BCC Minutes 10/23/1991 SCOLLIER COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
GROUNDWATER PROTECTION ORDINANCE
PUBLIC HEARING
October 23, 1991
5:05 p.m.
Third Floor Boardroom
Collier County Courthouse
Naples, Florida 33962
Reported by,
Christina J. Reynoldson
Deputy Official Court Reporter
Notary Public
State of Florida at Large
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS
Carrothers Reporting Service, Inc.
20th Judicial Circuit - Collier County
3301 East Tamiami Trail
Naples, Florida 33962
TELE: (813) 732-2700 FAX: (813) 774-6022
APPEARANCES
BOARD MEMBERS
P. Anne Goodnight - Chairman
Max A. Hasse - County Commissioner
Burr Saunders - County Commissioner
Richard Shanahah - County Commissioner
Michael Volpe - County Commissioner
Mike Arnold - Utilities Administrator
James Hatcher - Pollution Control
Bill Lorenz - Environmental Services
Jennifer Pike - Administrative Assistant to County Manager
David Weigel - Assistant County Attorney
George Yilmaz - Pollution Control
Gary Beardsley
Brian MacKenzie
Mark Morton
Craig PaJer
Carl Reich
George Risher
Mike Slayton
Jon Staiger
Fred Tarrant
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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PROCEEDINGS
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: I'll call the meeting to
order. All rise.
(The invocation was presented, followed by
recitation of the Pledge of A/legiance.)
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: The first item of business
tonight will be the first public hearing on the Well
Field Protection Ordinance, right? And then the second
item will be a continuation from last week's Land
Develo~ent Code. So we'll begin first with the Well
Field Protection Ordinance.
MR. LORENZ: Thank you. For the record, Bill
Lorenz, Environmental Services Administrator.
As you noted, this is the first public hearing for
Groundwater Protection Ordinance which also incorporates
regulations to protect our potable well fields.
This has been an effort that has gone over several
years. We've had a technical advisory committee that has
been very instrumental in developing the ordinance with
staff's support, and technical advisory committee was
chaired by John $taiger. Also on the advisory committee
was Glenn Simpson, Steve Means and Jack Abney. I believe
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
everyone except for Steve Means is with us tonight as
well on the technical advisory committee.
What I'd like to cover tonight, and I believe we're
going to be going, Madam Chairman, to seven o'clock?
C~AIRMAN GOODN IGHT: Urn-hum.
MR. LORENZ: We'll be -- this is a fairly complex,
complicated ordinance covering a number of facility types
in addition dealing with the groundwater topic of
developing an overlay series for well field protection
zones.
So what I'd like to try to accomplish tonight is to
give the board a good feeling for how those maps were
developed and what the rationale and justification of
what went into those maps and also to cover the standards
that we're proposing for Land Development Regulations.
That, with the questions, probably will cover the bulk of
the presentation tonight.
We've also in your executive summary listed the
history, the chronology, and I won't go into too much
detail with that in terms of my presentation.
We also have identified a physical impact statement
for the regulations both in terms of administrative,
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physical impact and also an economic report with regard
to what the implication of those regulations will be on
businesses.
COMMISSIONER }{ASSE'. This is the first hearing, is
it not?
MR. LORENZ z This is the first hearing tonight.
There's quite a bit of material I'll have to go through,
but as I said, tonight I'd like to go through the
presentation of -- I've given -- you should have an
extra -- in your hands, a presentation. And what it
includes is a series of view graphs that we'll go through
and iljustrate these concepts, so if you can't read the
words on the screen, you'll have it right there at your
finger tips.
Somebody might be able to get some of the lights up
here in the front.
With regard to the mandates for groundwater
protection, back in 1984 actually the Water Pollution
Control Referendum was passed for the county to develop
programs to protect the county's water supply. That was
the reason for the water pollution control department to
come into existence. There was a one-tenth mill tax that
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was passed by the voters for that particular program.
The Growth Management Act developed, established
Land Development Regulations, required Land Development
Regulations to protect potable or drinking water well
fields and hence the reason or the mandate for adopting
our Groundwater Protection Ordinance. The Growth
Management Act also includes policies to protect water
quality or was identified as zones of influence around
well fields, recharge areas and water wells.
Our own Growth Management Plan has a number of
policies and objectives to identify and map these zones
of influence and contribution to the well fields in
addition to adopting a comprehensive Groundwater
Protection Ordinance. And the Growth Management Plan
also identifies very specific potential facilities or
pollutant sources that we addressed in our Land
Development Regulations and these include petroleum
storage tanks, hazardous materials and waste, mineral
extraction, industrial and domestic waste and storm water
systems.
To give you a little bit of a feel for what our
general approach has been, staff and the technical
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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advisory committee is basically -- we're trying to
develop and look at the county to provide higher degrees
of protection for more sensitive areas in terms of
groundwater sensitivity.
And the first -- the first item of the ordinance is
adoption or provides for county-wide protection by
adopting the State's groundwater quality standards. In
this way we can adopt what the State has as groundwater
quality standards and that provides for county-wide
protection with regard to enforcement of potential cases
where we have violation of the groundwater quality
standards.
The ordinance also provides for sections to address
what's called high recharge areas. And there's two
categories of high recharge areas that we can discuss.
One is natural areas, recognizing that all of Collier
County is basically the recharge for its lower aquifer
systems that we use on a daily basis such as the lower
Tamiami aquifer.
But there aren't -- there are areas that because of
certain hydrogeologic characteristics maybe provide a
higher degree of recharge. We have not yet been able to
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identify those. We have been focusing instead on high
recharge areas that are around the well fields
themselves.
When you p~p a well, you actually reduce recharge
as a result of drawing down the water, and so when we
talk about very sensitive groundwater areas, these areas
around the well fields themselves, hence our first
priority in this protection ordinance has been around
well fields.
The well fields, basically our general approach has
been to develop a series of risk management zones around
the well, from the well to the boundary of what is
called, termed a 20-year capture zone.
What I'll do tonight as I get into some slides,
I'll help define these well field management zones and
what a 20-year capture zone is. Once we have identified
these zones around the protected well fields, we've also
addressed Land Develo~ent Regulations that address those
various pollutant sources for each of these zones.
So the basic approach is to identify those areas,
the risk management zones around the well field, and then
identify the Land Develoiament Regulation or restriction
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
that will occur within each zone.
The way I'd like to handle it tonight is I've got a
set of slides together with the view graph available to
show how groundwater moves to wells through the different
geological materials because this is important to
understand why our zones look the way they look.
And one concept is always understand that even
though the groundwater is kind of out of sight, it
follows similar principles of surface water. Basically
it flows downhill or down gradient from areas of high
pressure or low pressure. And this is the kind of
information that we have to put into our computer. model
and be able to calculate the direction of groundwater
flow.
We've also -- you'll see this in a slide
presentation, groundwater flow in living color and just a
series of slides that I can go through briefly with you.
Also, we have developed this concept through the
Environmental Protection Agency publications for
guidelines for delineation of wellhead protection areas.
And you'll be able to see some elements of this
particular presentation as how we apply it to the well
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fields in Collier County.
We'll iljustrate what our zone of contribution is,
that 20-year capture zone, make sure you have an
understanding of the difference between draw down and
what we're talking about as capture zone and identify
what our protection objectives are that form the basis of
the ordinance itself.
We'll also present the application of the EPA
procedures in Collier County that was developed through
our computer modeling report that we had done, completed
in the summer of 1989. The board may recall that you
received a presentation on that report at that time, just
going through some of the concepts. So I'll refresh the
board's memory with regards to some of the more salient
points of that presentation.
As I said, our approach has been through the, a
guidance document, guidelines for delineation of wellhead
protection areas published by the Environmental
Protection Agency. We feel that this basis and this
documentation as recommended by EPA is a very good model
to follow and indeed we followed it and you'll see some
of the evidence of this in some of the other slides.
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This particular view graph here is not to
demonstrate how little I know of the equations but simply
as a que a little bit to say that we are -- our
groundwater model that we have developed is a
mathematical model. It's a computer model that's based
upon certain theoretical developments.
And what I'm going to do now is I'm going to give
you -- rather than to cover that kind of material, I'm
going to give you a little bit of the slides to show how
the groundwater flows to our well fields.
This particular presentation is from the Natural
Water Well Association, and it will iljustrate these
concepts that we took into account in our modeling
exercises.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: What's the difference between
groundwater and surface water?
MR. LORENZ~ Well, groundwater is that water that's
basically under the ground surface, within the ground
surface. Surface water is what you see in the canals.
The relationship, however, is many times in our
canal systems that that surface water that you see is
actually the expression of the groundwater table. But I
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can show this a little bit -- if somebody could get the
lights on this side, it would be a little bit helpful.
These are actual box models that iljustrate the
principle, iljustrate the--- it has groundwater flows.
What we've done is this is a well that's put down in the
ground and we've taken a section through the ground
surface and looked at it edge along. This is the top of
the ground here. The groundwater table is expressed by
this white line, and the groundwater is moving from this
particular point to this particular point downhill or
down gradient.
In Collier County's situation, the typical
groundwater gradient would be -- this would be towards
the Immokalee area and this would be along the gulf
coast. That's how our groundwater flows regionally in
the county.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: It flows from north to south
or from east to west?
MR. LORENZ: Northeast to southwest.
As you'll see through this dye, the dye has been
injected into this groundwater system and you can see of
course that it's flowing down gradient with regard to the
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groundwater table up here and the groundwater table here.
As we start pumping the well, you start to get that
characteristic curvature of the groundwater because it's
actually moving downhill here. Now, this is further
downhill than at this particular point with regard to
pressure.
And so you actually -- you actually see the effect
of the pumping of the well in the groundwater system and
to the point where you get a characteristic draw down
curve.
Now, this draw down -- what this draw down curve is
showing is that right about this particular point you've
got a reversal of the groundwater direction. You
actually have groundwater that's going backwards to the
natural gradient and you have a divide which the
groundwater at this particular point is moving in this
direction in Collier County towards the gulf and in this
particular case the groundwater now is moving to the
well.
What's important about understanding this situation
is that this particular, this particular curve here, we
have to identify that curve if we want to try to protect
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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the well field because obviously -- if you've got a
facility over here and the discharge is to groundwater,
it's not going to get into the well, and so what we have
to do is to identify through the computer modeling
exactly what this zone of influence is from that pumping
well.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: The zoning influence, is
that -- how far would you say it's generally away from
this?
MR. LORENZ~ Well, it varies for each particular
well field. And you'll see in your well field maps that
that zone varies based upon the exact -- based upon the
type of groundwater system that you have in here. This
is a very simplified model. It iljustrates the
principles -- you know, we wish that the system was as
easily modeled as this is shown. But it does depend upon
each specific well field.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. But isn't the answer to that
too, though, in terms of the period of - I love this
word- translucivity?
MR. LORENZ: Yes, that would be the characteristics
of the well -- of the well -- of the geology that the
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well field is developed into. So it depends upon the
translucivity of the materials; it depends upon the depth
of the well; depends upon the configuration of the well
field; how much the wells themselves --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE~ All I was trying to ask is
that the cone of influence, the area of influence will
depend upon what period of time. I mean, eventually all
this water is going to come, at some point, towards this
well field.
MR. LORENZ: Yes. George, if you can show the view
graph, because I think that will iljustrate that, that
discussion.
At some particular point, Commissioner Volpe, --
well, in this particular slide here, this is what you're
actually looking at in that box model, if you think about
it. This down here is what you'd look on the surface in
plan view.
There is a groundwater -- potentially a groundwater
divide where the influence of the well on this particular
slide will show that the groundwater is moving in this
direction but over here it's, of course, moving in the
opposite direction.
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That has to be identified as part of the regional
groundwater system and, of course, we had to go through
an expensive regional modeling effort to identify these
groundwater divides, what we call sometimes boundary
conditions, to be able to determine what that total
extent of zone of contribution is because if it was
completely flat and if you pumped it forever, you'd be
expanding out, but the groundwater -- actually, the
groundwater system isn't flat, it's contoured and curved
and so there are these divides around well fields that we
have to identify.
