Florida Administrative Register, or both, as appropriate.  
 
The stormwater rules have a fiscal impact on the private sector and local governments. See Fiscal Comments 
in Section II.  
 
   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
Background 
 
Water Quality and Nutrients  
For approximately 15 years the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has warned that despite 
Florida’s regulatory standards and the state’s long-term focus on water quality protection, “[t]echical 
evaluations and water quality monitoring data indicate that many rule-adopted best management 
practices (BMPs) are not as effective at achieving the intended stormwater treatment performance 
standards for some critical stormwater pollutants, including nutrients such as nitrogen and 
phosphorus.”
1
 DEP determined that “[c]urrently, excess nutrients represent one of the leading causes 
of impairment in our surface waterbodies. Therefore, it is critically important that stormwater design 
criteria and operation requirements provide for effective nutrient removal.”
2
 
 
While the correct balance of both nitrogen and phosphorus is necessary for a healthy ecosystem, 
excessive nitrogen and phosphorus can cause significant water quality problems.
3
 Human-made 
nutrient load sources include stormwater runoff, untreated sewage, and agricultural production and 
irrigation practices.
4
 Excessive nutrient loads may result in harmful algal blooms, nuisance aquatic 
weeds and the alteration of the natural community of plants and animals.
5
  
 
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) periodically conducts nutrient level assessments for rivers, 
streams, lakes and coastal waters to benchmark water quality and measure water quality stressors
6
 
that may lessen water quality.
7
 The National Aquatic Resource Surveys are statistical surveys of the 
biological health and condition of waterbodies across the United States and allow for estimates to be 
made about the adverse impact stressors are having on water quality. The most recent surveys found:  
 That in lakes nutrient pollution was the most widespread stressor with 45 percent of lakes 
evaluated as in poor condition with elevated phosphorus and 46 percent evaluated as in poor 
condition with elevated nitrogen.
8
  
 That 42 percent of the nation’s rivers and streams were rated in poor condition for phosphorus 
and 44 percent were rated poor for nitrogen.
9
 
 Excess nutrients exist in two-thirds of the nation’s estuarine areas.
10
  
 
                                                
1
 Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), Rulemaking Update, Stormwater/Chapter 62-330, F.A.C. Environmental Resource 
Permitting, p. 1, (on file with the House Water Quality, Supply & Treatment Subcommittee). 
2
 DEP, Statewide Environmental Resource Permitting Rules for Stormwater Design and Operation Regulations Rule Development 
Workshop No. 1, p. 15 (May 18, 2022), PowerPoint Presentation (floridadep.gov) (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  
3
 Ch. 2020-150, Laws of Fla.  
4
 Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Sources and Solutions (last updated Nov. 30, 2023), 
https://www.epa.gov/nutrientpollution/sources-and-solutions (last visited Jan. 25, 2024). 
5
 Id. 
6
 EPA, National Aquatic Resource Survey, What is the National Rivers and Streams Assessment? (last updated Dec. 19, 2023), What 
is the National Rivers and Streams Assessment? | US EPA (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). Stressors are the chemical, physical and 
biological components of the ecosystem that have the potential to degrade biological integrity. Some of these are naturally occurring, 
some result only from human activities, but most come from both sources.   
7
 Individual statistical survey information is collected for the National Lakes Assessment (NLA); National Rivers and Streams 
Assessment (NRSA); National Coastal Condition Assessment (NCCA); and, National Wetland Condition Assessment (NWCA). EPA, 
National Aquatic Resource Surveys (last updated Dec. 21, 2023), National Aquatic Resource Surveys | US EPA (last visited Jan. 24, 
2024).  
8
 EPA, National Aquatic Resource Surveys, National Lakes Assessment 2017 Key Findings (last updated Aug. 17, 2023), National 
Lakes Assessment 2017 Key Findings | US EPA (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  
9
 EPA, National Aquatic Resource Surveys, National Rivers and Streams Assessment 20138-19 Key Findings (last updated Dec. 19, 
2023), National River and Streams Assessment 2018-19 Key Findings | US EPA (last visited Jan. 25, 2024).  
10
 EPA, National Aquatic Resource Surveys National Coastal Condition Assessment 2015 Key Findings (last updated Aug. 17, 2021), 
National Coastal Condition Assessment 2015 Key Findings | US EPA (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
A 2007 stormwater treatment system design study commissioned by DEP concluded that current 
stormwater design criteria failed to achieve the standards in place at that time.
11
 In Florida, 87 percent 
of counties have nutrient impaired water bodies.
12
  
 
The Florida Clean Waterways Act (Act) addresses a myriad of water quality issues by strengthening 
regulatory requirements for wastewater treatment and discharge, septic systems, stormwater runoff and 
fertilizer used in agricultural production.
13
 The Act directed DEP to promulgate rules to implement 
policies to improve water quality and address stormwater treatment systems design and performance to 
increase nutrient removal and ensure future stormwater system design that is consistent with Best 
Management Practices (BMPs). 
 
Stormwater Treatment  
Stormwater is the flow of water resulting from, and immediately following, a rainfall event.
14
 When 
stormwater falls on pavement, buildings and other impermeable surfaces, the runoff flows quickly and 
can pick up sediment, nutrients (such as nitrogen and phosphorous), chemicals and other pollutants.
15
 
A stormwater management system is a system designed “[t]o control discharges which are 
necessitated by rainfall events, incorporating methods to collect, convey, store, absorb, inhibit, treat, 
use, or reuse water to prevent or reduce flooding, overdrainage, environmental degradation, and water 
pollution. . . .”
16
 Most activities that create new impervious surfaces or alter surface water flows involve 
a stormwater management system.
17
   
 
Effective stormwater management reduces nonpoint source pollution and protects surface water 
resources from stormwater pollution from existing and new land uses.
18
 Nonpoint source pollution may 
come from land runoff or rain or hydrologic modification, among other diffuse sources. These pollutants 
adversely impact drinking water supplies, recreation, fisheries and wildlife.
19
 
