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E. F. GUYTON vs. DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION, 78-001817 (1978)

Court: Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 78-001817 Visitors: 18
Judges: CHARLES C. ADAMS
Agency: Department of Environmental Protection
Latest Update: Mar. 12, 1979
Summary: The issue is whether or not the Petitioner, E. F. Guyton, should be granted a permit by the Respondent, State of Florida, Department of Environmental Regulation, to dredge a boat slip and construct a sedimentation basin with boat storage, which involves the excavation of a boat basin, access canal and access channel at the Petitioner's property on the west shore of Crescent Lake, in Putnam County, Florida.Petitioner failed to give reasonable assurances his project would not harm waters of state.
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78-1817.PDF

STATE OF FLORIDA

DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS


  1. F. GUYTON, )

    )

    Petitioner, )

    )

    vs. ) CASE NO. 78-1817

    ) STATE OF FLORIDA, DEPARTMENT OF ) ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION, )

    )

    Respondent. )

    )


    RECOMMENDED ORDER


    Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held before Charles C. Adams, a Hearing Officer with the Division of Administrative Hearings. The hearing was conducted on January 25, 1979, in the Board of County Commissioners' Conference Room, Putnam County Courthouse, 400 St. Johns Avenue, Palatka, Florida.


    APPEARANCES


    For Petitioner: E. F. Guyton

    Post Office Box 906 Oldsmar, Florida 33557


    For Respondent: Silvia Morell Alderman, Esquire

    Department of Environmental Regulation 2600 Blair Stone Road

    Tallahassee, Florida 32301 ISSUE

    The issue is whether or not the Petitioner, E. F. Guyton, should be granted a permit by the Respondent, State of Florida, Department of Environmental Regulation, to dredge a boat slip and construct a sedimentation basin with boat storage, which involves the excavation of a boat basin, access canal and access channel at the Petitioner's property on the west shore of Crescent Lake, in Putnam County, Florida.


    FINDINGS OF FACT


    1. The Petitioner, E. F. Guyton, has filed an application for a permit which would allow the dredging of a boat slip and construction of a sedimentation basin with boat storage, specifically requiring the excavation of a boat basin, access canal, and access channel on his property which is located on the west shore of Crescent Lake, in Putnam County, Florida. The permit application number is 54-6806.


    2. The Respondent, State of Florida, Department of Environmental Regulation, is an agency of the State of Florida which has the responsibility of appraising those applications such as the one submitted by the Petitioner, E. F.

      Guyton, and making a decision to grant or deny that permit. The authority for such action on the part of the Respondent resides in Chapters 253 and 403, Florida Statutes, and Rule 17, Florida Administrative Code.


    3. This cause comes on for consideration based upon the Respondent's letter of intent to deny the application, as dated August 22, 1978, after which the Petitioner has filed its petition challenging that intent to deny and requesting that the permit be granted. The petition in behalf of the Petitioner was received by the office of the Respondent on September 8, 1978. It was subsequently assigned to the Division of Administrative Hearings for consideration and that Notice of Assignment was dated September 28, 1978.


    4. The proposal for permit calls for excavation of a boat basin 100 feet wide and 480 feet long, leading into an access canal 25 feet wide and 500 feet long. This excavation is in the vicinity of an existing intermittent natural stream. The proposal would call for the removal of approximately 21,000 cubic yards of silt and sand, landward of mean high water. The excavation would be accomplished by use of a dragline to a depth of -2.0 feet MSL. The basin and canal slopes would be 2:1 and stabilization of slopes would be assured by riprap and grassing. A concrete spillway would be constructed at the upper end of the basin to direct the stream flow into the basin. In addition, the proposal calls for the dredging of an access channel through the shallow littoral zone of Crescent Lake to the mouth of the proposed access canal. The dredging involved with the access channel would cause the removal of 400 cubic yards of sediment from an area 250 feet long and as wide as 30 feet. The proposed depth of the channel is 2.0 feet MSL and slide slopes would be 5:1. The spoil would be pumped to a dike holding area on adjacent uplands. The Respondent's Exhibit No. 1, which is the permit application, offers a sketch of the boat basin with secondary sedimentation feature and the attendant access canal and channel.


    5. The project lies between U.S. Highway 17 and Crescent Lake, Areas to the south and west of the site are pasture and bayhead wetlands and they serve as a watershed for the aforementioned intermittent stream. Other upland areas in the vicinity are dominated by fully-drained flat woods and well-drained sand hill and messic oak terrain.