The--what we're talking about here is this zone
of contribution, this ZOC, is the area whereby the
groundwater when it falls on plan view will actually move
to the well field. And as you can see, at this
particular point where you have a divide, if it falls
here, although we have a draw down, we have an influence
of that well on the natural groundwater table, the
groundwater's actually moving away from the well.
So this Zone of Contribution, this capture zone, is
the concept that we're using for our well fields. This
particular slide is also set up on a very simplified what
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we call water table condition. That means the well field
is developed in the aquifer system here. That has a free
water table surface.
The well fields that we have modeled along this
concept, for instance the Golden Gate City's well field
out in Golden Gate City, Avatar's well field or
previously called Avatar. North Naples or Quail Creek is
an example of a well field that is like this. In
addition, Everglades City.
George, if you could take the next one.
As I said, what you saw on that one previous view
graph is the guidelines from EPA with regard to
identifying what these terms are, this Zone of
Contribution, Zone of Contribution.
(C_~__~issioner Saunders entered the board room.)
In 1989, we completed the computer modeling report
by Dr. Vorheez (phonetic), applied those principles to
Collier County's well fields and performed the computer
modeling.
George, if I could have the next one, please.
This is actually a result of the modeling effort
for the North Naples utilities well field, Quail Creek
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well field. If you will, this outer boundary is that
capture zone in 20 years. That's what we're calling our
20-year capture zone.
So any groundwater that falls within this area will
move to the well field within 20 years. So that is that
Zone of Contribution that's actually computer-modeled for
Collier County.
And again, this -- in terms of the idealized line,
this is what it would look like in that one schematic.
And, of course, this is what it looks like with regard to
that specific well field.
The reason why you get a trending in this direction
is because the groundwater gradient is higher over here
than it is over here.
characteristic shape.
well field.
That's why you see a
It's just not a circle around the
I wish that all well fields that we had in Collier
County or the system was as simplified as those
particular well fields.
tha t.
Of course, it's not the like
This is another box model showing some similar
principles that we saw before where you've got two wells
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that are pumpin9 in this particular model. This
particular medium here is -- if you will, has a high
translucivities and it does not provide a resistance to
flow.
This white medium here provides a greater degree of
resistance to flow. It's like a semiconfining unit. And
the other material is somewhere in between. Again, we've
got groundwater flow moving in this direction and you'll
be able to see by the dye that, of course, the
groundwater is flowing dependent upon the degree of the
type of materials that you have in underlying the ground.
And as you start pumping the wells, you start to
exhibit a certain stress whereby you can see the change
that we're getting in terms of this groundwater system to
the point where even you' re starting to induce, induce
groundwater upwards through some of this very tightly
consol idated material.
The purpose of this slide is to show that many
times what we have is what's called a confining unit, a
semiconfining unit. People have the impression that it's
what I call a tin roof. As water hits it, it stops and
it can't go through it. But actually, the water does
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pass through these confining units, and in Collier County
they're characterized as highly leaky. They do provide a
certain resistance to flow, but water does pass through
the~.
Indeed, in terms of the big picture with regard to
Collier County, 80 percent of the water received at the
lower Tamiami through these semiconfining units is
actually recharged from the water table or from the
surface.
So you do get that water that's going through these
systems. And, of course, the greater stress that you
place in the groundwater system with your wells, the more
groundwater flow you can induce through these systems.
So we've got to handle that particular situation
with the models. And again, this is out of EPA's
guidelines for delineation of wellhead protection areas
and you've got this representation of some kind of
confining unit; again, showing that you can induce
vertical leakage through these confining units to the
well field itself.
We have the same kind of problem with regard to or
challenge which is to determine what this Zone of
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Contribution is even under this particular situation.
This particular situation exists with well fields such as
the City of Naples' well field on Goodlette Road and out
in the east, Golden Gate, the county's well field in
Golden Gate Estates.
And in addition, the Immokalee well fields are more
characterized with these kinds of semiconfining units
that they're -- of course, they're always represented
nice and simply in these kinds of diagrams, but the exact
thickness, the exact characteristics are not very well
known all across a well field. And therefore, in terms
of developing a protection strategy we have to understand
what kind of uncertainties exist to help us try to map
out, again, what these 20-year capture zones are for the
well fields.
This is going to be somewhat of a complicated view
graph, but what I want to try to show is this is the,
this is Goodlette Road. It's the City of Naples'
Goodlette Road well field, the coastal ridge well field
that runs up Goodlette Road.
And our modeling efforts shows that you have a high
degree of vertical leakants that is coming down through
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this confining unit and up into the wells. In fact, it's
a very interesting characteristic that as groundwater is
moving from west -- excuse me, from east to west, that it
actually in some cases passes over the well, moves down
and up -- and back up again. It's a very complicated
vertical flow condition.
The computer modeling that was performed in it took
that vertical leakage into account to try and identify
these capture zones for the purposes of delineating
wellhead protection areas.
What we have to do with regard to once we have that
kind of groundwater knowledge, that knowledge of the
groundwater system, we have to identify what our overall
protection goals are, what our policy considerations are
and other technical considerations to have a
well-founded, rational, technical and legally defensible
ordinance.
Our overall protection goal is to prevent the
contamination of the groundwater at the wellhead. That's
our stated goal. That is to say that we don't want to
see groundwater standards being violated through some
surface activity at the point of input to a particular
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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well field.
And within that overall protection goal, we have to
deal with a number of protection objectives. One of
those protection objectives is reaction time. For
instance, if you have a spill of a certain material, how
close is too close to that well field before you have
time to react and clean up that particular contamination
site.
Another consideration is how does the pollutants
behave in the groundwater and soil system, because the
tenuation or the ability of that, this groundwater system
to degrade certain contaminants needs to be considered as
well because you have a natural purification process
going on. So we don't want to be overly restrictive with
regard to groundwater protection.
The other question is do we protect all or part of
that Zone of Contribution? You'll see from some of our
zones of how we're protecting -- we have higher degrees
of protection for the Zone of Contribution that's closer
to the well field.
We also have a number of sites specific
considerations such as the hydrogeologic setting; the
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view graphs that you saw; how the groundwater system is
in Collier County and how is it different for each
particular well field that we have modeled and developed
maps for.
You also have to understand the nature and behavior
of the potential contaminants and other technical
considerations.
This is a little bit of a view graph, just to cue
me, and what's important is all the question marks. This
is an article discussing geological uncertainty and
parameter uncertainty when we start doing the models.
We tend to fool ourselves when we develop a lot of
the computer models, and the computer models and the
mathematical theoretical principles are all valid. The
problem always comes is never having enough data to
accurately characterize the particular well field that
you' re trying to model; hence we have to make a lot of a
assumptions and judgments, simplifying assumptions and
conceptualizations of what's going on and everybody has
to be aware that that is a typical way that you handle
these kinds of conditions.
Because we're dealing with groundwater, it's always
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a topic that because we can't see it it's a little bit
mystical, but make an analogy to what we're trying to do
with the Groundwater Protection Ordinance such as flood
plain protection.
In flood plain protection we have a series of
computer models that we put data and information into
those models that identify some kind of flood plain.
We have to -- we recognize that all of our
information and data is never completely accurate, but we
use the information to develop those flood plains,
boundaries, and we understand that we establish a policy
decision to make, for instance, a hundred year flood
plain or one percent chance in ~ny given year that that's
going to occur and becomes a major policy decision and
then we implement ordinances and regulations to manage
our activities in our flood plains.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Does the zone of influence
become a policy decision that we make?
MR. LORENZ: The zone of influence becomes a policy
decision. That's correct.
We've tried to -- we'll identify the rationale for
why we've selected the capture zones and the rest of the
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zones, but that does indeed become a policy decision that
the board has to make based upon the technical
information that we're presenting to you.
Just to give you some sense -- if you can put that
up a little bit higher. Thanks.
This is some raw computer output for the Golden
Gate well field, the city's well field out in Golden Gate
Estates. And what you see here are these are the actual
wells right in the center there. They're in the
north/south alignment. And these lines that are curving
and spiraling into the well field are the computer's
projections of how the groundwater is flowing to those
wells.
And what we had -- excuse me. What we had the
consultant do is identify this area here is that 20-year
capture zone, these lines that you can see kind of
bunching up.
What I've put together in terms of that yellow
highlighted area is a confidence interval. That's a
statistically, a statistical interval that says that
there's a 75 percent chance we've calculated based upon,
75 percent chance that the true capture zone is somewhere
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within that yellow band.
So this gives us some sense and some feelin9 of the
tightness of this band and how much confidence you have
that when you actually adopt the line on the map, what
does that really mean.
We are recommending that we adopt the expected
value. We wanted to make sure that the board was aware
that this has degrees of uncertainty in it and this has
some sense of uncertainty that you have or where that
line is.
That means that there's a 25 percent chance that
the capture zone may be out here or may be in here, but
that's the best we can do with trying to honestly present
you the best picture of the degrees of uncertainty in the
modeling effort.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: That inserted that 6,000 foot
mark you're representing there is an area that you have
to be very cautious when you put in?
MR. LORENZ: Well, the way we'll discuss it-- this
particular area here is the 20-year capture zone. I
think that this is probably -- this area right in here,
Just because this is an older map, from this point to the
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well field, expanding this area, is the area that we're
most concerned about regulating hazardous substances and
hazardous materials.
The rest of the area from this particular point
out, which would be zone four, and I'll discuss these
zones in another view graph, is an area where it
provides -- we've identified as it provides recharge to
the well fields and we have some minimal prohibition
standards.
For instance, we have now recom -- not to locate a
landfill anywhere from this point inward to the well
field. But we'll go through the slides with the
protection zones.
I'd like to try to identify this. This is what
we're calling these well field risk management zones
because this is the framework is to manage the risk
around well fields. It's like providing insurance. How
much premium, how much insurance do you purchase to
protect an item?
And this is the consensus of staff and the
Groundwater Protection Technical Advisory Committee that
these were the appropriate risk management techniques
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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around our well fields considering the technical data
base, their uncertainties, their modeling efforts and the
costs of regulation.
Our well field protection risk management zones are
based upon a 20-year capture zone, and again, that's the
area where all groundwater moves to a well within 20
years. We've identified four zones that are established
to minimize risk from sanitary hazards as well as loss of
hazardous products and waste.
Each zone is a specified fraction of that 20-year
capture zone. Remember, one of the consider -- policy
considerations is how much of that capture zone do we
protect, to what degree.
And again, the shape and size of the zones are
different for each well field because of the differing
hydrogeological characteristics that each well field
cite.
The protection objectives for each zone are zone
one, we're looking at sanitary hazards. That's the zone
that's closest to the well field itself. And there's a
need to provide some degree of protection through
sanitary hazards such as discharge of waste, treated
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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waste water or sludge disposal. This is what we're
calling sanitary hazards.
Zone two is established--
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: How about septic tanks?
MR. LORENZ: Septic tanks we've also identified for
a particular size septic tank facility. So yes, that is
a sanitary hazard but we've looked at a larger size than
your typical residential septic tank. But the last set
of view graphs I'll show you -- we'll go down, set down
each of the facilities.
Zone two is a loss of petroleum products, talking
about petroleum storage, gasoline stations as identified
as the protection objective for zone two.
In zone three we're concerned -- I should say, too,
that is from the well field out to the boundary of zone
two.
From the well field out to the boundary of zone
three, we're concerned about hazardous waste and
hazardous products, mostly large quantities of those
wasted products. I'll go over the threshold quantities
and requirements for those.
Zone four is that 20-year capture zone that
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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establishes the extent of our -- of the well field
recharge to 20-year recharge for a particular well field.
Again, from zone three and four, we're not
especially strict with regard to regulations, but we do
have certain requirements, and I'll identify those as we
go through them.
In terms of procedure and process, we'll be asking
the board to adopt these zones as Special Treatment or ST
for the zoning maps. So therefore anyone can look at the
zoning map or Development Services when an applicant
comes in, can refer to the zoning map and find out which
particular zone that individual is in and depending upon
what type of facility the applicant has, then we'll
identify the particular restrictions for that facility.