 
DEP regulates surface water flows via the Environmental Resource Permit (ERP) Program, a permitting 
process that addresses and regulates impacts to the landscape including clearing, grading, 
construction of structures and filling and dredging, whether the work occurs in uplands, wetlands or 
other surface waters.
20
 An ERP permit may be issued by DEP, a water management district (WMD) or 
a local government to which DEP delegated ERP permitting authority.
21
 ERPs are designed to prevent 
flooding, protect wetlands and other surface waters and protect Florida’s water quality from stormwater 
pollution.
22
 
 
                                                
11
 Harvey H. Harper, Ph.D., P.E., and David M. Baker, P.E., prepared for DEP by Environmental Research & Design, Inc., Evaluation 
of Current Stormwater Design Criteria within the State of Florida, p. 1-1 (June 2007), Microsoft Word - SW TREATMENT 
REPORT-SEC 1-607.doc (sfwmd.gov) (last visited Jan, 24, 2024.) 
12
 DEP, Modernizing Florida’s Stormwater Rules, Presentation to the House Water Quality, Supply & Treatment Subcommittee, p. 8 
(Jan. 10, 2024), 
https://www.myfloridahouse.gov/Sections/Documents/loaddoc.aspx?PublicationType=Committees&CommitteeId=3251&Session=20
24&DocumentType=Meeting+Packets&FileName=wst+1-10-24.pdf (last visited Jan. 10, 2024).  
13
 Ch. 2020-150, Laws of Fla. 
14
 DEP, Environmental Resource Permit Applicant’s Handbook Volume I (General and Environmental) p. 2-10 (Dec. 22, 2020) 
Modified Document, 1/6/2021, https://www.flrules.org/gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-12078 (last visited Jan. 23, 2024). 
15
 EPA, Source Water Protection, Urbanization and Stormwater Runoff (last updated Feb. 28, 2023), 
https://www.epa.gov/sourcewaterprotection/urbanization-and-stormwater-
runoff#:~:text=Stormwater%20runoff%20is%20generated%20from%20rain%20and%20snowmelt,chemicals%2C%20and%20dirt%2
Fsediment%20into%20streams%2C%20lakes%2C%20and%20groundwater (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). 
16
 S. 373.403(10), F.S. See s. 403.031(18), F.S., relating to pollution control.  
17
 DEP, Modernizing Florida’s Stormwater Rules, supra note 12, pp. 1-5. 
18
 R. 62-40.431(1), F.A.C.  
19
 EPA, Polluted Runoff: Nonpoint Source (NPS) Pollution, Basic Information about Nonpoint Source (NPS) Pollution (last updated 
Dec. 4, 2023), Basic Information about Nonpoint Source (NPS) Pollution | US EPA (last visited Jan. 25, 2024).  
20
 DEP, Environmental Resource Permitting Online Help (last updated Feb. 8, 2022), https://floridadep.gov/water/submerged-lands-
environmental-resources-coordination/content/environmental-resource-0 (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). 
21
 Id.  
22
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
ERP permitting for stormwater management systems as well as dams, reservoirs and water 
impoundment is governed by s. 373.4131, F.S. DEP implements this section of law in ch. 62-330, 
F.A.C., which provides for the permitting rules, application process and standards by which applications 
are considered and approved or denied. The ERP Applicant’s Handbook, which is incorporated by 
reference into DEP rules, provides guidance on DEP’s ERP program, which includes all permitted 
activities governed by ch. 373, part IV, F.S., relating to management and storage of surface waters, as 
well as stormwater management systems-specific activities.
23
 Applicants for an ERP must adhere to 
requirements in both the Applicant’s Handbook, Volume I, which governs general permitting while 
WMD-specific permitting requirements are contained in the Applicant’s Handbook, Volume II, for which 
there is one per WMD.
24
   
 
Regulations to protect water quality typically use standards and BMPs in concert to achieve desired 
outcomes. Generally, BMPs are measures to prevent water pollution discharge.
25
 The EPA’s National 
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
26
 regulations include a definition of BMPs as applied 
to water quality protection to mean: 
 
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, and other 
management practices to prevent or reduce the pollution of ‘waters of the United States.’ 
BMPs also include treatment requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control 
plant site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw material 
storage.
27
  
 
Florida law includes a BMP definition that is specific to the Northern Everglades and Estuaries 
Protection Program in ch. 373, pt. IV, F.S.
28
 DEP as well as the Department of Agriculture & Consumer 
Services (DACS) use BMPs in rules, guidance and criteria to protect water quality. BMPs are often 
used among both environmental and agricultural constituencies to balance agricultural productivity and 
improvements to water quality.  
 
Currently, Florida’s state water quality standards are found in administrative rule and provide the 
threshold reduction required for stormwater treatment systems. New stormwater management systems 
design and performance criteria must achieve at least an 80 percent reduction of the “average annual 
load of pollutants” that would cause or contribute to violations of state water quality standards.
29
 For 
systems that discharge to Outstanding Florida Waters (OFW) (see Stormwater Rules Performance 
Standards below for term definition), the system must achieve at least a 95 percent reduction.
30
 If a 
WMD or DEP adopts basin-specific design and performance criteria in order to achieve an adopted 
Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)
31
 or the pollutant load reduction goals established in a watershed 
                                                