    6. The project site waterward of the mean high water is part of a shallow littoral zone of the west shore of Cresent Lake. The intermittent stream receives the runoff from the pastureland and drainage from U.S. Highway 17. There is a pronounced change in elevation during the course of the intermittent stream.


    7. The submerged littoral zone of the lake, which includes the proposed site of the access canal, falls away at a gentle slope and includes a number of supporting hardwoods, predominantly bald cypress. The area also includes submerged emergent vegetation, which is found in the shallows offshore. These shallows are exposed to favorable sunlight from the point of view of the health of this vegetation. The vegetation includes an emergent bed of oft stem bulrush (Sicrpus validus) which is in line with the proposed channel. Within the photic zone there is submerged tape grass (Valisneria americana) and naiad (Najas sp.).


    8. On the shore of Crescent Lake at the project site is found a hardwood swamp in its natural form, together with a creekbed which divides into numerous channels fanning out in the direction of the lake itself. This area of the creekbed contains bald cypress (Taxodium distichum), red maple (Acer rubrum), swamp ash (Fraxinus panciflora), black willow (Salix nigra), black gum (Nyssa biflra), water hickory (Carya aquatica), and wax myrtle (Myrica cerifera). The

      herbs and ferns in this area include penny wort (Hydrocotyl umbellata), arrow- arum (Peltandra virginica), leather fern (Acrostichum danaeifolium), and royal fern (Osmunda regalis). The sediments found in the creek area are sandy to silty sand.


    9. In the area where the boat basin/sedimentation facility would be located, the present intermittent stream is much more confined than in the area of the creekbed. Only in times of heavy rainfall does the water come outside the banks of the intermittent stream and inundate the surrounding territory. This portion of the stream is densely vegetated by a mixture of hydrophytes, facultative hydrophytes, an optimally situated upland species. These include sweet bay (Magnolia virginiana), black gum (Nyssa biflora), and red maple (Acer rubrum). Additionally, there are slash pine (Pinus elliotii), long leaf pine (Pinus palustris), dahoon (Ilex cassine), wax myrtle (Myrica cerifera), water oak (Quercus nigra), wild azalea (Ericaceae), and saw palmetto (Serenoa repens). The sedminets in this area range from very sandy in the slightly higher elevations adjacent to the stream bed to a heavy peat which is found predominantly in the bay tree locations.


    10. The uplands in the agricultural area are dominated by water oak, slash pine, long leaf pine, live oak and saw palmetto.


    11. A more graphic depiction of the project site and in particular as it relates to the intermittent stream, shore line upland agricultural area, and

      U.S. Highway 17 may be found in the Petitioner's Exhibits 1 and 2 and the Respondent's Exhibits 2 through 15, which are photographs of the project site.


    12. There are numerous varieties of fish in the area of Crescent Lake through which the access channel would be routed. These include: Seminole killifish (Fundulus seminolis), naked goby (Gobiosoma bosci), black bullhead (Ictalurus melas), brook silversides (Labidesthes sicculus), sunfish (Lepomis sp.), large-mouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) and Atlantic needlefish (Strongylura marina) . In addition, there are 35 species of invertebrates which were collected in the studies made by employees of the Respondent in their assessment of this permit application. The names of those invertebrates may be found in the Respondent's Exhibit No. 19 which was admitted into evidence in the course of the hearing. The vegetation and shallow water with a sandy bottom, together with the numbers and species of macro invertebrates, small fishes and immature game fishes point to the fact that this part of the lake serves as a valuable site for the propagation of fish, otherwise referred to as a spawning ground.


    13. The water quality in Crescent Lake at the site of the project is good, from the standpoint of gross observations. However, there have been some indications of eutrophication in Cresent Lake. A more complete understanding of the water quality may be gained from an examination of the Respondent's Exhibits

      21 through 41 admitted into evidence. These exhibits are constituted of certain water quality reports rendered after extensive testing in Crescent Lake.


    14. The rainfall in the area exceeds 54 inches a year, with 50 percent of that rainfall being recorded in the wettest quarter, in which over 7 inches a month would fall. July has recorded 15 inches as a mean measurement over the last 80 years, with the month of May showing less than 2 inches, the month of September showing less than 2 inches and the month of October less than 1 inch.