Here are the composite map of all the well field
protection zones, the 20-year capture zones in Collier
County. This represents roughly 57 square miles of the
county around these particular well fields through zone
four.
I have to check my notes.
In the zones of what I consider more specifically
restrictive zones, one, two and three, zones -- total
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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area of zones one, two and three is roughly 18 square
miles. So we're talking about a fair amount of
regulation in 18 square miles of the county through this
Groundwater Protection Ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Where's 1-75 on that map or
chart, the north/south segment?
MR. LORENZ: Right here.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: That's east/west, isn't it?
MR. LORENZ: Right here.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Okay.
MR. LORENZ: To iljustrate the--
COMMISSIONER VOLPE= So on 1-75 you've taken in --
there's a zone of protection in one of our Activity
Centers?
MR. LORENZ~ Yes, that's correct.
That's the -- that was an issue that was -- George,
put up that other one. That was an issue that was
brought up to the Planning Commission.
The Pelican Bay well field is in this particular
area. That is a-- and you'll hear one of the issues is
Pelican Bay well field currently is not being used as a
potable or drinking water supply well field; however, it
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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is permitted to be used as a potable water supply well
field.
It was the consensus of staff and the technical
advisory committee that, and the ordinance as written,
that any well field that is permitted to be used as a
potable water supply well field would be listed as a
protected well field, and we've had certain comments from
some individuals that request that that not be the case.
I think that would be some, an issue that the board needs
to address.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: And the other is along
Goodlette-Frank Road, --
MR. LORENZ: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: -- the City of Naples --
MR. LORENZ: That's the City of Naples' well field.
That is a particular well -- that well field-- we'll
show some view graphs of it. Capture -- some of the one
manufacturing park along Pine Ridge Road, and that's
captured within zone three for that particular well
field.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: What's the possibility of salt
water intrusion there?
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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MR. LORENZ: The reason why -- if you remember that
one view graph that we showed along the coastal ridge
well field that exhibited such marked vertical flow was
exactly because of that, because you have a salt water
boundary interface there for that particular well field
and it tends to force the fresh water to go further to
the west as opposed to the east.
And that salt water interface is actually creating
again what we call a boundary condition for the purposes
of the model and it forces the fresh water to be taken,
drawn further and further to the east. That's why the
shape of this particular protection zone is probably a
little bit more unusual than the other well fields.
COMMISSIONER VOLPEz Just to -- I'm going back to
the other map. The -- on Manatee Road, we don't have a
well field there, but we' re going to have a deep well
injection and we're going to have an aquifer recovery
system; at least we talked about that.
I think that the same considerations that are
driving the protection of our well fields could also
protect where those aquifer recovery systems are.
MR. LORENZz We have identified -- let me answer it
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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this way.. Port of the Island's well field -- let me use
this as an analogy. We modeled it and it's got a capture
zone, but its development with regard to where the
production zone is in an aquifer system that is deep
enough and has sufficient degrees of confinement in our
Judgment that it is not listed as a protected well field.
The aquifer storage and recovery systems that we
understand utilities will be looking at will be forcing
water down into some of those deeper aquifer systems and
the ordinance addresses them from a standpoint that it
would not be -- we do not need to take the degree of
protection because of the isolation from surface
activities for that kind of deeper well field.
COMMISSIONER HASSE~ In the area there, the Golden
Gate well fields, you have a lot of septic systems in
that area.
MR. LORENZ: Yes.
COMMISSIONER ~ASSE: Are we adequately protected in
that respect?
MR. LORENZ~ We think so. We think that the
individual septic tank systems for typical family
residents adequately designed, constructed and maintained
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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according to State standards is appropriate degrees of
protection for those well fields out in that area.
Where we've addressed septic tank systems is for
larger systems, once you get to an absorption field
greater than a thousand square feet. Then that
particular system functioning as simply a gravity flow
through that absorption field has a higher rate of
failure and hence our recommendations in the ordinance is
for systems greater than a thousand square feet of
absorption area have what's called a low pressure lateral
system to ensure that you get adequate coverage and
treatment of that septic tank affluent. So we've
identified larger systems for the purpose of this
ordinance.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: So that singular septic system
doesn't really have an impact on our well fields.
MR. LORENZ: That's right. That's our judgment;
that there's no need for any additional restrictions for
those kinds of smaller septic tank systems.
I have a series of view graphs. This is the Golden
Gate City well field. As you can see, the bright orange
is zone one. This is where we're addressing sanitary
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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hazards.
Zone two is the -- is concerning the petroleum
storage.
Zone three is the hazardous products. And that
very lighter colored area is where we have a higher
degree of regulation.
Zone four is the green area. That's the 20-year
capture zone. Basically what it says is if I'm a
particle of water and I'm lying about here, it'll take me
20 years to get to that well field.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: What's that distance?
MR. LORENZ.. This is -- from this point to this
point is one mile, so that's about a mile.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE, What do you do with the water
treatment plant that's going to be right there?
MR. LORENZ~ The water treatment plant, with regard
to its own hazardous types of products it may have to
treat the water, those-- those -- there is a general
exemption in the ordinance so that those kinds of
activities are generally exempt from the ordinance as
long as the appropriate precautions are being taken so
that we don't get into a situation where all of a sudden
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we can't develop the well field because of -- because we
have a prohibition.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: One of the reasons why I asked
the question is because obviously the new water treatment
plant is right in that area and we' re talking about a
deep well injection system in that area that we're
talking about disposing of sludge.
MR. LORENZ: Well, this particular -- this is the
Golden Gate City well field.
City' s --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE:
This is the Golden Gate
I'm sorry. Okay.
This is
MR. LORENZ~ But you' re still correct.
where the water treatment plant is located.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: For Seven States -- I mean,
for Avatar; right?
MR. LORENZ: For Avatar.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Right. Okay.
MR. LORENZ: From this slide, again, this is
basically the same as the view graph, but if we -- this
is the water treatment plant itself, and this is where
the wells are located. But if I back up, you're looking
in this direction here from west to east.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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COMMISSIONER VOLPE: I confused that. I thought we
were looking at the new water treatment plan.
MR. LORENZ, This would be about the extent of zone
one where we'd be looking at the sanitary hazards.
COMMISSIONER ~ASSE: Our new water plant is not
going to pump the water from anyplace in that location
and there from east and in Golden Gate Estates' water
source of wells, is it not? I mean, Commissioner Volpe
is concerned it might affect the water.
MR. LORENZ: George, is the next one the county's
facility? Yes.
This is the county's existing well field in Golden
Gate Estates. Again, showing the same colors of bright
red as zone one; yellow -- orange, zone two; yellow, zone
threel and green, zone four.
Again, the wells, of course, are aligned in this
north/south alignment and then this east/west alignment.
The county's utilities system, of course, pumps this raw
water to their existing facility at -- in Golden Gate,
just south of Golden Gate where you' re looking at that
previous view graph.
COMMISSIONER VOLPEG Well, but we're going to have
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a new water treatment plant.
extension right there some place?
sort of--
sure.
Isn't Vanderbilt Beach Road
Isn't that -- am I
MR. LORENZ: I don't know where Mike is. I'm not
This is--George, can you read that for me?
MR. YILMAZ~ Golden Gate Boulevard.
MR. LORENZ.' Golden Gate Boulevard is right here.
This is Immokalee Road up here, I believe.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: And 951, is that on --
And 951 is much further over.
We have a slide, Bill. It might show
MR. LORENZ~
MR. YILMAZ~
better.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE:
Well, it seems as though it's
outside that, all those four zones that you're talking
about.
miles.
MR. LORENZ~ Yes, I believe it is.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Must be about five, six, seven
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: That' s cot rect.
MR. LORENZ: Yeah. Again, in terms of scale, this
is about a mile, I think, as a section. And again, the
slides here, you understand the residential character.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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think this is the well field alignment along this area of
residential. There is, again, single family residences
and I believe this is a well.
And the major concern out in this particular area
would be septic tanks, but again, we feel that small
residential septic tanks would not be adversely affecting
the well field.
The only place where there is a problem is the
convenience store that's located on Wilson Boulevard has
petroleum storage tanks, and they are within our zone two
and there would be certain restrictions towards the
future use of that particular property for petroleum
storage.
COMMISSIONER HASSE.. How deep are our wells out
there?
MR. LORENZ, Eighty -- eighty feet deep. Eighty to
a hundred.
This is one of the well fields that was going to
have one of the greater impacts with regard to the
restrictions of the ordinance. This is the Goodlette
Road well field. All these smaller circles basically
represent individual wells that are aligned along
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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Goodlette Road and strike out over here on this east/west
alignment Just around Pine Ridge Road.
This is the Pine Ridge manufacturing park, so zone
three basically bisects that particular area and you can
see that -- you can see that again it's trending so much
to the east and that's again because of the salt water
boundary that exists at that particular well field. So,
the shape of it is very small on this side, on the west
side, but very broad on the east side.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE
Goodlette-Frank Road?
MR. LORENZ:
that it, George?
Where is Pine Ridge Road and
Goodlette, I believe, is here.
And Pine Ridge is here.
Is
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So it goes all the way along
Goodlette-Frank Road to the north?
MR. LORENZ: Yes.
The well field or the wells themselves-- I think
this is Goodlette Road. Some of the wells are actually
located in the median strip of Goodlette Road and you can
see one of the wells when you pull off the Golden Gate
Parkway in Goodlette Road is where one of the wells are
located. Some of the wells are located along this golf
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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course. I forget which golf course it is. But all the
way down to the southern part of it, it goes all the way
down to Coastland Mall.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.' How about to the north? How
far north does the well field extend?
MR. LORENZ:
graph? No, down.
George, can you pull down that view
The other way.
Is this -- this is Pine Ridge develol~nent up in
here. I'm not sure what road that is right now. Is that
Immokal ee Road?
MR. HATCHER:
MR. LORENZ
Pine Ridge is down there.
Maybe it's Vanderbilt.
But it's fairly extensive alignment of wells and of
course in the urban area where we would be talking about
higher degrees of restriction for zones three, for the
protection of this particular well field.
MR. HATCHER: I think that is Vanderbilt.
MR. LORENZ: The Immokalee wells, well fields
three, well fields in Immokalee -- this is the airport.
There is along this area, again, the more restrictive
zones one, two and three are tied into this particular
well field but the well field is of course located right
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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about there, and this does have an effect on even the
county's master plan for the Immokalee airport with
regard to prohibition of bulk fuel, petroleum products
through zone two. As long as they can be located outside
of zone two, they would be conforming to the Groundwater
Protection Ordinance.
Zones one, two and three, again, where we' re
regulating hazardous waste and hazardous products and
still allow the facility to exist but having some degrees
of restrictions.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: You said that the~e are
exemptions in the ordinance for existing essential
services I think is what I heard you say.
MR. LORENZ ~ Yes.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Is there in the draft of the
ordinance any type of a waiver that could be granted for
any circ~stances?
MR. LORENZ~ There is a conditional -- called
conditional use or conditional permit, well field permit
that can apply for, can be established for any -- and I'm
going to look at Dave here and make sure I use the
correct terminology, non-conforming use, but we would not
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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be recommending that that be used, but the mechanism does
exist.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: You're going to have, I
suspect, I don't know this for a fact, you may very well
have an existing use within one of these zones of
i nf 1 uence.
MR. LORENZ: That is correct. We do have existing
uses that would still be allowed to exist for the most
par t.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: But are they non-conforming
and therefore they cannot expand and they can't do any of
that other stuff?
MR. LORENZ ~ Yes.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE ~ Okay.
MR. LORENZ~ So this is what the Immokalee area --
again, what I'm trying to do is highlight some of the hot
spots that that includes.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: I was just thinking about when
you mentioned the effect it may have on the county's
master plan for the Immokalee airport, I mean, we have an
enterprise zone out there and we've had some anticipation
of some future uses there and I just --
OPPICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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MR. LORENZ: The 'highest -- what I consider the
greatest impact would be the location of the fuel storage
area for the airport. The current ordinance would
propose that that fuel storage area would have to be
outside of zone two. And right now I believe that from
the master plan that I've seen, it bi -- zone two bisects
that fuel storage area.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Who establishes all these
rules and controls, the state or federal government or
what?