23
 R. 62-330.010(4), F.A.C. See DEP, Modernizing Florida’s Stormwater Rules, supra note 12. 
24
 DEP, ERP Stormwater (last updated June 7, 2022), ERP Stormwater | Florida Department of Environmental Protection (last visited 
Jan. 24, 2024). 
25
 EPA, NPDES Permit Writers Manual, Chapter 9, Special Conditions, p. 9-3 (Sep. 2010), 
https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-09/documents/pwm_chapt_09.pdf (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  
26
 Pursuant to section 402 of the federal Clean Water Act, any discharge of a pollutant from a point source to surface waters (i.e., the 
navigable waters of the United States or beyond) must obtain a NPDES permit. See 33 U.S.C. § 1342. NPDES permit requirements for 
most wastewater facilities or activities (domestic or industrial) that discharge to surface waters are incorporated into a state-issued 
permit which gives the permittee a single set of permitting requirements rather than one state and one federal permit. See ss. 
403.061(32), and 403.087, F.S. 
27
 40 C.F.R. §122.2. 
28
 S. 373.4595(2)(a), F.S. The term “best management practice” in this section means a practice or combination of practices 
determined by the coordinating agencies, based on research, field-testing and expert review, to be the most effective and practicable 
on-location means, including economic and technological considerations, for improving water quality in agricultural and urban 
discharges.  
29
 R. 62-40.432(2)(a)1., F.A.C. 
30
 R. 62-40.432(2)(a)2., F.A.C.  
31
 A TMDL is a scientific determination of the maximum amount of a given pollutant that can be absorbed by a waterbody and still 
meet water quality standards. DEP, Watershed Evaluation and Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL) Section (last updated Oct. 12, 
2023), Watershed Evaluation and Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL) Section | Florida Department of Environmental Protection 
(last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
management plan, such design and performance criteria shall govern in place of the above-mentioned 
reduction thresholds.
32
 
 
When a stormwater management system complies with rules establishing applicable design and 
performance criteria, there is a rebuttable presumption that the system’s discharge will comply with 
water quality standards.
33
 Thus, compliance with the reduction threshold is presumed achieved and not 
measured according to outcome calculations.  
 
Rulemaking Authority and Legislative Ratification 
A rule is an “agency statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes law or 
policy or describes the procedure or practice requirements of an agency . . . .”
34
 Rulemaking authority is 
delegated by the Legislature through statute and authorizes an agency to “adopt, develop, establish, or 
otherwise create” a rule.
35
 The effect of an agency statement determines whether it meets the statutory 
definition of a rule, regardless of how the agency characterizes the statement.
36
 If an agency statement 
generally requires compliance, creates certain rights while adversely affecting others or otherwise has 
the direct and consistent effect of law, it is a rule.
37
 
 
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) sets forth a uniform set of procedures agencies must follow 
when exercising delegated rulemaking authority.
38
 Agencies do not have discretion whether to engage 
in rulemaking.
39
 To adopt a rule, an agency must have an express grant of authority to implement a 
specific law by rulemaking.
40
 The specific statute being interpreted or implemented through rulemaking 
must provide standards and guidelines to preclude the administrative agency from exercising unbridled 
discretion in creating policy or applying the law.
41
 
 
An agency begins the formal rulemaking process by filing a notice of rule development in the Florida 
Administrative Register (FAR) and the notice must “indicate the subject area to be addressed by rule 
development, provide a short, plain explanation of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule, cite the 
specific legal authority for the proposed rule, and include the preliminary text of the proposed rules, if 
available, or a statement of how a person may promptly obtain, without cost, a copy of any preliminary 
draft, if available.”
42
 Next, an agency must file, upon approval of the agency head, a notice of proposed 
rule.
43
 The notice is published by the Department of State in the FAR
44
 and must provide certain 
information, including: the text of the proposed rule; a summary of the agency’s statement of estimated 
regulatory costs (SERC) if one is prepared; and, how a party may request a public hearing on the 
proposed rule.
45
  
 
                                                
32
 R. 62-40.432(2)(a)3., F.A.C. 
33
 R. 62-40.432(2)(a), F.A.C. 
34
 S. 120.52(16), F.S.; see also Fla. Dep’t of Fin. Servs. v. Capital Collateral Reg’l Counsel-Middle Region, 969 So. 2d 527, 530 (Fla. 
1st DCA 2007). 
35
 S. 120.52(17), F.S. 
36
 Dep’t of Admin. v. Harvey, 356 So. 2d 323, 325 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977). 
37
 McDonald v. Dep't of Banking & Fin., 346 So. 2d 569, 581 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977); see also Balsam v. Dep’t of Health & Rehab. 
Servs., 452 So. 2d 976, 977–78 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984); Dep’t of Transp. v. Blackhawk Quarry Co., 528 So. 2d 447, 450 (Fla. 5th DCA 
1988), rev. den. 536 So. 2d 243 (Fla. 1988); Dep’t of Natural Res. v. Wingfield, 581 So. 2d 193, 196 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991); Dep’t of 
Revenue v. Vanjaria Enters., Inc., 675 So. 2d 252, 255 (Fla. 5th DCA 1996); Volusia Cnty. Sch. Bd. v. Volusia Homes Builders Ass’n, 
946 So. 2d 1084, 1089 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007); Fla. Dep’t of Fin. Servs. v. Capital Collateral Reg’l Counsel-Middle Region, 969 So. 2d 
527, 530 (Fla. 1st DCA 2007); Coventry First, LLC v. Fla. Office of Ins. Reg., 38 So. 3d 200, 203-04 (Fla. 1st DCA 2010). 
38
 Ch. 120, F.S. 
39
 S. 120.54(1)(a), F.S. 
40
 Ss. 120.52(8) and 120.536(1), F.S. 
41
 Sloban v. Fla. Bd. of Pharmacy, 982 So. 2d 26, 29-30 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008). 
42
 S. 120.54(2)(a), F.S. 
43
 S. 120.54(3)(a)1., F.S. 
44
 S. 120.55(1)(b)1., F.S. 
45
 S. 120.54(3)(a)1., F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
Stormwater Rulemaking History  
In 1978, DEP attempted to create stormwater discharge exemptions in department rules; however, the 
first formal stormwater rules were not adopted until 1981.
46
 Subsequent, minor revisions were adopted 
prior to the adoption of the Statewide ERP program rules in 2013.
47
 Stormwater treatment pursuant to 
the ERP program is currently based on the presumption that standards are achieved when a system 
complies with design and performance criteria; actual discharge is not measured for compliance 
purposes.  
 
