Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Until July 1, 2012, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) had a law enforcement contingent, referred to as the Division of Law Enforcement (DLE), which included sworn state law enforcement officers and special agents as well as emergency responders to hazardous materials incidents. [citation needed]
www .fdle .state .fl .us. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement ( FDLE) is a state-wide investigative law enforcement agency within the state of Florida. The department formally coordinates eight boards, councils, and commissions. FDLE's duties, responsibilities, and procedures are mandated through Chapter 943, Florida Statutes, and Chapter ...
v. t. e. The Florida Department of Education ( FLDOE) is the state education agency of Florida. It governs public education and manages funding and testing for local educational agencies ( school boards ). It is headquartered in the Turlington Building (named for former education commissioner Ralph Turlington) in Tallahassee.
The FDEP, collaborating with Manatee, Hillsborough, and Pinellas counties, and the Tampa Bay Estuary Program, has also tested water samples at Port Manatee and the adjacent coastline to determine ...
The Thomas P. Smith Waster Reclamation Facility started out as the Springhill Road Sewage Treatment Facility in 1966. It consisted of a 2.5 MGD trickling filter. With the first expansion in the 1970s the facility was renamed to the Thomas P. Smith Wastewater Treatment Facility. This expansion added an activated sludge treatment train with ...
Concern Grows About Rainfall Capacity At Piney Point: FDEP - Bradenton, FL - The Florida Department of Environmental Protection worries there could be another contaminated wastewater leak at Piney ...
The FDEP is asking HRK “for injunctive relief, cost recovery, attorney’s fees, damages, civil penalties in excess of $30,000,” according to the agency’s complaint against the company.
Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 560 U.S. 702 (2010), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that the Florida Supreme Court did not effect an unconstitutional taking of littoral property owners' rights to future accretions and to contact the water by upholding Florida's beach renourishment program.