MR. LORENZ~ Well, of course, this particular
Groundwater Protection Ordinance, the way we've set it up
is we're establishing those requirements. You know,
certainly staff is recommending those requirements be
established.
COMMISSIONER HASSE.. We do have something we
predicate our thinking on, though, do we not?
MR. LORENZ~ Oh, yes. What we try to do is once
you -- if you will, once you accept the concept of the
well field risk management zones and the idea of how --
what I'm calling how close is too close, that risk
management idea.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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The standards that we will address for the most
part come from general requirements that already exist in
state law or are appropriate practices with regard to
protecting groundwater. It's a matter of where do we
apply those practices and for what facilities.
So we try not to, again, if you will, to create
with regard to a lot more different requirements but we
try to apply the existing requirements to two areas that
we' re saying that the risks need to be managed better
than doing nothing at all.
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: Bill, have you had the
opportunity to show this map to the Immokalee Water &
Sewer District? Because two of those areas is very much
going to affect their spray affluent.
MR. LORENZ~ Yes. I believe this area -- is it up
in here? Up in here, George, is this the -- down this
one here?
The current sewage treatment plant in the Immokalee
area for the Immokalee Water & Sewer District is located
Just on the boundary of zone one. Our analysis shows
that their spray irrigation field that they have permits
for, this is one thing that we've listed, I think -- I
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
48
believe it's part of your executive summary package.
Most of that spray field is located outside of zone one,
which would be appropriate to the ordinance.
A very small part of that spray field, however,
would be located in zone one, but it's our understanding
that that particular area exists for emergency purposes.
This particular map here just shows the color coding of
where those particular spray fields are in relationship
to that particular well field.
We have had a presentation to the Immokalee Water &
Sewer District. I believe someone is supposed to be here
tonight to represent the district and to clarify these
points.
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT ~ Okay.
MR. LORENZ: The Groundwater Protection Ordinance
itself is -- this is Just a general content outline. We
spent all of our time here discussing the protected well
fields, the rationale and basis for that and the risk
management zones and what the basis for those are.
The bulk of the ordinance, of course, provides for
land development standards for a variety of facilities,
potential pollutant sources. The ordinance itself
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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provides for well field exemptions and conditional uses.
We do have a certificate to operate program that's
supplied to specific facilities; their processes and
achninistrative procedures are outlined in the ordinance.
There's also addressing placement of future wells
and future well fields, provisions for violations and
penalties and exemptions. And also, the intent is to
once this ordinance is adopted, it would be incorporated
into the Unified Land Development Code at some particular
appropriate Juncture.
This particular -- in your executive summary we
have a little bit more detailed version of this summary
here to discuss the variety of restrictions and
requirements that are placed in a variety of facilities.
And what I'd like to be able to do with this next
set of view graphs is to hit the highlights, pull out
some of the areas that I see that are important and will
have some degree of impact, at least from our judgment,
and from so~e comments that we've heard.
The solid waste facilities are addressed. Disposal
facilities such as the landfill, again, we're not --
we're recommending that no landfills be sited in any of
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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the well field protection zones one, two, three and four.
Future transfer facilities be prohibited in zones
one, two and three.
The containers that -- solid waste containers be
fitted with rain-- leak proof and rain proof covers, and
that comes right out of the requirements that we already
have.
And recycling facilities --
Does that mean I can't use my
COMMISSIONER VOLPE:
plastic bag any longer?
MR. LORENZ:
it doesn't get punctured.
COMMISSIONER HASSE:
That should be leak proof as long as
Standard container.
Optimistic.
MR. LORENZ~ AS long as you're following the
existing mandatory collection ordinance, you should be in
good shape.
The recycling facilities -- we want to promote
recycling facilities, but we're going to address them
here is that any facility that is handling hazardous
waste and products would be prohibited from zones one,
two and three. That's for future facilities. Just
general recycling facilities and activities would be no
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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problem.
Items two and three, hazardous products and
hazardous waste have the -- I think they have the -- will
have the greatest degree of impact for small business
owners. For hazardous products and hazardous waste, too,
we've tried to identify larger facilities, and therefore
we have threshold values that match up to generally
larger tank sizes.
Hazardous product is, for instance, like a cleaning
fluid or some product that has a beneficial use that a
business is going to use. Its hazardous characteristics
are identified through reference in the ordinance to a
variety of federal definitions and requirements.
But any hazardous -- a facility that has a
hazardous product greater than 250 gallons of liquid or a
thousand pounds of solid, there are a number of 9eneral
requirements that they must meet. For instance, no
discharge in the storm water systems or septic tanks.
And any kind of discharge of greater than 50 gallons will
have to be reported to the Pollution Control Department.
In zones one, two and three, future facilities will
have to have a containment plan that would require 110
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percent secondary containment and provisions to absorb an
equivalent volume of spilled material.
Secondary containment could be any kind of facility
that's engineered or designed to ensure that if you have
a loss of product that it's not going to get into the
soil and into the groundwater system, so it's contained
through again the term "secondary containment."
It requires notification of disposal; requirements
in event of a spill; provide for an annual inspections;
and it also be part of an annual certificate to operate
program.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Don't we already have similar
regulations dealing with hazardous materials?
MR. LORENZ l We do not -- we're not aware of any
kind of state requirement for hazardous products that
we've defined in the ordinance that require secondary
containment with -- close to a well field.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: I understand that, but I'm
just saying you've got a small business that's a dry
cleaning establishment, I thought that we either have an
ordinance or independent fire districts actually have to
go out and inspect and there's certain rules and
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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regulations.
MR. LORENZ~ There are certain fire standards and
codes that do exist but not necessarily match up to the
secondary containment provisions that we're providing in
this ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: The only reason why I ask that
is that I think there are some of those and it's been
confirmed in terms of the regulations with respect to the
storage of the hazardous materials.
If you have different standards here, then there
are existing standards and I just don't remember what the
ordinance or regulation was. It's going to make it very
difficult, you know, for the person who is having to
store or his business requires him to use these hazardous
materials.
MR. LORENZ: I would like to say and get a
confirmed confirmation of the staff member that deals
with this is that the intent of these particular
ordinances or regulations are to ensure that in the event
of a spill you have it properly contained and it's not
going to get into the soil and into the groundwater
system and in no way should be attributed to be in
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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conflict with any of the fire prevention and safety
requirements.
Indeed, I think we have in the ordinance that to
receive a certificate to operate they have to have a fire
prevention plan because they are to some degree tied
together.
Again, we're looking at larger facilities. Our
estimate, for instance, in terms of impacts, our estimate
is that 75 facilities will probably be captured by this
ordinance that meet these criteria.
We have the same -- basically, we have the same
criteria for facilities that accumulate or generate
hazardous waste. Threshold is different. A hundred and
ten gallons of hazardous waste, if you will, in
comparison to two hundred and fifty gallons of hazardous
product.
But the -- basically, the requirements are the
same, and that is provide for secondary containment and
absorption and notification requirements, annual
inspections.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: What happens if somebody say
has a gasoline station someplace around here, within the
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zone that you're speaking of here? What happens to his
gas station?
MR. LORENZ: George, can you flip to the last view
graph? I think it's on the last view graph.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: If you're going to talk about
it later, --
MR. LORENZ~ Yes, I'll be getting to that.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: All right.
MR. LORENZ: Okay. Just go the next one then.
The other item, facilities that we're looking at is
waste water treatment facilities and disposal systems.
Again, think of zone one as being a hazard, a sanitary
zone, and that particular zone comes out of the
recommendations from EPA of restricting or regulating
sanitary type hazards within what EPA calls a one-year
travel time.
Our zone one approximates a one-year travel time.
It doesn't exactly equal, but we're using that as a basis
for the -- for applying these standards to sanitary
hazards.
And in zone one, we are basically allowing
facilities to discharge treated affluent in zone one
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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because think about the golf courses on Goodlette Road,
and that's one reuse syste~ and that's a recharge to the
well field. We're Just requiring that a high level
disinfection standard be applied to reuse systems in the
zone one.
This is what's required by the state for affluent
reuse systems. We're simply applying that definition to
our zone one areas. We are recommending, however, that
facilities, the siting of those facilities, the actual
plant itself be prohibited within zone one. But the
discharge of high disinfection treated affluent be
allowed in zone one.
These facilities also would be part of the
certificate to operate program.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. That's the county, isn't it?
I mean, that's who's providing it, the waste water for
the irrigation purposes.
MR. LORENZ: We have some facilities that are not
county facil -- county-owned facilities. There are
certain county-owned facilities, of course, that do do
that along with the city, so--
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So this would be a requirement
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not on the golf course but on -- if the golf course is
purchasing the reused water.
MR. LORENZ: Would have to purchase the higher
level disinfection of reused water.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: And those are EPA standards,
aren't they, for example, that the county has to meet?
MR. LORENZ ~ Those are State -- the high level
disinfection standard are State DER standards. We've
used those criteria to apply to zone one.
For industrial waste water facilities, we've
basically broken those down into two categories. Right
now we don't have any industrial facilities but we do
have this provision to be able to look at that particular
category.
If an industrial waste water process--maybe
industrial waste water would be classified as an
industrial waste water facility, many times their process
waste water is simply sanitary domestic waste water. And
in those cases where EPA has not identified any toxic
pollutants for that kind of waste water, those facilities
would be allowed to discharge in zone one as long as they
meet high level disinfection standards.
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We are recommending, however, that waste water
facilities, industrial waste water facilities that have
toxic limits imposed upon them by EPA, that they not be
allowed to discharge in zones one, two or three.
So that's basically the operative requirements for
industrial waste water treatment facilities in the
ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So if they're permitted and
they're regulated and we don't allow them to discharge in
those zones, what do they do?
MR. LORENZ.. They would have -- we would not allow
them to site a discharge facility within zones one, two
or three. They would have to be located somewhere else.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. And you're saying that right
now we don't have any of those existing, so that's not an
issue.
MR. LORENZ: To my knowledge we don't have any
classified for that.
For waste water collection and transmission
systems, we recognize that existing design standards are
adequate in zones one, but we' re recommending to the
ordinance that semiannual inspections for these
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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facilities, collection and transmission systems, be
instituted for facilities that pass through zones one.
Sludge disposal is another sanitary hazard.
Discussion of sludge disposal gets very complicated
because of the classification of sludges.
What we attempted to do was that sludges that meet
certain patbogen reduction standards that are specified
by EPA such as milorganite (phonetic) that many people
are familiar with would be allowed to be used in zone
one.
The other sludges, however, that do not meet the
patbogen reduction standards or would not be allowed in
zone one and other criteria will be applied in terms of
application in zones one, two and three depending upon
the metal's content and the nitrogen concentrations of
the sludge.
We've discussed -- n~ber seven is septic tanks.
We've discussed the fact that a typical residential
septic tank is going to fall below the threshold of a
thousand square feet for absorption fields and that these
particular facilities would not have any more
requirements placed upon them of a system's zone one, but
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those facilities, however, that have absorption fields
greater than a thousand square feet, we're recommending
that a low pressure lateral distribution system be used
for the system and that a professional engineer certify
that you have a two-foot separation to groundwater --
high groundwater table underlying that particular
absorption field.
Again, we feel that it's the larger septic tank
systems, because they can't get even distribution across
that absorption bed are the ones that propose a higher
risk and therefore this requirement is Justified for the
smaller systems, existing standards are sufficient.
For septic tanks that are being used to serve
industrial uses, we are requiring that a monitoring
system be established for that particular facility to
ensure, at least be able to monitor for the release of
any kind of hazardous substances as an early warning
sy stem.
We've looked at storm water systems, and basically
the South Florida Water Management District criteria is
Judged to be adequate to manage storm water discharges in
all well field protection zones.
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Again, the storm water has a beneficial effect.