To address excessive nutrients in stormwater runoff, from 2007 to 2010, DEP and the WMDs worked 
together to develop a statewide unified stormwater rule.
48
 After a technical advisory committee’s 
analyses, workshops and public comment, DEP released a draft statewide stormwater quality rule and 
applicant handbook that increased the level of nutrient treatment in stormwater discharges and 
provided statewide treatment performance standards and BMP design criteria.
49
 The proposed rule and 
revised handbook were expected to be adopted in 2011; however, neither were adopted. 
 
Updated Stormwater Rules Required by the Clean Waterways Act of 2020 
Florida’s Clean Waterways Act
50
 requires DEP and the WMDs to initiate rulemaking by January 1, 
2021, to update stormwater design and operation regulations and the ERP Applicant’s Handbook using 
the most recent scientific information available. The Act requires DEP to consider design BMPs and 
criteria that increase the removal of nutrients from stormwater discharges. With respect to adopting new 
standards for pollutant loading reduction, the Act requires DEP to adopt measures for the consistent 
application of net improvement performance standards. As part of rule development, the bill requires 
DEP to consider and address low-impact design BMPs and design criteria that increase the removal of 
nutrients from stormwater discharges. 
 
The EPA provides guidance on low-impact design
51
 and describes low-impact development as systems 
and practices that mimic or preserve natural drainage processes to manage stormwater.
52
 Low-impact 
designs, including green roofs and permeable pavements, can result in stormwater being reused, 
soaking into vegetation that performs evaporative cooling or infiltrating the soil and replenishing 
groundwater.
53
 
 
DEP’s current stormwater treatment rulemaking process began in July 2020 and concluded after three 
years. The process included: two public outreach meetings and the establishment of a Technical 
Advisory Committee (TAC); 13 TAC meetings and associated recommendations;
54
 four rule 
development workshops; publication of and a hearing on the draft rule; publication of a Statement of 
Regulatory Costs (SERC); and, four published rule changes based on receipt of stakeholder-submitted 
                                                
46
 DEP, Modernizing Florida’s Stormwater Rules, supra note 12, p. 9.  
47
 See 62-330, F.A.C. 
48
 Chapter 62-347, F.A.C. 
49
 Id. 
50
 Ch. 2020-150, Laws of Fla.   
51
 EPA, Nonpoint Source: Urban Areas (last updated Nov. 30, 2023), Nonpoint Source: Urban Areas | US EPA (last visited Jan. 25, 
2024). 
52
 Id.  
53
 William F. Hunt, Ph.D., P.E., and Laura L. Szpir, Urban Waterways, Permeable Pavements, Green Roofs, and Cisterns: Stormwater 
Treatment Practices for Low-Impact Development (May 2006), https://brunswick.ces.ncsu.edu/wp-
content/uploads/2013/04/BMPs4LID.pdf?fwd=no (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  
54
 DEP, Division of Water Resource Management, Clean Waterways Act Technical Advisory Committee Summary Report, (March 
2022), Clean Waterways Act Stormwater technical advisory committee (floridadep.gov) (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). A technical 
advisory committee is appointed by a state agency secretary and is composed of experts, practitioners, stakeholders and interest groups 
to provide research, guidance and recommendations on a particular proposed action by that agency. The stormwater rulemaking 
TAC’s goal “was to develop and provide consensus on stormwater rulemaking recommendations for DEP and the WMDs through 
public discussion and constructive deliberation. The TAC collaborated during public meetings to produce stormwater 
recommendations for DEP’s consideration during rulemaking.” See p. 2. TAC members included representatives from the Florida 
Home Builders Association, Audubon Florida, Florida League of Cities, Florida Association of Counties, academia, the Florida 
Stormwater Association, and others. See p. 7. The TAC reached consensus on 33 of 39 recommendations it developed.   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
Lower Cost Regulatory Alternative (LCRAs) proposals.
55
 DEP submitted the stormwater rules to the 
Department of State for adoption on April 28, 2023.  
 
The rules increase stormwater treatment design performance standards, provide explanations on how 
to achieve those standards and update requirements to strengthen operation, maintenance, inspection 
and reporting requirements. Changes to the draft rules based on the LCRAs include: providing a lower 
treatment standard for redevelopment sites; authorizing “qualified inspectors” to conduct inspections in 
addition to “registered professionals;” and, allowing Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) 
permit holders to follow MS4 standard operating procedures.
56
 Lastly, all four LCRAs proposed a 12-
month grandfathering period for those outstanding permit applications deemed complete. Section 3.1.2, 
contains the grandfathering provisions of the adopted ERP Applicant Handbook, Vol. I. It reads:  
 
(e) Stormwater criteria throughout Volume I and Volume II was updated effective [effective 
date]. The updated requirements are applicable to project applications as indicated in the 
respective updated sections, and as described below:  
 
1.  When public transportation projects have received an individual permit prior to 
[effective date], such activities will remain subject to the rules in effect at the time of 
issuance, including any associated modifications necessary to accommodate design 
changes solely for the purposes of public safety or design changes that do not increase 
the overall impervious surface area by more than 10 percent.  
 
2.  For permit modifications, submitted no later than five years from [effective date], 
for permitted public transportation projects which include stormwater ponds that were 
sized and permitted to collect stormwater from future public transportation projects, such 
projects shall be subject to the rules in existence at the time the stormwater management 
pond was permitted, so long as the treatment capacity for future public transportation 
projects was specified in the application materials submitted to the agency at the time of 
the original permit application.  
 
