MARSTILLER, J.
These are consolidated appeals from final orders of the Northwest Florida Water Management District ("District") determining that Appellants cannot administratively challenge the District's 2008 Region III Regional Water Supply Plan ("Plan") pursuant to section 373.709(5), Florida Statutes. We reverse the orders insofar as they determine, as a general proposition, that the Plan is not subject to challenge under chapter 120, Florida Statutes. The District's ruling directly contravenes the plain language of section 373.709(5) permitting such a challenge if the plan, in part or in whole, affects a party's substantial interests. However, concluding that the Plan has no legal effect on Appellants' ability to challenge a consumptive water use permit granted to Bay County, we affirm the District's determination that Appellants lack standing to challenge the Plan.
Section 373.709, Florida Statutes,
§ 373.709(2)(a)2., Fla. Stat. (2010). Approval of a plan by a water management district governing board is "not [ ] subject to the rulemaking requirements of chapter 120. However, any portion of an approved regional water supply plan which affects the substantial interests of a party shall be subject to s. 120.569." § 373.709(5), Fla. Stat. (2010).
Should an entity choose to undertake an identified water supply development project, it must eventually apply for a water use permit pursuant to section 373.223, Florida Statutes. The permit applicant must establish that its proposed water use "(a) [i]s a reasonable-beneficial use as defined in s. 373.019; (b) [w]ill not interfere with any presently existing legal use of water; and (c) [i]s consistent with the public interest." § 373.223(1), Fla. Stat. (2010). If the proposed water use will cross county boundaries, the district's governing board must consider seven additional criteria. See § 373.223(3)(a)-(g), Fla. Stat. (2010). A regional water supply plan "may not be
§ 373.223(5), Fla. Stat. (2010). A substantially affected third party can challenge the intended grant of a permit pursuant to sections 120.569 and 120.57, Florida Statutes.
The District's governing board adopted the Plan at a regularly scheduled open meeting on August 28, 2008, after conducting a publicly noticed workshop and soliciting input from interested parties through the District's website and other modes. The Plan contains three water supply development project options, the first of which is at issue in this case: (1) inland ground water source development and water supply source protection; (2) utility interconnections and infrastructure enhancements; and (3) water reuse facilities. The stated objective of the inland ground water project is to "[d]evelop inland alternative water supply source to meet future demands and abate risks of salt water intrusion and extreme drought."
In 2010, the District gave notice of its intent to approve Bay County's application for a consumptive use permit proposing to use its well field near the Bay County/Washington County line to extract inland ground water as an alternative water supply. Appellants requested and received a formal administrative hearing in which to present evidence challenging the District's decision. While the permit challenge was ongoing, Appellants also petitioned the District for a formal administrative hearing seeking to challenge the portion of the Plan designating the inland ground water project as an alternative water supply source. In its petition, Appellant, Washington County, alleged that the presumption provided for in section 373.223(5) and "priority funding attention" constitute "preferential treatments" that would "promote, enable, facilitate and secure the permitting and development of" Bay County's proposed well field project, and that withdrawal of groundwater through the well field would affect Washington County's substantial interests. Appellant, The Northern Trust Company, as the sole trustee of the James L. Knight Charitable Term Trust ("Trust"), stated in its petition that the Trust manages land straddling the Bay County/Washington County border, and that Bay County's well field is adjacent to the Trust-managed land. The Trust asserted that its interests are substantially affected by the Plan because the public interest presumption afforded Bay County's consumptive use permit application would enable withdrawal of groundwater that will detrimentally impact the Trust-managed land.
The District ultimately dismissed the petitions with prejudice concluding, "the District is without jurisdiction, as a matter of law, to address the validity of a regional water supply plan through an administrative hearing under Chapter 120, Florida Statutes, and [Petitioners are] without standing." As to lack of jurisdiction, the District reasoned that the Plan is neither a rule nor an order, and thus not subject to
For this reason, the District concluded, Appellants cannot demonstrate injury in fact of sufficient immediacy to establish the first prong of the two-pronged test for standing articulated in Agrico Chemical Company v. Department of Environmental Regulation, 406 So.2d 478 (Fla. 2d DCA 1981). The District ruled further that Appellants cannot satisfy the second Agrico prong because "[t]he type of injury alleged is not the type of injury the state-wide [sic] water and regional water supply planning processes are designed to address." Rather, the asserted injury is properly addressed in a permit challenge proceeding.