That's where we get our recharge, so we don't want to get
too restrictive and dry up our well fields by not
allowing storm or discharge within the zones and the
requirements that the water management district has with
regard to quality, we feel, are appropriate.
For well construction, we're recommending that
locks and caps for inactive wells and monitoring wells be
provided. A larger impact here is we're also
recommending that all new wells, and I think the major
impact here is all new residential wells, be wells that
are four-inch diameter, minimum diameter.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: What is the requirement now?
MR. LORENZ~ Right now, two-inch wells can be
installed.
The problem with two-inch wells is that they' re
much harder to grout, to get a seal to prevent
contamination of groundwater to surface leakage or even
getting interchange of the groundwater system from the
different aquifers. Many of the water management
districts around the state are going to a four-inch well
requi rement.
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COMMISSIONER HASSE~ Those who are located in our
area of Collier County that are drilling wells now are
going to have to go to four-inch wells, they're going to
have to rerig their outfits and everything else? Is that
a fact?
MR. LORENZ: We've done some surveying and my
understanding is that most of the contractors that are
out there already drilled four-inch wells and there would
be no, if you will, requirements or for the contractors
to have to get all new equipment.
It would be -- it's an added expense to the home
owner, and we estimate that it'll have a cost increase of
$600 a well to go to a four-inch well.
COMMISSIONER HASSE~ Total cost, $600?
MR. LORENZ z $600 more.
COMMISSIONER HASSE:
COMMISSIONER VOLPE:
More.
Maybe I missed it, but what
was the reason for recommending the four-inch well?
MR. LORENZ: The two-inch wells are difficult to
get a seal, a grout, along the casing to get a good seal
against surface water contamination. And therefore with
the four-inch well you get a tighter construction
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process, and our groundwater system is much better off
going to a four-inch well recognizing the increased cost
of $600 per well for residents.
The other ite~ that the ordinance addresses is
excavation and mining, the processes. And the
recognition here is that a physical act of mining
material out of the ground does not cause groundwater
contamination or groundwater problems just by excavating
it.
Where our focus is is to provide standards that
will divert storm water runoff from areas of the mining
operation that have hazardous waste or hazardous products
such as maintenance areas. Isolated -- storm water can
be isolated from going directly into the open pit itself,
to be handled basically by best management practices for
handling fuels and other related materials.
So we're not prohibiting the mining close in to the
well field, but we are regulating the activities that the
hazardous nature that exists around that particular
excavation.
For petroleum products, we've addressed it in two
fashions. Commissioner Hasse, the last one is the area
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where you had mentioned in terms of product storage, but
with exploration, we're recommending sitin9 for
exploration and drilling of petroleum wells be prohibited
within zones one, two, three and four.
Gail, is that correct where we're saying
directional drilling is also prohibited?
Through the vertical projection of those zones.
Basically what you can do is locate -- my understanding
is you can locate outside of a well field protection
zone, drill vertically and then start the drill on a
slant to where you want to drill and you're actually
underneath the well field itself but you'd be about a
thousand feet or so at least. So -- 3,000.
So we're allowing -- we would be allowing petroleum
exploration directly under a well field, but it would be
at sufficient depth that it would pose virtually no risk
to the well field itself.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: By the same token, you're
talking about drilling an oil well.
MR. LORENZ ~ Cot rect.
COMMISSIONER HASSE:
has a gas station, the zone of influence.
I'm talking about somebody who
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MR. LORENZ.' Yes. The next one, product storage,
is we are prohibiting -- in zones one and two, we' re
prohibiting the location of new petroleum product
storage, use or handling facilities of greater than 110
gallons of fuel.
And also, if you'll -- also prohibit the expansion
of any existing facilities that already exist in zones
one or two. So existing facilities can exist as long as
they don't expand the storage or overcome a three-foot
capacity for petroleum storage.
We are recognizing that we have a general exemption
for emergency generators accessory to public facilities
asserting a safety purpose that would be close in to a
well field zone one or two, such as an emergency
generator for an elevator or any other kind of emergency
requirements.
One of the questions can be brought up is, Does the
state regulate petrole~ storage? And yes, they do. The
state has a n~ber of rules and regulations with a
requisite schedule, compliance schedule, but the local
governments are pre-empted from adopting any regulations
that regulate the design standards themselves.
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The only thing that local government can do is to
look at it as, if you will, a land use issue to say that
this particular area is not suitable for petroleum
storage.
And our recommendation is that when you get into
zone two, if you have a spill, our records show that it
takes several years to go through all the hydrogeologic
studies, to go through the remedial action planning and
actually implement a recovery plan to clean up a
contaminated site; therefore, we are recommendin9 that
new facilities do not be located within zone one or zone
tWO.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Where does propane fit into
all of this?
gas,
can find in the ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE ~
MR. LORENZ:
allowed.
COMMISSIONER HASSE ~
state under pressure.
MR. LORENZ= Propane would be allowed since it's a
It's not a liquid under certain conditions that we
And chlorine?
If it's a gaseous chlorine, it's
Both of them are in a liquid
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~lR. LORENZ z That's correct. But we've identified
that at atmos-- is it atmospheric pressure to be a
liquid?
So we haven't gotten into the real technical
details of it. That's why I have to look over to my
s~aff who have been researching all of the material.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: How about agriculture citrus?
I don't know much about those industries, but I
understand that they're growing by leaps and bounds in
our community, and I understand that they do some
spraying and they have fertilizers and they have heavy
equipment. Are they exempted from this ordinance?
MR. LOREN~ When we discussed whether citrus or
any other agricultural or even residential application of
fertilizers and pesticides, we're not regulating the
application rates of the material. What we are
regulating would be the storage of quantities in excess
of your threshold values that are existent in the
ordinance to provide for secondary containment.
It's our judgment that it's in these areas where
you have large quantities of concentrated materials is
really the threat to the well fields, not the application
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rates. So therefore, the ordinance allows application of
pesticides, fertilizers as long as the applifier, the
individual applying it conforms to state and federal
requirements.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: I was Just trying to get to
some practical applications of this ordinance because
this is the first hearing, I understand, but I was
thinking about such places as Naples Fertilizer,
Goodlette-Frank Road, right near one of the well fields
they've got a propane tank and they store lots of
fertilizer on-site.
What happens to a business like that or out in
Immokalee where you've got a number of large farms who
have, I'm sure, huge fuel storage tanks and maybe they
store fertilizer in bulk. What do you do with those
kinds of operations?
MR. LORENZ~ If it's liquid fertilizer, it would be
covered under the ordinance; correct?
MR. ~ATC~ER: The retail packaging of all the
hazardous products is exempted in the ordinance.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Do you want his name?
MR. HATCHER~ James Hatcher, for the record.
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The fuel storage facilities, they would come under
the same criteria as the gas station in Golden Gate
Estates. They would not be allowed to expand their
storage capacity under the existing ordinance the way it
stands.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So you're saying that there is
no exemption for agricultural and citrus industries?
MR. HATCHER: Not -- there's no specific ordinances
for the storage of what we would define as hazardous
products or hazardous waste.
MR. LORENZ~ There's no, if you will, blanket
exemption to that particular --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE, I don't know if that's
important or not. It was Just a question I had. I don't
know whether it --
MR. LORENZ~ But that bulk storage would be
regulated under the requirements of the new ordinance,
but not the application rates per se.
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT: Guys, I think the only thing
that's stored in bulk for more than a couple days is
maybe that liquid fertilizer plant, but most of it's
hauled in and they store it there and then they haul it
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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out to the fields.
MR. LORENZ: And again, in terms of an existing
facility that's in zone one, two or three, there would be
requirements to provide for capability to absorb a spill.
For a future facility, they would have to actually put in
secondary containment as well as provide the capability
to absorb the spill.
So we're not necessarily prohibiting the use of --
requiring standards to minimize the risk of any kind of
spills.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: You did indicate that there
was no increasing of the facility, did you not, --
MR. LORENZ.. That's correct.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: -- because of hazardous
material?
MR. LORENZ z If a -- well, that's only for
petrole,-- storage if you have existing -- let's say a
gasoline station. I know it was brought up, an
individual with the store on Wilson Boulevard.
The ordinance, the way it's currently written,
would not allow that facility to be expanded with regard
to expansion of petroleum storage tanks or through
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capacity. So the existing facility would be allowed
subject to compliance with State regulations with no
expansion would be allowed under zone one or two.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~ Bill, you may have covered
this, and I apologize if you have. The -- to what extent
has this issue, the Groundwater Protection Ordinance, to
what degree has this been workshopped or explained to the
business community that will be affected by it?
MR. LORENZ~ We have one workshop with the
technical advisory committee that we had a mailing list
of a number of individuals to be notified of the
workshop. Unfortunately we only had about three or four
people from the general public.
only two or three people.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS:
The Planning Commission,
It looks like from the
audience that the environmental community is very well
represented. I'm not sure if the business community,
which would be affected by this, has been represented or
has some significant notice that we' re doing this.
when is the second public hearing on this?
MR. LORENZ: November 6th.
COMMISSIONER SHANAHAN~ Two weeks from today.
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Bill, did I understand you to say, following up on
Mr. Saunders' question, that there were 75 companies that
would be affected by this ordinance that you are aware
of?
MR. LORENZ~ We estimate 75 businesses would fall
in the classification of greater than 250 gallons and
located in zones one, two and three.
COMMISSIONER S~ANAHAN: Were those 75 companies
invited to participate in the public hearings or public
meeting?
MR. LORENZ~ }~ot by name, no.
COMMISSIONER SHANARAN: Don't you think that might
be a good idea to let them know?
COMMISSIONER HASSE: I certainly think it would be.
MR. LORENZ~ We've also identified approximately 83
facilities that would be generating hazardous waste that
would be --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE~ I think the point's well-made,
and that's what I was trying to conceptualize here and
look at the practical application of this ordinance and a
couple companies came to mind, but it seems to me that as
a part of the process that we ought to do something.
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Those who have been targeted who actually staff has
determined may be affected by the ordinance, some special
assistance --
MR. LORENZ: We had a mailing list, a very
extensive mailing list. I don't recall which
organizations were listed.
Dave, you may remember some of the organizations,
but we haven't -- quite frankly, we haven't gotten any
comment from virtually, hardly anybody from all the mail.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: How about the Chamber of
Commerce? Have they commented on this?
MR. LORENZ~ They haven't commented, but I believe
they were on the list.
MR. WEIGEL: I can't recall specifically, but I
believe the Chamber of Commerce may have been on the list
and also were a number of home owner associations; major
developing, land-owning entities; property owners; also
engineering firms and contractors.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: How were they notified you
say ?
MR. WEIGEL~ They were notified by regular first
class mail of the workshop that was held with the
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groundwater technical advisory committee, and of course
there have been the other advertisements pursuant to the
CCPC hearings and these hearings.
County Attorney's Office had advised some work with
staff consistently over the long duration of working on
this to see that there were various inputs to the public
both by occasional press release as well as staff
participation on the radio interview programs and
occasional newspaper column that wrote on it also.
So we have attempted to cover the bases pretty
thoroughly prior to the formal hearing that we have this
evening.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS.' Thank you.
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHTs Any other questions?
MR. LORENZ~ That pretty much covers the overview
with the presentation. The Planning Commission passed on
it -- I believe it was five to two. The issues of the
Immokalee area came up, plus the Pelican Bay well field
was addressed.
In your executive summary, we have also provided a
fairly extensive economic and physical impact section
through a companion report to try to show what the
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general costs of the impacts on home owners or
businesses, a range of unit costs provided in that
economic, separate cover economic report in addition to
the physical impact with regard to a recommended staffing
pattern to institute the certificate to operate program
and the annual inspections. This is depending on the
board --
COMMISSIONER VOLPEr Can you, Mr. Lorenz--
MR. LORENZ: I don't know if that answers your
question.
COMMISSIONER VOLPEr Excuse me. Can you identify
in a summary fashion where the staff views that a certain
policy decision will have to be made by the board?
MR. LORENZ ~ Where?