3.  For projects and activities not covered by subparagraphs 1. and 2. above, those 
projects and activities that were approved by an unexpired conceptual, general, or A.H. 
Volume I Eff. date 3-5 individual Environmental Resource Permit, Management and 
Storage of Surface Waters Permit, or Surface Water Management Permit issued prior to 
[effective date] shall be exempt from the amendments to Chapter 62-330, F.A.C., and 
Volume I adopted on [effective date], and the corresponding amendments to the 
applicable Volume II. This exemption shall apply to any modification of such permit that is 
not a major modification or that does not cause substantially different water resource 
impacts, and to the subsequent permits to construct and operate the future phases 
consistent with an unexpired conceptual approval permit. This exemption shall also apply 
to transfers of such permits, or conversion of such permits to the operation phase, on or 
after [effective date]; however, such operation phase permits shall be subject to the 
Inspections and Reporting Requirements of sections 12.5 and 12.6 of this Volume. A 
modification of a permit qualifying for this exemption shall be reviewed under the rules in 
effect at the time the permit was originally issued, unless the applicant elects to have such 
modification reviewed under the rules adopted on [effective date]. Any modification of such 
permit for the construction of a new dam or major modification of an existing permit for a 
dam, as defined in paragraph 2.0(a)27 above, shall be subject to the criteria of sections 
8.4.5 and Appendix L, if applicable to such permit modification.  
 
4.  Projects or activities that are the subject of a general or individual permit 
application that is deemed complete on or before [effective date + 12 months] shall be 
                                                
55
 S. 120.541, F.S., authorizes a “substantially affected person” to, during the rulemaking process, submit a “good faith proposal” 
which “substantially accomplishes the objectives of the law being implemented.”  
56
 DEP, Statement of Estimated Regulatory Cost (SERC), Chapter 62-300, F.A.C., p. 9-12, serc-template-updated.pdf (state.fl.us) (last 
visited Jan. 4, 2024).   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
exempt from the amendments to Chapter 62-330, F.A.C., and Volume I adopted on 
[effective date], and the corresponding amendments to the applicable Volume II.
57
 
 
The adoption of the LCRAs decreased the total estimated cost by $231 million, or a decrease of $500 
per acre developed.
58
 
 
Stormwater Rules Performance Standards 
The rules increase stormwater treatment design performance standards and provide guidance on how 
to achieve the standards, both of which are included in the adopted ERP Applicant’s Handbook, 
Volume I. The majority of increased costs associated with the rules are related to increased standards 
for nutrient removal from stormwater discharges. (See Statement of Estimated Regulatory Costs 
(SERC) below for details relating to the cost.)  
 
The rules shift from a threshold for “average annual load of pollutants” to performance standards for a 
minimum reduction needed for each of the total nitrogen nutrient level (TN), the phosphorus nutrient 
level (TP) and the total suspended solids (TSS) for specified waters. The four types of waters include:  
 “Outstanding Florida Waters” (OFW) means waters designated by the Environmental Regulation 
Commission
59
 as worthy of special protection because of their natural attributes.
60
 The 
designation is intended to protect existing water quality for a designated OFW.
61
  
 “Impaired Waters” means a waterbody or waterbody segment that does not meet its applicable 
water quality standards, due in whole or in part to discharges of pollutants from point or 
nonpoint sources.
62
 
 “Impaired Outstanding Florida Waters” means an OFW for which a TMDL and a Basin 
Management Action Plan (BMAP) have been adopted by DEP.
63
 
 “Redevelopment” is defined in the adopted ERP Applicant Handbook, Vol. I, to mean 
construction on existing sites with the same or less intense land uses, that are not used for 
silviculture or agriculture purposes. Existing sites must also be:  
o where the existing land use has not been previously permitted pursuant to ch. 373, pt. 
IV, F.S.; and, 
o where all or part of the existing impervious surface is removed and replaced with new 
impervious surface, which has the same or lesser area as the existing impervious 
surface.
64
  
                                                
57
 DEP, Environmental Resource Permit Applicant’s Handbook Volume I (General and Environmental) (adopted Apr. 28, 2023), pp. 
3-4 – 3-5, TABLE OF CONTENTS (state.fl.us) (last visited Jan. 11, 2024).   
58
 DEP, Notes on the State[ment] of Estimated Regulatory Costs (SERC), p. 4, (on file with the House Water Quality, Supply & 
Treatment Subcommittee). 
59
 DEP, Environmental Regulation Commission (last updated Dec. 12, 2023), Environmental Regulation Commission | Florida 
Department of Environmental Protection (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). The Environmental Regulation Commission (ERC) is a seven-
member board housed within DEP that is charged with setting statutorily-specified air and water quality standards by evaluating the 
standards’ scientific and technical validity, economic impacts and risks and benefits to the public and Florida’s natural resources. 
Members represent a broad array of water quality professionals including scientists and engineers, as well as representatives of local 
governments, developers and environmental advocates. ERC members are selected by the Governor. See s. 408.304, F.S.  
60
 R. 62-302.200(26), F.A.C. For a complete listing of Outstanding Florida Waters, see R. 62-302.700(9), F.A.C. 
61
 DEP, Outstanding Florida Waters (last updated June 9, 2023), Outstanding Florida Waters | Florida Department of Environmental 
Protection (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).  
62
 R. 62-303.200(7), F.A.C.  
63
 S. 403.067(6), F.S. Adopted by DEP and legally-enforceable as such, a BMAP is a restoration plan for the watersheds and basins 
connected to an impaired water body which includes standards for restoration outcomes and monitoring requirements using local and 
state commitments to reduce pollutant loading. BMAPs contain a comprehensive set of solutions, such as permit limits on wastewater 
facilities, urban and agricultural best management practices and conservation programs designed to achieve pollutant reductions 
established by a TMDL. Where there is an adopted BMP for a nonpoint source, the BMAP must require the nonpoint source to 
implement the applicable BMPs. See also DEP, Water Quality Restoration Programs, Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs) (last 
updated Jan. 17, 2024), Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs) | Florida Department of Environmental Protection (last visited Jan. 
24, 202.)  
64
 DEP, ERP Applicant’s Handbook: Vol. I (adopted Apr. 28, 2023), supra note 57, s. 2.0(a)97, p 2-10.  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
Redevelopment may be used as a strategy for reducing net nutrient increases in existing 
impervious surfaces and receiving waters.
65
 
 
The rules set the following standards for nutrient reduction:  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
*See Effect of the Bill, modifications to the ERP Applicant Handbook, Vol. 1, s. 8.3.5, for additional 
requirements for redevelopment sites that include OFW and Impaired Waters.  
 
