Committee backs uniform baseline for municipal stormwater standards, amid industry concerns
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Summary
CS for SB 558 would require municipal and county stormwater systems to meet FDOT construction standards and third‑party inspection by certified technicians; industry groups and counties raised concerns about preemption, costs, inspection capacity and rural impacts, but committee reported the bill favorably.
Senator Burgess said SB 558 would impose a statewide baseline standard for municipal and county stormwater systems, using FDOT construction material specifications as the baseline, requiring third‑party inspection by an engineering firm or general contractor meeting NASSCO PACP certification, and clarifying the measure is not retroactive.
An amendment adopted in committee clarified that DOT material specifications apply as the baseline but that DOT inspection procedures are not mandatory; it also broadened eligible third‑party inspectors and corrected technical language. Sponsor emphasized the bill creates a "floor not a ceiling," encouraging local governments to exceed the baseline while seeking uniformity to prevent catastrophic failures.
Industry groups, local governments and contractors gave extensive testimony opposing or seeking changes: NUCCA and utility contractors warned the bill could raise installation costs (one witness estimated increases up to 40%), questioned third‑party inspection duplications with existing licensed professional engineer certifications and noted possible limited numbers of PACP‑certified technicians. The Florida Association of Counties and the Florida Stormwater Association urged preserving local flexibility for unique site conditions (coastal corrosion, saltwater intrusion) and raised concerns about unfunded, duplicative inspection requirements.
Committee members pressed on whether FDOT standards — originally for roads and bridges — are appropriate for non‑roadway stormwater systems, how the bill would affect DEP permitting and whether the measure would supersede higher local standards. Senator Burgess acknowledged the bill preempts certain local standards in subsections on installation and inspection and said he would work with stakeholders to refine the language, including maintenance and rural flexibility.
The CS for SB 558 was reported favorably by roll call (Yes: Avila, Desigley, Harrell, Polsky, Smith, Mayfield, Chair Rodriguez; No: Arrington). The record shows broad stakeholder engagement and requests for technical fixes and assurances on local authority and rural implementation.