COMMISSIONER VOLPEr Yeah. I mean, the zones of
influence. That's a policy decision to be made. Are we
talking about 20 years translucivity or are we talking
about 10 years or what are -- so that you help those of
us who don't have the technical expertise that you do to
get us to focus on.
I mean, some of the technical stuff that's -- you
know, that's something that's beyond our, you know,
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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perhaps comprehension, but the policy decisions as to
where they're to be made would be helpful to me.
MR. LORENZ~ Staff is reco~mending the decision
with regard to well field protection zones to adopt a
20-year capture zone is that boundary of zone four and
the delineation of zones one, two and three, according to
what we presented in regard to our protection.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. You measure one, two, three
and four? I mean, who made the determination that zone
one is going to be X number of feet or X number of
That's all computer modeling, is that what it
months?
is?
MR. LORENZ: Yes. That's correct.
Once we've identified that capture zone, the
20-year capture zone, then we identify the protection
objectives of sanitary hazards of approximately one year;
petroleum storage, two years because of the reaction
time. Then those decisions then translated into the
lines of the map that you see for each specific well
field.
I think the board needs to -- obviously it's a
policy decision that the board would confirm that that's
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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the appropriate framework to develop the groundwater
protection ordinance.
Additionally, in terms of some of the other issues,
for instance, Pelican Bay well field, because of it's
somewhat a gray area whether it's actually being used
versus what it is permitted to be used for, I think
that's an issue that is going to need some board
resolutions.
Staff and the advisory committee is recommending
the conservative approach since it is being permitted as
a potable well field that it ought to be planned to be
used as a potable well field and hence this ordinance
would apply to it.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. What's the likelihood that it
will ever be used for that purpose?
MR. LORENZ~ I would defer that to Mike Arnold in
Utilities Division to discuss about the future plans the
county would have for that well field, but I think that's
an issue for the board.
There is another issue for the board with regard to
siting of future well fields. We're recommending that
each well field not be sited such that they' re zoned,
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their capture zone begin to encroach upon existing
industrial zone or land. That's an area that's in the
ordinance that I think the board needs to provide some
attention to.
The rest of the standards -- the advisory committee
and staff tried to develop-- what we have is a consensus
a~ to what is the most reasonable approach given the
technical uncertainties, given our protection goals,
given the costs to effectively manage the risks around
well fields.
That's a lot of technical information that goes
into the ration, reasons for that, but certainly the
board needs to confirm that as, when you adopt the
ordinance.
We have provided the board with a fairly extensive,
technical report that is the foundation and the basis for
the rationale of Just about all the decisions we're
recommending in the ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: How about the expansion of all
of the existing "non-conforming"? Is that a policy
decision to be made by the board as well?
MR. LORENZ~ I think -- I think yes. I think
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that --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Staff is saying they cannot
expand under any circumstances.
MR. LORENZ: That's right.
COMMISSIONER SHANAHAN: Bill, the costs associated
with implementing the program are pretty broad, from
$11,000 to $224,000 depending upon the implementation
program that we select.
What can -- can you just real brief on the cost and
recovery of costs through fees and et cetera?
MR. LORENZ.. Yes, you' re correct, Commissioner.
We've identified a number of alternative plans, and
basically those plans are based upon how frequent we
inspect the facilities. And we are recommending that
what we're calling Plan B be the plan to implement with
regard to amounts of staff that would be needed to
implement the program.
The total cost of Plan B -- George, I don't know if
I'm looking at the right numbers is roughly $175,000.
Now, we also recognize that we have existing staff that
we will be prioritizing for different programs and we
will be applying existing staff to make up a portion of
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that implementation.
How about the additional staff then, or how much
additional money would be recommending to be captured in
fees, George?
HR. YILMAZ: For the record, George Yilmaz.
Commissioners, if I might have a f~w minutes of
yours, I can go through the financial assessment that we
have provided to you with the executive summary.
On page 87 of your executive summary --
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Eighty-seven?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir. Exhibit A.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: That's in this small book?
HR. YILMAZ: That's on your executive summary.
As Bill mentioned, we have identified four
alternatives, and each alternative has associated
resource allocation as well as expected program level.
An expected program level was pretty much based on the
life of the program.
Having an ordinance in place, we wanted to present
to the board some kind of comprehensive decision making
tool so that we are able to identify how reliable this
program should be to protect the well fields and what
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will be the associated costs.
As you can see, Plan A identifies adjusted --
basically that's additional resources of 1.63 manager of
hydrogeologist and 2.2 manager of pollution control
specialist and associated total costs with that plan
would be $233,000 and then the less estimated fee
revenues being $133,000 and then there are some funds
associated with pollution control found 114 and then
subsidize total costs and then the associated program,
the liability is for that alternative would be .8.
I'd like to --
COMMISSIONER HASSE: I'd like to look at that, the
third column, less estimated fee revenue.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Where is most of this coming
from, the individual that is using the facility in that
area?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes. It is designed-- that's right,
sir. It's designed to compensate the program as much as
feasible and as much as possible from the individuals
creating the potential, being regulated parties.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Does that include those that
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are there now, or is this something new that's going to
be imposed on our existing business fees?
MR. YILMAZ~ This is designed to represent existing
facilities to regulate.
MR. LORENZ: But this would be a new fee that an
existing business would have to pay to be able to receive
this particular fee revenue so that the certificate to
operate program would be as close to self-supporting as
possible. The other funding source for the Pollution
Control Department is the ad valorem fund, the
work-release control fund.
So we'd be recommending that if the board were to
choose to implement the program, at some particular level
that we would have a mixture of fees designed to
establish that revenue to fund the program as much as
possible.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: That's an annual fee of $750
that you're recommending for the 75 businesses?
MR. YILMAZ: Again, Commissioner, that would be a
plat for Plan B. If you choose to ask staff to implement
Plan C or D, cost associated with inspection fees as a
certificate to operate would be relatively lower.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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So the fees that is published in that publication,
Just to show the algorithm and the methodology that staff
utilized to come up with summaries that you have in your
executive summary.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: I understand that. But for
Plan B, which is the plan that the staff is recommending,
as it relates to annual fees for those 75 businesses that
will be issued a certificate of operation, that's a $750
fee annually; is that correct?
MR. YILMAZ: That's right, sir.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE:
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT:
Then we have to -- I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~
Okay.
Is there any other questions?
I'd like to raise one
issue, I guess for us to consider perhaps at the next
public hearing, but I'm wondering if the fees for this
should come out of the general fund as opposed to out of
assessments to the 75 business owners; the rationale
obviously being that everybody in the entire community
benefits from a well field protection program.
And I'm not sure that it's fair to saddle the
business owners with the costs of maintaining that
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program in light of the type of program. I'll just throw
that out for consideration and perhaps at the next
meeting we can hear some discussion on it. Obviously
there's arguments both ways.
MR. LORENZ: What we've set it up as is that we
would be coming back to the board with a resolution some
point in the future if the board so chose to create a fee
schedule, but we wanted to provide the physical, the
economic impact and this kind of information as you
deliberate on the ordinance.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Could you make a note on
that particular comment concerning the general funds so
that we can discuss that in the future?
(]{AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: We have speakers?
MS. PIKEs Yes, Madam Chairman, we have three
registered speakers. The first speaker is George Risher.
MR. RISHERz Hi. My name's George Risher.
I own a convenience store they talked about on
Wilson Boulevard and Golden Gate Boulevard. And when I
built the convenience store there, there wasn't any well
field there. So in effect what you're doing here now is
condemning my property. You're devaluing the property.
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Can't expand it. Can't sell it. They come under a
different set of rules altogether if you sell it.
So I don't think we've done enough studying on
this. We've got to do something better than we've got
here tonight. There's a lot of questions here. A lot.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: How did you get notification
of this hearing?
MR. RIS~ERz Pardon?
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: How did you know --
MR. RISHER.. A neighbor of mine brought it to me in
the paper. Nobody notified me, nothing. I'm within 600
foot of the well.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So you didn't get any
notification from the organizations that you belong to?
MR. RISHER ~ No. No.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~ Sir, what is your name
again?
MR. RISHER~ George Risher.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: I'm sorry. George Risher?
MR. RISHER: Risher, R-i-s-h-e-r.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Okay. Over here. I know
the sound system's a little confusing here.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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MR. RISHER, You have speakers behind me.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Yeah, I understand. You' re
not the first person who's looked back there.
MR. RISHER~ But there's a lot of questions on this
that I don't understand and I would like to get a
complete copy of this ordinance.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Yeah. You raise a very
interesting point. I assume, Mr. Weigel, that there's
some evaluation concerning the impact on property owners
in the sense of --
MR. RISHER~ And the article in the paper didn't
even tell us what time.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~ Okay. I assume that
there's been some discussion concerning condemnation of
property, whether we are in effect taking property
through regulation.
MR. WEIGEL~ Yeah. There's been considerable
discussion about that issue and related issues;
condemnation, prohibition of use of property as opposed
to the regulation of use of property; limitation use of
property; and each of tho~e elements of land use or
restriction of land use fall within judicial guidelines
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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of what is a taking and what is not a taking and also the
general rule of reasonability that land does not have to
be permitted for every possible use that it would have if
there was no regulation whatsoever, but if there is a
reasonable and rational limitation placed upon the land
that it is not considered a taking.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Could you have someone from
the County Attorney's Office speak to Mr. Risher about
his particular site and what the regulation, proposed
regulations --
MR. RISHER: Yeah, because they've got me scared
enough now I'm going and getting an attorney in the
morning.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: That's fine, and I would
encourage you to do that. I'm not trying to discourage
you from doing that, but if you would contact the County
Attorney's Office, the humber's 774-8400. I'd like for
that dialogue to take place, Mr. Weigel.
MR. RISHER~ Who do I need to talk to?
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: I guess it's Mr. Weigel,
Dave Weigel.
COMMISSIONER SHANAHAN:
David Weigel.
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COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: It will be your
responsibility to call him.
MR. RISBER: I'll call him in the morning.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: And then Dave, I'd like to
hear your analysis concerning just those legal issues
that you said have been addressed. I'd like to sometime
between now and November 6th I'd like to talk to you
about that.
MR. WEIGEL=
MR. RISBER~
have on this?
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~ Right now we only have one
more; that's on November 6th.
MR. RISHER~ I don't think that's enough.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS: Well, we're going to talk
about that. That may be all there is.
MR. RISHER: Thank you.
MS. PIKE~ Next speaker is Gary Beardsley.
MR. BEARDSLEY: For the record, my name is Gary
Beardsley, I'm a resident of Collier County, a voter.
I have a couple things that I think need to be
brought out. One thing, and I apologize, I got here 20
That's fine.
Bow many more meetings are we going to
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minutes late, if Bill already discussed this. This
committee that's been working on this has probably been
working four years.
MR. LORENZ: Three.
MR. BEARDSLEY~ Three or four. I mean, there's
been notices out and I realize that those businesses
affected need to be involved in the process, but it's not
like the public in general didn't know those meetings
were going on. These were noticed. The public was
invited. Typically those, you know, that the public's
main concern is day-to-day making a buck and trying to
figure out what to do with it.
So, I'm not saying that that's right or wrong, it's
Just that there tends to be a little apathy in this
county on involvement of these kinds of things, but I
think it needs be addressed. You're right.
The other thing this program didn't just spring out
of the ground because some little fairy went to Bill
Lorenz and said, Hey, Bill, you ought to put in an
ordinance on groundwater protection.
And I see a document, and again, I'm not up to date
on all these documents. I see a document that says
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economic impact of putting this ordinance in place.
There's a reverse side of this. What is the economic
impact to the public if they don't put it in place. And
I know Commissioner Saunders has come from Dade County.
I came from Dade County. I came from Broward County.
And over there, they --
COMMISSIONER SAUNDEK$: Just for the record, I
didn't really come from Dade County, I lived there for a
while, but I came from Virginia.
MR. BEARDSLEY: Okay. I came from Illinois, but I
came lastly from Dade County.
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS~ I just didn't want that
stigma attached that I'd come from Miami.