The rules provide flexibility to achieve the required nutrient reduction. An applicant may calculate either 
the post-development nutrient load as less than or equal to the pre-development nutrient load or 
achieve specific nutrient loads as identified in the rule to be a net improvement. The applicant must use 
the calculation that achieves the greatest reduction to produce the most environmentally protective 
outcomes. The rules also provide that design options to achieve the outcome may include BMPs.  
 
Statement of Estimated Regulatory Costs (SERC) 
A SERC must be prepared by a state agency “if a proposed rule will have an adverse impact on small 
business or if the proposed rule is likely to directly or indirectly increase regulatory costs in excess of 
$200,000 in the aggregate within one year after the implementation of the rule . . . .”
66
 The economic 
analysis mandated for each SERC must analyze a rule’s potential impact over the five-year period from 
when the rule goes into effect, including: the rule’s likely adverse impact on economic growth, private-
sector job creation or employment, or private-sector investment;
67
 the likely adverse impact on business 
competitiveness, productivity, or innovation;
68
 and, whether the rule is likely to increase regulatory 
costs, including any transactional costs.
69
  
 
If the SERC analysis demonstrates that the projected impact of the proposed rule in any one of these 
areas will exceed $1 million in the aggregate for the five-year period after implementation, the rule must 
be ratified by the Legislature in order to become effective.
70
 If a rule requires ratification, the rule must 
be submitted to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives no later 
than 30 days prior to the commencement of the regular legislative session in order to be considered for 
ratification.
71
  
 
DEP determined that a SERC was required for the stormwater treatment rules. DEP found that the 
rules will increase regulatory costs for approximately 14,032 stormwater projects permitted over a five-
                                                
65
 EPA, NPDES Stormwater Best Management Practices: Redevelopment (December 2021), NPDES: Stormwater Best Management 
Practice, Redevelopment (epa.gov) (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). See also DEP, Clean Waterways Act Technical Advisory Committee 
Summary Report, supra note 54, Charge Item 2, p. 14-16.  
66
 S. 120.541(1)(b), F.S. 
67
 S. 120.541(2)(a)1., F.S.  
68
 S. 120.541(2)(a)2., F.S. (The analysis of the likelihood of adverse impact on business competitiveness includes the ability of those 
doing business in Florida to compete with those doing business in other states or domestic markets.) 
69
 S. 120.541(2)(a)3., F.S. 
70
 S. 120.541(3), F.S. 
71
 S. 120.541(3), F.S. 
Nutrient Load Reduction Criteria in Rule 
All Sites –  
Not 
Impaired 
OFWs Impaired 
Waters 
Impaired OFWs Redevelopment* 
 
TP: 80% 
TN: 55% 
TP: 90% 
TN: 80% 
TP: 80% 
TN: 80% 
TP: 95% 
TN: 95% 
TP: 80% (90% if 
OFW) 
TN: 45% (60% if 
OFW:  
 
TSS 
(suspended 
solids): 80% 
TSS: 95% TSS: 80% TSS: 95% TSS: 80% (or 95% if 
OFW)  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 10 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
year period. The SERC includes both transactional and treatment costs.
72
 However, DEP estimates 
“[t]he most significant factor in the anticipated cost increase associated with these rule updates is the 
higher treatment costs that would be required to achieve the proposed minimum stormwater treatment 
performance standards in combination with the requirement to maintain post-development loadings that 
would not exceed pre-development loadings for nutrients, as a result of the development project.”
73
 
 
DEP estimates the total increase in cost within five years of implementation will be $1,254,971,174, an 
approximately 8-10 percent increase over current stormwater treatment costs.
74
 DEP based the 
estimate on five land use development categories (residential; commercial; industrial; roadway; and, 
other) across 464,867 acres. The estimate includes transactional costs totaling $43,802,340 and 
treatment costs totaling $1,211,168,834.
75
 
 
Effect of the Bill  
 
The bill ratifies amendments to Rule 62-330.010, F.A.C., Purpose and Implementation, which 
incorporates by reference Volumes I and II of the adopted ERP Applicant’s Handbook. The rule 
incorporates by reference the Federal Guidelines for Inundation Mapping of Flood Risks Associated 
with Dam Incidents and Failures (FEMA P-946, July 2013), in appendences to Volume I. The bill also 
modifies the adopted ERP Handbook, Vol. I and: 
 
 Section 3.1.2, Grandfathered Activities:  
o Clarifies that grandfather provisions in existence prior to the effective date of the rule 
remain in existence.  
o Provides that specific grandfathered projects
76
 will continue using all forms in effect at 
the time the permit was originally issued, except for those subsequent permits to 
construct and operate the future phases consistent with an unexpired conceptual 
approval permit which will use specified forms. 
 
