Florida Department of Environmental Protection: Conservation and Regulation

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) serves as the state's primary regulatory and stewardship agency for natural resources, pollution control, and environmental permitting. Its authority spans more than 4,000 miles of coastline, 7.7 million acres of public lands, and an extensive network of surface waters, springs, and aquifers that define Florida's environmental profile. The scope of FDEP's regulatory reach intersects with land use, industrial operations, water quality, and hazardous waste management across all 67 Florida counties.

Definition and Scope

FDEP is established under Florida Statutes Chapter 20 and operates pursuant to the Environmental Reorganization Act of 1993, which consolidated the former Department of Environmental Regulation and the Department of Natural Resources into a single agency. The department administers more than 30 distinct regulatory programs organized into three primary functional areas: Pollution Control, Land and Recreation, and Water Policy.

FDEP holds delegated authority from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to implement core federal programs under the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) within Florida's borders. This delegation means FDEP issues National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits, enforces hazardous waste rules, and sets ambient air quality standards at the state level, subject to federal baseline requirements.

Scope limitations: FDEP's jurisdiction covers activities regulated under Florida law and federally delegated programs within state geographic boundaries. It does not govern offshore federal waters beyond the 3-nautical-mile state limit, which fall under U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and NOAA jurisdiction. Federally owned lands such as national forests and military installations are subject to federal land management agencies rather than FDEP, though coordination agreements exist. Tribal lands under federal jurisdiction are also not covered by FDEP regulatory authority.

For the broader landscape of Florida's administrative agencies and how FDEP fits within the executive branch, see Florida Government Authority.

How It Works

FDEP regulatory operations proceed through four principal mechanisms:

  1. Environmental Permitting — Facilities and projects that discharge pollutants, alter wetlands, dredge or fill navigable waters, or operate air-emission sources must obtain FDEP permits before commencing activity. The Environmental Resource Permit (ERP) program, governed by Florida Statutes Chapter 373, is the primary instrument for managing impacts to surface waters and wetlands.

  2. Compliance and Enforcement — FDEP field inspectors conduct scheduled and complaint-driven inspections. Violations may result in Notices of Violation, consent orders, administrative penalties, or referral to the Office of the Attorney General for civil or criminal prosecution. Administrative penalties under Florida law can reach $10,000 per day per violation (Florida Statutes §403.141).

  3. Cleanup and Remediation — Through programs including the Petroleum Contamination Cleanup (PCTCP) and Brownfields Redevelopment, FDEP oversees contaminated site assessment and restoration. The Dry Cleaning Solvent Cleanup Program addresses chlorinated solvent contamination at or near dry cleaning facilities statewide.

  4. Land Management and Recreation — FDEP manages state parks, trails, and conservation lands through the Division of Recreation and Parks and the Florida Park Service, which administers 175 state parks covering more than 800,000 acres (Florida State Parks).

FDEP coordinates closely with the state's Florida Water Management Districts, which hold concurrent jurisdiction over water use permitting and consumptive use of groundwater and surface water under the Water Resources Act.

Common Scenarios

Wetland and dredge-fill permits: A developer proposing residential construction on parcels containing jurisdictional wetlands must obtain an ERP from FDEP (or the applicable Water Management District under delegation) prior to any land disturbance. Mitigation requirements apply when unavoidable impacts exceed threshold acreage.

Underground storage tank (UST) compliance: Fuel retailers and fleet operators maintaining USTs must register tanks, meet secondary containment standards, and report releases within 24 hours of discovery under 62-761 Florida Administrative Code. FDEP maintains a statewide database of active and closed UST sites.

Air permit applications: Facilities exceeding specified emission thresholds for pollutants such as nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, or particulate matter must obtain Air Construction Permits before installation and Title V Operating Permits for ongoing operations, mirroring federal Clean Air Act requirements.

Coastal construction: Projects within the Coastal Construction Control Line (CCCL) — typically within 50 to 600 feet of mean high water depending on location — require CCCL permits under Florida Statutes §161.053. This program is distinct from federal Army Corps of Engineers Section 404 permitting, though dual permits are often required for the same project.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission holds concurrent authority over activities affecting listed species and wildlife habitat, requiring coordination when FDEP-permitted projects intersect with protected species habitat.

Decision Boundaries

FDEP's authority is bounded by statute, administrative rule, and federally delegated program requirements. Key distinctions governing agency jurisdiction include:

Agencies within FDEP's coordination network relevant to specific regulated sectors include the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, which holds primary jurisdiction over agricultural nonpoint source pollution programs, and the Florida Department of Health, which sets drinking water quality standards under a delegated Safe Drinking Water Act program.

References