MR. BEARDSLEY= Well, I happen to think there's a
lot of good qualities over in Dade County, if we could
just move it away from all the people. I happen to like
the Keys and Biscayne Bay.
Again, the problem is Dade County and Broward
County have had to close public well fields because they
were polluted. Tremendous expense to try to relocate a
public well field.
If we could -- everybody I think tends to look at
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VCR's and you've got that little button that says "fast
forward." If we could fast forward Collier County, we've
got Dade County's problem.
We have an opportunity now to put something in
place addressing the taking issue and addressing the
people that are in those places and didn't know they were
going to do this, addressing that aside, and it needs to
be addressed, we have an opportunity here -- and this is
rare and unique that I'm up here supporting an ordinance,
I'm usually condemning it's weak and everything like
that. But I think Mr. Lorenz and the consultants have
done an admirable job. I disagree on a few technical
things, but we have an opportunity, and if we are going
to be so narrow and sit here and argue over this for
years to come, we're going to miss an opportunity.
Again, I would like to point out the Comprehensive
Land Plan that you as commissioners adopted require that
this ordinance be in place by '89. Not 1991. So, we're
already late in the process. I think we can seize an
opportunity.
The other thing that might want to be thought about
is if someone happens to have a business within this
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zone, you don't have to outright buy it. There are
opportunities to buy development rights from that person.
You say, Hey, you can still stay there. We'll allow you
to do such and such, but we're going to buy the right of
you to expand this gas station. So you have other
opportunities. You don't have to outright buy it. That
needs to be considered.
Also, and this is my big point right here, the
water management district, I remember Mr. Lorenz showed
the water management district is adequately protecting
storm water runoff and that kinds of things. All
cons~ptive and surface water permits have to go through
the water management district or it's delegated authority
to the county smaller than 20 acres.
All those big pies that you see split up into
industrial use, rural use, irrigation use, recreational
use, agricultural use, doesn't show the environment. The
environment is the biggest user of water. We're talking
about -- and I heard Mr. Lorenz still talk about 57
square miles of draw down. That's 57 square miles of no
wetlands.
Golden Gate Estates, when they dropped the water
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table out there two to three feet, the productivity
dropped 50 percent. I'm from Illinois, farmer
background. If I got 90 bushels per acre and somebody
did something to drop my bushels per acre to 45, I'd be
up here screaming.
And I'm just saying we need to look at the
environmental impacts in the process of looking for
siting of new well fields especially and expanding
existing well fields. These are all important issues
that we don't even talk about.
A~d I was on that committee probably for two years
and Bill knows that I was hammering on what are the
environmental impacts here. We seem to be addressing the
public and good quality of water and that type of thing,
but we're not looking at how the environment's being
impacted.
So I'd like to see an economic analysis, another
booklet there, how is this going impact the environmental
quality of what we're trying to preserve here in Collier
County. Thank you.
MS. PIKE~ The next speaker -- and we have three
additional speakers now. The next speaker is Mike
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Slayton.
MR. SLAYTON: Good evening. Mike Slayton, for the
record. I apologize if I sniffle a lot. The north wind
has kicked up some Lee County dust and aggravated my
allergies.
I've got two policy issues I'd like to --
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: As long as it's not lethal
yell(~ing it's okay.
MR. SLAYTON= Not lethal yellowing. I don't know.
You'd have to be the better judge of that.
TWo policy issues for the board to consider. One
is the omission of the surface water source for Marco
Island from the protection zones. The surface water
source for Marco Island is the sole potable drinking
water supply down that way and through some mechanism we
need to address that supply source.
It's very difficult to model, and the staff has
been grappling with that. It may be something that's
more of a policy issue where a reasonable zone is defined
as a policy issue around Marco Island water supply
source,
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.' You said Marco Island.
Do you
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mean Immokalee?
MR. SLAYTON=
951 and 41.
present form.
Marco Island. The old rock pit near
It's not covered by the ordinance in its
The second policy issue is some way of coming to
grips with existing non-conforming uses within zones one,
two and three of the modeling work that's been done. And
what I would suggest is that you require retrofitting
remedial measures for those land uses as non-conforming
land uses or a relocation of the well that is causing the
draw down in that area.
And to make it equitable to the property owners,
you really need to develop a cost sharing mechanism to
implement that. Without the remedial actions for
existing non-conforming uses, you're not really
protecting the resource that you want to protect.
But to make it fair to the property owners, to make
it equitable, you need to cost share those remedial
measures or the well relocations with the affected
utilities. Thank you very much.
MS. PIKEs Next speaker is Brian MacKenzie followed
by Fred Tarrant.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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MR. MacKENZIE: Good evening. For the record, my
name's Brian MacKenzie. I work for Collier Resources
Company. We manage the underground estates for both
sides of the Collier family, and most of my concerns have
been answered.
The only one I really have left, and I was late in
submitting comments, too, was the imposition of the
special treatment overlays of the natural aquifers,
natural aquifer recharge areas.
Our exposure under the current prohibitions in the
well field protection zones is minimal and I don't
imagine you're likely to hear too much of a kick out of
us over that. Those prohibitions are the prohibition of
the expansion of existing exploration facilities; the
directional drilling problem has been answered and the
imposition of well field conditional use permitting
process.
Those, with the exposure that I'm looking at, are
minimal. My concern relates to the special treatment
overlay for a natural aquifer recharge area. In reading
Articles I and II of the proposed ordinance, it's stated
that these natural aquifer recharge areas are undefined.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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They've not been modeled. They've not been identified.
They've not been mapped.
In the course of our oil and gas activities, we've
undertaken a great deal of hydrogeologic research for the
underlying parts of the county, and my understanding of
it is that an aquifer recharge area can be a very huge
expanse of land. It can be a very isolated expanse of
land. And in reading Articles I and II of the proposed
ordinance, the same idea is evinced in there that the
entire county could be a natural aquifer recharge area.
My concern is that at the same time we're adopting
restrictions for the groundwater protection zones, which
are all right, we're going to put ourselves in the
position where the same prohibitions are going to be
spread on a natural aquifer recharge area that may be
used, maybe. the whole county, without consideration for
any of the identifying factors that we've done for the
modeling, for instance, adopting the groundwater
protection zones.
And what I'm trying to suggest, I guess, is that we
make that a separate exercise, we look at the federal
standards for oil and gas exploration and production, the
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State standards required under the State rules and
nationwide industry standards and then fit the technical
need for restrictions based on the technical standards
that are already out there and the technology that exists
when we do it.
There's a lot of -- there's been a lot of
advancements relatively recently in the types of casing
strings you run to protect groundwater aquifers, and in
Florida it requires a minimum of three that are all
cemented in place.
And my suggestion is that we remove the imposition
of restrictions on natural aquifer recharge areas to a
separate amendment process where there is some ability to
deal with it on--
COMMISSIONER VOLPE~ That was one of the earlier
questions that I had and I'm thinking about the crew
lands, the crew trust. I mean, you've got some well
fields in that area.
MR. MacKENZIE: Yes.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: This ordinance -- I mean, I
don't know if that's one of those areas that would be
covered under this ordinance. Is it?
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MR. LORENZ: What we've done -- excuse me. What
we've done in this ordinance is to basically reserve a
section for natural aquifer recharge, special treatment
overlay, but in which case we'd have to come back to the
board and get the board to adopt a set of maps that we
would develop plus adopt the standards that we go along
with those set of maps, and that just hasn't been done
yet.
MR. MacKENZIE~ But the standard -- I'm sorry. Go
ahead.
KR. LORENZ I So these standards that we have in
this ordinance, we're not by any means trying to imply
that they're going to apply verbatim to these yet to be
defined areas.
MR. MacKENZIE~ Then I don't have a problem with
that. But could we add some language to that that would
indicate some type of research or interaction with the
oil and gas industry that would --
COMMISSIONER SAUNDERS= I think you two gentlemen
are in accord. Why don't you discuss that language and
present that to us?
MR. MacKEN~.IE~ Okay. The only other issue I had
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was I'm not adversarial, but the notification process I
think was less than it could have been. I've been
following this for quite a long time and have visited the
Pollution Control Office on a fairly regular basis and
gotten copies of the drafts and written comments and
there's been some confusion in terms of when these
meetings were and what they were to be.
I thought this was an GPTAC workshop tonight before
the public hearing for the ULDC and that last week's
meeting had been postponed to this week. So just for
what it's worth, we got our comments in and I have no
further concernB, but that's something to consider then,
the notification process.
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT= Thank you.
MS. PIKEs Next speaker is Fred Tarrant followed by
Craig PaJer.
COMMISSIONER SHANAHANs The speakers have grown,
haven't they?
MS. PIKE..
Yes, they have.
MR. TARRANT= Thank you, Commissioners. For the
record, my name is Fred Tarrant. I'm speaking as a
private citizen for myself and my wife.
OPFIClAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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My concern is what I perceive to be the godzilla of
government versus the free enterprise system. The free
enterprise system is all we have, really, that separates
us from the deplorable picture that we see today in the
Soviet Union, but I don't need to defend or stand up or
protect the free enterprise system as such because the
businessmen are more than capable of protecting their own
interests.
But the point that brings me here is that when
businesses, large, medium or small are manhandled by the
politicians and their elected officials and their
handy-helpers, these costs are passed right straight on
down to Joe and Sally Public. They do not remain in the
corporate structure. They cannot absorb it. They pass
it on.
So we're really talking about an ordinance that
would create a charge of for permitting or licensing that
is going to be levied against "businesses," which in fact
is being leveled against, again, the taxpayer, the end
user of the product, whatever that product is.
And it Just seems to me that we' re reaching a point
in this country today where you can divide the people
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into two parts, the regulated and the unregulated. And
the regulated are the taxpayers and the ordinary people
that try to generate business and keep this country
going. And the unregulated, those who are basically
exempt from all the laws that affect the rest of the
peasantry are the government organizations and officials.
It was Just mentioned here, I believe, that the
county water works where there are chemicals to be stored
would naturally be exempt in the same way that the
Congress of the United States exempts itself from all the
laws that the rest of us are subject to.
So I would urge extreme care and caution and going
slow. We don't want disasters. We don't want spills.
But it seems to me that this is something where the
government again is reaching out with its long intrusive
arm and saying, You are guilty unless you can prove that
you're innocent. We are going to charge you a licensing
fee to support another layer of the bureaucracy, another
layer of the bureaucracy to see whether or not in fact
you do create a dangerous hazard or a spill, at which
time we will really sock it to you, and I think they
should be socked if they create a spill or a hazard.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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But the idea of charging people up front to support
another layer of bureaucracy seems to me unAmerican,
unconstitutional and extremely unkind, and that's all I
have to say. Thank you.
MS. PIKE: The next speaker is Craig Pajer,
followed by Mark Morton.
MR. PAJER~ Good evening. My name is Craig Pajer.
I live at 2233 Royal Lane in King's Lake.
I have several comments and several
recommendations. My first comment is that the
information contained in this draft ordinance is somewhat
incomplete. There's references to the Glades well field
that has been abandoned and the wells have been capped,
but that information is still in the ordinance.
Also, as you know, Pelican Bay well field is no
longer being used as a potable supply source and that
needs to be addressed.
There's also other facilities that will be coming
off line, particularly the North Naples Utilities' water
treatment plant will be replaced. There are water lines
being built now to replace that facility and you should
consider whether or not that should remain in the
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o r di nan ce.
Also, the county's been discussing the potential
purchase of Avatar Utilities of Marco Island. Again, if
those do take place, there should be some provision for
removing those areas from the ordinance.
The -- another area that has not been addressed in
the ordinance is your well fiel~ expansion. You
currently have bid a project to expand your well field,
but that information has not been contained in the
ordinance.
Again, the Marco Island supply source has not been
addressed as Mike Slayton mentioned.
In the ordinance, it calls for an annual review of
the well field risk management areas, and my concern
there is that that bubble could swell and grown on an
annual basis. I think it would be prudent to fix that
area perhaps for a five-year time frame so that the
people that are in that area know that they're affected
and so for at least how long into the future they will be
affected by the ordinance.