 Section 8.3.4, Minimum Performance Standards for Impaired Waters:  
o Clarifies in s. 8.3.4(a) and (b) that the minimum level of treatment for stormwater 
treatment systems located within a HUC 12
77
 subwatershed
78
 which contains an 
impaired water, and is located upstream of that impaired water, must be sufficient to 
accomplish a reduction that results in “the post-development condition average annual 
                                                
72
 DEP, Statement of Estimated Regulatory Cost (SERC), Chapter 62-300, F.A.C., supra note 56.  
73
 DEP, Notes on the State[ment] of Estimated Regulatory Costs (SERC), supra note 58, p. 4. 
74
 Id., p. 2. 
75
 Id., p. 4.  
76
 Section 3.1.2(e)3., identifies these projects as “…projects and activities that were approved by an unexpired conceptual, general, or 
individual Environmental Resource Permit, Management and Storage of Surface Waters Permit, or Surface Water Management Permit 
issued prior to [effective date] shall be exempt from the amendments to Chapter 62-330, F.A.C., and Volume I adopted on [effective 
date], and the corresponding amendments to the applicable Volume II.” DEP, ERP Applicant’s Handbook: Vol. I (adopted Apr. 28, 
2023), supra note 57, pp. 3-4 – 3-5. 
77
 “Hydrologic Unit Code” or “HUC” means the hydrologic cataloging unit assigned to a geographic area representing a surface 
watershed drainage basin. Each unit is assigned a two- to 12-digit number that uniquely identifies each of the six levels of 
classification within six two-digit fields. United States Geological Survey (USGS), Hydrologic Unit Codes (HUCs) Explained, 
https://nas.er.usgs.gov/hucs.aspx (last visited Jan. 24, 2024). Eight-digit HUCs are used for large watersheds known as subbasins; 10-
digit HUCs divide the large subbasins into watersheds; and, 12-digit HUCs divide watersheds into subwatersheds. EPA, Hydrologic 
Unit Codes: HUC 4, HUC 8, and HUC 12, https://enviroatlas.epa.gov/enviroatlas/datafactsheets/pdf/Supplemental/HUC.pdf (last 
visited Jan. 24, 2024); DEP, About the Florida National Hydrography Dataset (last updated Sept. 6, 2022), 
https://floridadep.gov/dear/watershed-services-program/content/about-florida-national-hydrography-dataset (last visited Jan. 24, 
2024). 
78
 A watershed, also referred to as a catchment area or drainage basin, is an area of land that contributes to the flow of water into a 
waterbody. The flow of water from a watershed can negatively impact the receiving body of water as it often carries pollutants such as 
fertilizers and pesticides and deposits them into the receiving waterbody. S. 403.031(18), F.S. See also, S. Shukla, What is a 
Watershed?, University of Florida IFAS Extension, Ask IFAS (Dec. 12, 2019), https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/AE265 (last visited 
Jan. 24, 2024). A subwatershed is an HUC classification that divides a watershed and captures the locale tributaries contained within. 
EPA, Hydrologic Unit Codes: HUC 4, HUC 8, and HUC 12, supra note 77.   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 11 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
loading, of those pollutants not meeting water quality standards, . . . is less than that of 
the predevelopment condition.”  
 
 Section 8.3.5, Alternative Performance Standards for Redevelopment: Provides an alternative
79
 
level of treatment sufficient to accomplish:  
o an 80 percent reduction of the post-development average annual loading of TP and a 45 
percent reduction of the post-development average annual loading of TN from the 
project area; and 
o for stormwater systems located within a HUC 12 subwatershed containing an OFW and 
located upstream of that OFW, a 90 percent reduction of the post-development average 
annual loading of TP and a 60 percent reduction of the post-development average 
annual loading of TN from the project area; and 
o for stormwater treatment systems located within a HUC 12 subwatershed which contains 
an impaired water and located upstream of that impaired water, a level of treatment 
sufficient to accomplish a post-development condition average annual loading, of those 
pollutants not meeting water quality standards, that is less than that of the 
predevelopment condition." 
 
 Section 12.5, Inspections: Provides exceptions to inspection requirements in the ERP Applicant 
Handbook, Vol. I, for activities and BMPs:  
o Regulated by the South Florida WMD pursuant to r. 40E-63, F.A.C, relating to the 
Everglades Program; or, 
o Regulated by DACS pursuant to Title 5M, F.A.C., relating to agricultural BMPs, and s. 
403.067(7)(c)2., F.S., relating to the establishment and implementation of TMDLs. 
 
The bill ratifies amendments, without further modification, to rules 62-330.050, 62-330.055, 62-330.301, 
62-330.310, 62-330.311, 62-330.350, and 62-330.405, F.A.C., relating to stormwater treatment within 
the ERP program. The rules:  
 
 Rule 62-330.050, F.A.C., Procedures for Review and Agency Action on Exemption Requests: 
The rule incorporates by reference the updated State of Florida Erosion and Sediment Control 
Designer and Reviewer Manual, the Florida Stormwater Erosion and Sedimentation Control 
Inspector’s Manual Tier I and the Florida Stormwater Erosion and Sedimentation Control 
Inspector’s Manual Tier II. 
 
 Rule 62-330.055, F.A.C., Conceptual Approval Permits for Urban Infill or Redevelopment: As a 
part of a conceptual approval permit request, if a county or municipality submits a stormwater 
management master plan for an urban infill or redevelopment area that meets certain criteria, 
the rule exempts the requestor from meeting all of the quality and quantity design and 
performance criteria of Volume I of the ERP Applicant’s Handbook. (Currently, this exemption 
only applies to the stormwater quality and quantity design and performance criteria of Volume II 
of the ERP Applicant’s Handbook.) 
 
 Rule 62-330.301, F.A.C., Conditions for Issuance of Individual and Conceptual Approval 
Permits:  
o The rule requires applicants who are unable to meet state water quality standards 
because existing ambient water quality does not meet standards and the stormwater 
management system will contribute to this existing condition to demonstrate a post-
development net improvement in pollutant load discharges. The rule provides how 
applicants must calculate the discharged pollutant loads.   
o The rule incorporates by reference Forms 62-330.301(26), “Certification of Financial 
Capability for Perpetual Operations and Maintenance Entities” and Form 62-
330.301(25), “Dam System Information.” (Submitting information for existing dam 
                                                
79
 The bill preserves the current adopted ERP Applicant Handbook nutrient load reduction criteria for redevelopment in ss. 8.3.2 – 
8.3.4, as an option for redevelopment activities. See Nutrient Load Reduction Criteria in Rule Chart in Stormwater Rules Performance 
Standards chart above.   STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 12 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
systems required by the Dam System Information form is a new requirement under the 
rules.)  
 