    15. In considering the proposed project, a beginning point would be an examination of the ability of the primary filtration pond and secondary

      filtration function found in the boat basin, to adequately disperse the pollutants which will come into the system from the agricultural area and U.S. Highway 17. That treatment system is inadequate. The inadequacy exists because in periods of low rainfall the pollutants will settle to the bottom of the siltation system and will not be dispersed evenly. This cycle of low rainfall when followed by heavy rainfall, such as occurs in July, will cause the pollutants to be rapidly discharged from the system into the basin of the lake, either in a dissolved form or a free form, causing an unreasonable dilatorious effect to water quality and creating possible turbidity. The confined nature of the proposed channel which empties into the lake will promote scouring because the water is coming out in a more confined area than the natural access allows at present. In addition, the flow velocity in the secondary siltation system is not strong enough to flush out the pollutants in an efficient manner. Finally, channelization promoted by the system would remove a certain percentage of the biological treatment that occurs in the natural intermittent stream, thereby introducing a greater quantity of pollutants into the lake and reducing oxidation that this biological treatment and natural course of the intermittent stream bed now provides.


    16. The project, as contemplated, is very similar in its nature to the canal system in Dunns Creek, a body of water adjacent to Crescent Lake. A study conducted on that canal system revealed a very poor quality of dissolved oxygen, which falls below the water quality standards for Class III waters. (A copy of this report may be found as Respondent's Exhibit No. 20 admitted into evidence.) These are the same standards that would apply to Crescent Lake. In addition, there is a lack of flushing and the development of aquatic weeds deterimental to the fish and invertebrates located in the area of the Dunns Creek canals. Therefore, a similar problem could be expected in the project now under consideration.


    17. If the project were completed, the excavation of the material would cause disruption of the sediment and water quality degradation if precipitation occurred during the excavation. Efforts at turbidity control would not protect against a heavy rain and the maturely vegetated stream bed and productive littoral vegetation and substrates would be lost. The long term effects of the project would cause degradation of the water quality and a loss of fish and wildlife resources in the impact area.


    18. The filtrative assimilative capacity provided by the algae, shrubs, trees and associated substrates involved in the process of absorption and in aerobic bacterial metabolism, would be eliminated by the project and replaced by an intermittently flushed, highly nutrified shallow water lagoon and canal.


    19. Pollutants associated with boat operations would further compound the water quality problems and perpetual sediment disruption would occur because of a natural result of shallow water maintenance and use of the system.


    20. Siltation and periodic discharge of degraded basin water into the littoral zone of the lake would adversely effect the productive potential and the habitat potential offered by this area in its present form.


    21. Based upon a full assessment of the project, it is established that there would be increased and harmful erosion, shoaling of the channel and the creation of stagnant areas of water. It would also cause an interference with the conservation of fish, marine and wildlife to an extent that is contrary to the public interest. It would promote the destruction of natural marine habitats, grass flats suitable as nurseries or feeding grounds for marine life

      and established marine soils suitable for producing plant growth of a type useful as a nursery or feeding ground for marine life or natural shoreline processes to an extent contrary to the public interests. These failings are in direct contravention of Chapter 253, Florida Statutes.


    22. The project would be contrary to State Water Quality Standards, as developed pursuant to authority of Chapter 403, Florida Statutes.


    23. Thus, the Petitioner has failed to give reasonable assurances that the immediate and long term impacts of the project would not result in a violation of the State Water Quality Standards, as required by Rule 17-4.28(3), Florida Administrative Code.


      CONCLUSIONS OF LAW


    24. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction in this cause.


    25. Based upon a full consideration of the facts herein, it is concluded as a matter of law that the Petitioner has failed to demonstrate his entitlement to the permit requested under application No. 54-6806, for reason of his non- compliance with the provisions of Chapter 253, Florida Statutes; Chapter 403, Florida Statutes and Rule 17-4.28(3), Florida Administrative Code.


RECOMMENDED ORDER


It is recommended that the permit application, 54-6806, applied for by the Petitioner, E. F. Guyton, be DENIED.


DONE AND ENTERED this 20th day of February, 1979, in Tallahassee, Florida.


CHARLES C. ADAMS, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings Room 530, Carlton Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304

(904) 488-9675


COPIES FURNISHED:


E. F. Guyton

Post Office Box 906 Oldsmar, Florida 33557


Silvia Morell Alderman, Esquire Department of Environmental Regulation 2600 Blair Stone Road

Tallahassee, Florida 32301


Docket for Case No: 78-001817
Issue Date Proceedings
Mar. 12, 1979 Final Order filed.
Feb. 20, 1979 Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED.

Orders for Case No: 78-001817
Issue Date Document Summary
Mar. 08, 1979 Agency Final Order
Feb. 20, 1979 Recommended Order Petitioner failed to give reasonable assurances his project would not harm waters of state. Deny application for dredge/fill permit.
Source:  Florida - Division of Administrative Hearings

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