My next comments are concerning waste water
treatment plants. They're considered to be a sanitary
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hazard. In my opinion, a waste water treatment plant is
not a sanitary hazard because a treatment facility will
remove 90 to 99 percent of the pollutants and the
chlorine will kill the bacteria and viruses in your
treatment plant affluent.
The ordinance exempts septic tanks that only
provide 50 percent treatment of your waste water and it
also does not address the pollution in your canal system.
I don't know what the water quality is of your
canals, but it just seems that if you have waste water
affluent that may have zero bacteria and viruses and
you're discussing restricting those but you let septic
tanks continue to operate and the drainage system
continue to operate that there are some inconsistencies
there, and I would suggest that you consider the
potential of removing waste water treatment plants from
this ordinance.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Aren't they exempted? Isn't
that what you said?
MR. LORENZ: If they discharge within a zone one,
they would have to provide for high level disinfection.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE~ Which is the EPA standard, in
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any event, or the State standard, isn't it?
It would be the State standard for
MR. LORENZ
affluent reuse.
MR. P~JER z
The treatment plants that use affluent
reuse are required to have high level disinfection now,
so it's really a redundant requirement.
Another concern that I have is the future location
of well fields. They're precluded from being built in
industrial areas, and this would have an impact on the
City of Naples and the Immokalee Water & Sewer District.
As you saw from the exhibit that Immokalee well
field is located in an airport which is near the
industrial area, I don't know what their plans for
expansion are, but it could affect them.
My recommendations to you are number one, to
consider removing waste water treatment plants from the
ordinance; and number two, to require your local portable
water purveyors to project a 20-year time frame where
their future well fields will be located. The county
will be expandinq there some time. The other utilities
will be expandinn theirs.
I think it would be prudent for the citizens of
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962'
Collier County to know in the future what lands would be
affected by this ordinance. And many times because of
the rapid growth in this area we don't have adequate
planning of our infrastructure facilities.
I think it would be good to at least request the
utilities that are in your county to come up with a
master plan so you know where their well fields will be
located and where this ordinance will have an impact.
Thank you.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE~ Bow did you get notification
of this meeting this evening?
MR. PAJER~ I read it in the newspaper Sunday.
MS. PIKE: The next speaker is Mark Morton.
MR. MORTON~ For the record, Mark Morton
representing the Barron Collier companies.
We have many properties that are affected by the
ordinance and we'll be submitting comments for
consideration prior to your November 6th board meeting.
Also, we have gone through the ordinance. We've
had somebody that's been following it and we have
received notice as a property owner.
MS. PIKE: There are no other speakers.
107
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C~AIRM]%N GOODNIGHT: I have one comment. Would the
gentleman from Snelling Wellford or -- would you mind
coming to the microphone, please?
The Immokalee Water & Sewer District is aware of
this taking place and they sent you over here to monitor
the thing. Did they have any comments about the well
fields that are in their area?
I guess my biggest concern is the fact that the
state has permitted them and now the county's coming back
and saying, you know, that this is an area of concern but
still the state's given the permits for both the affluent
fields and the wells.
MR. REI(~: The only item that I would think about
would be the airport facility. The county did have some
plans to build a fueling depot at the airport site, but
to my knowledge they've relocated it.
If I could look at a map, I might be able to find
it. From what I understand, the fueling depot is to be
relocated to the other side.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Speak into the mike a little
bit better. The young lady's having troubles.
C~AIRM;uN GOODNIGHT: There's a mike behind -- Carl,
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there's behind the screen there if you can pull it off
the wall.
MR. REI(~: From what I understand, the fueling
depot, which was in this area here, it's kind of hard to
see, but it's to be relocated on the other side of the
airport. The reason it's to be relocated is because of
environmental issues because of gopher tortoises and
scrubJays and so forth.
This is something that the county's determined, the
county's found out recently. That was the only concern
that was of mine originally, was that particular fueling
zone.
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: So the actual where the water
and sewer plant is located and their, their affluent
fields are located over there off of Ninth Street, is not
going to be affected?
MR. REiCh: The affluent right now is going to be
treated in Section H. This is going to be the major
zone. There again -- it is treated. It is chlorinated.
It is disinfected along with the regulations that are
required by the DER.
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: I agree with what Craig says.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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I think that the sewage treatment plants should be
exempt, you know, if they're supposed to meet the
criteria that state says and certainly ours does and
Immokalee Water & Sewer District does.
MR. REICM= I agree with that.
CHAIRRAN GOODNIGHT: Thank you, Carl.
I don't have any other questions.
COMMISSIONER SHANAHAN: Bill, you'll give us a
report on some of these very important questions that
have been asked such as the Marco Island supply source
and et cetera?
MR. LORENZ ~ Yes.
COMMISSIONER VOLPEt Mr. Weigel, the application of
this ordinance for the City of Naples, is that addressed?
I mean, because we're talking about well fields that are
located within the City of Naples or are we talking about
a county ordinance?
MR. WEIGEL: Well, it does affect that well field
area which goes into a portion of the City of Naples.
And an ordinance of this nature, just like any ordinance
of the county origin may affect municipality unless --
municipality enacts an ordinance that is in conflict with
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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the county legislation.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: So has the City of Naples --
is the City of Naples contemplating a well field
protection ordinance for its wells within its boundaries?
MR. WEIGEL: I'm not aware that they are, but quite
frankly, John Staiger is part of the groundwater
protection advisory committee and is on the staff with
the City of Naples and I think can advise you that,
advise you in that regard.
MR. STAIGER: Yes. For the record, John Staiger,
Natural Resources Manager, City of Naples and Chairman of
the Groundwater Protection Technical Advisory Committee
for the last three and a half years.
We're basically going to adopt this ordinance into
the city. We have a comprehensive plan policy which says
that we will have -- we will have a groundwater
protection program in effect.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Who do we send the bill to?
MR. STAIGER: No, no, you've got to talk to the
City Manager about that.
We have at present a comprehensive plan has wording
in it referencing the groundwater protection in the cones
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
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112
of influence, and what I'm probably going to end up doing
is taking these computer modeled maps and we will then
sort of incorporate that into what we already have in the
Comprehensive Plan.
The only well field affected in the city is the
Goodlette Road well field. To the best of my knowledge,
we don't have any plans to expand that one. We have a
consumptive use permit from the water management district
right now.
And over the years, the tendency has been to
increase the withdrawal from the well field out in Golden
Gate Estates and reduce the withdrawal from the well
field in the city both for the -- to prevent salt water
intrusion and also to reduce the dependency on that well
field that is located in a relatively inappropriate area.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE.. But in the presentation, the
reason why I asked the question is that obviously there
is a significant well field that runs along
Goodlette-Frank Road and I think Mr. Lorenz pointed out
that it does have an impact upon property outside the
City of Naples, specifically the industrial property
located on Pine Ridge Road. So, you can -- I mean, we
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
113
need to coordinate -- somehow we need to coordinate those
efforts because we could have conflicting ordinances.
MR. STAIGER: Well, the ordinance is a county
ordinance, and as far as I can understand, that's going
to apply within the city.
The majority of that well field is in the county,
so it would come under county regulation. The portion of
it that's in the city is predominately in residential
neighborhoods and the -- there are very few businesses
affected by it in the city.
One -- Just a point of information, I think there
was some confusion in the audience. The retail sale of
hazardous materials such as paint thinner, lighter fluid,
stuff like that or fertilizers or pesticides in a
hardware store or a garden supply store like, this is
exempted; retail quantities, retail packages.
What we're talking about regulating is the bulk
storage, and in most cases many hundreds or thousands of
gallons. And there aren't very many facilities in this
area that store those kinds of quantities of hazardous
materials in well field protection zones.
COMMISSIONER VOLPE: Seventy-five.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
114
MR. STAIGER= Yeah. There are in Dade County, for
instance, 75 industries in the cone of Jnfluence of one
well.
And one of the issues that was raised while I'm up
here, what we're trying to do is basically prevent the
poisoning of the drinking water supply for Collier
County.
In Dade County where I worked in hazardous waste
management before I came to work for the city, we had
poisoned the drinking water supply of a good piece of
Dade County by allowing industrial siting inappropriately
in well fields and well fields had to be shut down.
And to drill a big supply well now costs 300 to
$500,000 perhaps and it takes you as much as 20 years to
get the thing permitted and on the line and producing
water and piped to where your water point is. That's why
we got the 20-year protection zone.
So this is not a thing we're doing -- you know,
it's not a frivolous effort. It takes a long time to
replace a well field and it's a very, very expensive
process and the best thing to do is to prevent that
contamination from occurring beforehand by appropriately
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115
regulating the land use around the wells. And that, I
think, is what we've done.
The technical advisory committee has been working
on this for a long time and it represents the
agricultural industry, the consulting end of things as
far as siting of residential developments.
Gary Beardsley was a member for several years and I
think the entire committee is unanimous in their support
for this as being as user friendly and as good an
ordinance as we could come up with that still protects
the drinking water supply.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Mr. Staiger, first I want to
compliment the committee on the work they have done.
I've been aware of it for a number of years now. They've
been working very hard towards the common goal of pure
drinking water.
Does the City of Naples anticipate maintaining that
well field out in the perimeter of Goodlette Road area?
MR. STAIGER: To the best of my knowledge, yes. We
have a consumptive use permit that I think goes some
years into the future. I don't know that the utilities
department, now the public works department, has any
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
116
plans of shutting it down. We have phased out some of
the wells that are closest to the coast.
There are wells south of the water plant, for
instance, off Fleischmann that are now used as monitoring
wells. And I believe the normal practice for that well
field is to pump some of those wells on a staggered
basis. They're not all pumped all the time, nor are they
pumped to the maximum permitted consumption. We don't
withdraw that much water from that well field.
But I don't anticipate the city ever abandoning it
because if the single large water main that comes in from
Golden Gate Estates were ever to be broken, we would then
have to rely on the coastal ridge well field to provide
all the drinking water for the entire Naples water supply
area, which goes out to the county and includes this
building, I believe.
COMMISSIONER HASSE: Yes. Thank you.
I couldn't-- I knew you couldn't let that go by.
Nevertheless -- no, I had heard that several of the wells
had been shut down for potable water usage and that's
what I was referring to and that's some time ago these
things have happened.
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
117
MR. STAIGER~ Yeah. The expansion of the well
field most recently was north up towards Carica Road up
the access of the old Seaport Airline Railroad
right-of-way and that's not even-- there's no roadway up
to it at this point. It's a dirt road. But I think they
anticipate continuing to use those on a low consumption
basis.
COMMISSIONER HASSE:
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT:
questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT:
hearing.
COMMISSIONER HASSE ~
hearing.
COMMISSIONER S[IANAHAN
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT '.
close the public hearing.
aye.
(A chorus of "Ayes.")
CHAIRMAN GOODNIGHT:
(No response. )
Just for my information.
Thank you. Is there any other
We need to close the public
So move to close the public
Second that motion.
I have a motion and second to
All in favor signify by saying
Opposed?
OFPICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
C~AIRMAN GOODNIGHT: Motion carries unanimously.
The next public hearing and final public hearing
will be held at 5:05 on November the 6th.
We'll take a ten-minute recess and come back for
the Unified Land Development Code meeting.
(Proceedings concluded.)
118
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962
October 23, ]991
There being no further business for the Good of the County, the
meetinG was adjourned by Order of the Chair - Time: 7-35 P.M.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS
CONTROL
TRICIA ANNE GOODNiGHT~ CHAIRMAN'
the Board on
or as corrected
March 3, 1992
119
STATE OF FLORIDA )
COUNTY OF COLLIER )
I, Christina J. Reynoldson, Deputy Official Court
Reporter and Notary Public in and for the State of Florida at
Large, do hereby certify that the foregoing proceedings were
taken before me at the date and place as stated in the caption
hereto on Page 1 hereof; that the foregoing computer-assisted
transcription, consisting of pages numbered 2 through 118,
inclusive, is a true record of my Stenograph notes taken at
said proceedings.
Dated this 9th day of December, 1991.
State of Florida
My commission expires~ 3/20/93
OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962