 Rule 62-330.310, F.A.C., Operation and Maintenance:  
o The rule requires a development-permittee that also serves as the perpetual operation 
and maintenance entity to demonstrate on-going financial, legal and administrative 
capability after the project is completed. (Currently, this requirement only applies to a 
perpetual entity which operates and maintains the project after completion and is 
different from the development-permittee.)   
o The rule incorporates by reference the updated Form 62-330.310(2), “Request for 
Transfer of Environmental Resource Permit to the Perpetual Operation and Maintenance 
Entity.” 
 
 Rule 62-330.311, F.A.C., Inspections and Reporting:  
o The rule requires each operation and maintenance entity to conduct and report 
inspections as described in Volume I of the ERP Applicant’s Handbook. The rule 
requires that within 30 days of a stormwater management system inspection, a report 
shall be submitted to the permitting agency using updated Form 62-330.311(1), 
“Operation and Maintenance Inspection Certification” and the rule incorporates by 
reference the updated version of the form. (Currently, the form is only required to be 
submitted within 30 days of any failure of a stormwater management system or deviation 
from the permit.) The rule requires the inspection report to include Form 62-330.311(3), 
F.A.C., “Inspection Checklists,” or another form or format that includes information 
required on the Inspection Checklist.   
o The rule requires information to be provided for existing dam systems in accordance with 
Volume I of the ERP Applicant’s Handbook on Form 62-330.311(4), “Condition 
Assessment Report” and incorporates the form by reference. 
 
 Rule 62-330.350, F.A.C., General Conditions for Individual Permits:  
o The rule requires performance-based erosion and sediment control BMPs to be installed 
and maintained in accordance with the updated State of Florida Erosion and Sediment 
Control Designer and Reviewer Manual, the Florida Stormwater Erosion and 
Sedimentation Control Inspector’s Manual Tier I and the Florida Stormwater Erosion and 
Sedimentation Control Inspector’s Manual Tier II.  
o The rule requires each permittee to provide routine operation of all components of the 
stormwater management system to remove trapped sediments and debris and to ensure 
that the system continues to function as designed and permitted. (Currently, permittees 
are not responsible for ensuring future function according to the design and permit.) 
 
 Rule 62-330.405, F.A.C., General Conditions for All General Permits: The rule requires erosion 
and sediment control measures for general permits to be installed and maintained in 
accordance with the updated State of Florida Erosion and Sediment Control Designer and 
Reviewer Manual, the Florida Stormwater Erosion and Sedimentation Control Inspector’s 
Manual Tier I and the Florida Stormwater Erosion and Sedimentation Control Inspector’s 
Manual Tier II.  
 
Except for the modifications to rule 62-330.010, F.A.C., the bill ratifies the DEP rules solely to meet the 
condition for effectiveness by s. 120.541(3), F.S., and expressly limits ratification to the effectiveness of 
the rules.  
 
The bill requires any future amendments to those portions of rule 62-330.010(4)(a), F.A.C., 
incorporated in the adopted ERP Applicant’s Handbook, Vol. I., be submitted in bill form to the Speaker 
of the House of Representatives and to the President of the Senate for their consideration and referral 
to the appropriate committees. Such amendments become effective only upon approval by act of the 
Legislature. 
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY:  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 13 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
Section 1. Ratifies rules 62-330.010, 62-330.050, 62-330.055, 62-330.301, 62-330.310, 62-
330.311, 62-330.350, and 62-330.405, F.A.C. 
 
Section 2:  Amends s. 373.4131, F.S., relating to statewide environmental resource permitting rules.  
 
Section 3. Provides an effective date of upon becoming a law. 
 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
None.  
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
There is a fiscal impact to local governments that own and/or operate stormwater treatment 
facilities; however, such impact is indeterminate, separate and apart from the total increased costs 
to private and public entities estimated in DEP’s SERC. See Fiscal Comments. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
The amendments to ch. 62-330, F.A.C., will increase costs to private entities for residential, commercial 
and industrial construction projects for stormwater treatment to achieve higher minimum stormwater 
treatment performance standards.  
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
The amendments to ch. 62-330, F.A.C., will increase regulatory costs for private and public entities
80
 
developing stormwater treatment infrastructure and providing increased levels of stormwater treatment. 
DEP estimates within a five-year period that costs will increase by $1,254,971,174, for five land use 
development categories (residential; commercial; industrial; roadway; and, other) across 464,867 
acres.
81
  
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
Not applicable.  
                                                
80
 It is difficult to estimate the number of public entities impacted by the bill. The Office of Economic and Demographic Research 
(EDR), in response to surveys for the stormwater services 20-year needs analysis required by Ch. 2021-194, Laws of Fla., received 
information from 832 counties, municipalities and independent special districts. However, EDR does not query systems owned or 
operated by the federal government, state government, WMDs, school districts, state universities or colleges for this needs analysis. 
See EDR, Annual Assessment of Florida’s Water Resources: Infrastructure Investments for Stormwater and Wastewater, 2023 
Edition, Chapter 5, p. 14, 2023_AnnualAssessment_InfrastructureInvestments_Chapter5 (state.fl.us) (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).   
81
 DEP, Notes on the State[ment] of Estimated Regulatory Costs (SERC), supra note 58, p. 2-4.  STORAGE NAME: h7053.ISC 	PAGE: 14 
DATE: 2/13/2024 
  
 
 2. Other: 
None.  
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
None provided by the bill.  
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None.  
 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
None.