We conclude first that the District incorrectly determined it lacked jurisdiction over Appellants' petitions because the Plan is not subject to administrative challenge. The plain language of section 373.709(5), Florida Statutes (2010), states, "any portion of an approved regional water supply plan which affects the substantial interests of a party shall be subject to s. 120.569." Even if, as the District posits, the Plan is neither a rule nor an order, the Legislature nonetheless has determined that a regional water supply plan, duly adopted by a water management district governing board, constitutes agency action subject to administrative challenge. See § 120.52(2), Fla. Stat. (2011) ("Agency action" means the whole or part of a rule or order, or the equivalent, or the denial of a petition to adopt a rule or issue an order.") (emphasis added). The District has no authority to conclude otherwise,
However, the District properly dismissed Appellants' petitions for lack of standing. Again, section 373.709(5) provides an avenue for administrative challenge if any part of a regional water supply plan affects a party's substantial interests. Section 120.569 applies "in all proceedings in which the substantial interests of a party are determined by an agency. . . ." A party asserting entitlement to an administrative hearing pursuant
Appellants claimed standing to challenge the Plan because it created a presumption that Bay County's consumptive use permit application, proposing withdrawal of ground water from a well field located near the Bay County/Washington County line, is consistent with the public interest. They asserted that any withdrawal of ground water by Bay County from that well field would injure them in a variety of ways. But the Plan itself does not name, refer to, or approve Bay County's well field project as an alternative water supply development project. Rather, the Plan refers generally to a project for "inland ground water source development and water supply source protection." This project and others contained in the Plan are simply options certain entities may choose to undertake by proposing and developing a specific project to fulfill the Plan's objectives. See § 373.709(2)(a)2., Fla. Stat. (2010). Moreover, the presumption afforded Bay County at the permit application stage does not impede or otherwise have a detrimental legal effect on Appellants' ability to challenge the District's grant of the permit in separate administrative proceedings. For these reasons, we conclude Appellants have failed to demonstrate that the Plan affects their substantial interests.
We decided similarly in Dillard & Associates Consulting Engineers v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 893 So.2d 702 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005). There the appellant, a Department of Transportation ("DOT") contractor operating and managing certain DOT wastewater treatment facilities, asserted standing to administratively challenge a consent order entered into between DOT and the Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP"). The consent order came about after DEP found DOT's contractor-operated wastewater facilities in violation of certain statutes and regulations, and imposed monetary penalties against DOT. Seeking an administrative hearing to challenge the violations and penalty, the contractor claimed that under its contract with DOT, it would be ultimately responsible for paying the fine. Id. at 703-04. We upheld DEP's dismissal of the contractor's petition for lack of standing because the consent order did not determine the contractor was liable to DOT for payment of the fines. Rather, the contractor's liability, if any, would be determined in an indemnity proceeding brought by DOT. Id. at 704. We concluded, "Because Dillard & Associates may challenge the propriety and amount of fines paid to DEP in circuit court, we agree with DEP that Dillard & Associates lacks standing." Id. at 704-05.
As in Dillard, the challenged agency decision here—adoption of that portion of the Plan providing for inland ground water source development—does not immediately affect, in and of itself, the interests Appellants asserted in their hearing petitions. The Plan lacks any language directly referencing or approving the Bay County well field project. It is the District's decision to grant Bay County's water use permit that affects Appellants' substantial interests, and the Plan has no legal effect on Appellants' ability to challenge the permit. Because the Plan does not operate as to injure Appellants' asserted interests, and because Appellants can dispute Bay
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part.
WOLF and PADOVANO, JJ., concur.