This dataset identifies if a waterbody has a verified nutrient or dissolved oxygen (DO) water quality impairment, has an FDEP adopted TMDL for nutrients or DO, or is within the watershed area of a Reasonable Assurance Plan that addresses nutrient or DO impairments. WBID numbering is referenced to WBID Run 52. As of now data are only available for South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) and Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) areas within Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) District 1. FDOT District 1 includes Charlotte, Collier, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Highlands, Lee, Manatee, Okeechobee, Polk, and Sarasota Counties. As more data become available this future statewide layer will be updated. Please Note: this layer has been created by FDOT for FDOT planning and consultants use. The FDEP maintains their own statewide impaired waters layer which is also available on FGDL. This is an update to the FGDL dataset VI_TMDL_RA_MAY13.
Purpose of this dataset is to provide spatial representation of the areas for which a nutrient and/or dissolved oxygen impairment in a water feature has been identified.
The State of Florida "verified list" of impaired waters is the list of Florida's water bodies that fail to attain any of its designated uses and/or meet the minimum criteria for surface waters established in the Surface Water Quality Standards (62-302, F.A.C.) and the Impaired Waters Rule (IWR, 62-303, F.A.C.). The entire state of Florida is divided into five basin groups in which each water body is re-assessed on a rotating basis every five years. FDEP develops TMDLs for waters on its verified list, or in the alternative, local stakeholders can develop and implement a RAP to restore water quality. The attached lists/maps are for use by consultants to FDOT District 1 to determine if nutrient loading calculations are required. The maps/lists include WBIDs that have a TMDL or are within a RAP watershed and require net improvement. The list is current through the Group 3, Cycle 3 assessments adopted in October 2016. Questions about this specific dataset should be addressed to: Janet K. Hearn, P.E. Associate Principal Applied Technology and Management, Inc. jhearn@appliedtm.com 386-256-1018 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FDEP VERIFIED IMPAIRED FLORIDA WATERS Supplemental Information: For more information or questions regarding the verified list and assessments, please contact Julie Espy (julie.espy@dep.state.fl.us or (850) 245-8416). For more information or questions regarding TMDLs please contact Erin Rasnake (Erin.Rasnake@dep.state.fl.us or (850) 245-8338). Watershed Assessment Program Florida's rivers, streams, lakes, estuaries, and coastal waters are spectacularly beautiful. More than that, they are essential natural resources, supplying the water necessary for aquatic life, both large and microscopic; drinking water; recreation; industry; fishing and shellfish harvesting; and agriculture. Florida's multi-billion tourist industry would vanish if our water resources were irreparably degraded. Protecting these abundant water resource, restoring them when they become damaged because of unmanaged growth and development, and preserving them for the future is your responsibility and ours. DEP's Divisions of Water Resource Management and Environmental Assessment and Restoration implement a wide range of programs to protect and restore Florida's surface waters. Tour this website and you will find dozens of different strategies and activities underway to benefit water quality. At the heart of these efforts, particularly in identifying water quality problems and establishing clean-up objectives, is the Watershed Assessment program. https://floridadep.gov/dear/watershed-assessment-section Total Maximum Daily Loads Program What is a TMDL? A TMDL is a scientific determination of the maximum amount of a given pollutant that a surface water can absorb and still meet the water quality standards that protect human health and aquatic life. Water bodies that do not meet water quality standards are identified as "impaired" for the pollutants of concern - nutrients, bacteria, mercury, etc. - and TMDLs must be developed, adopted and implemented to reduce those pollutants and clean up the water body. The threshold limits on pollutants in surface waters - Florida's surface water quality standards on which TMDLs are based - are set forth primarily in rule 62-302, Florida Administrative Code (F.A.C.), and the associated table of water quality criteria. What are the basic steps in the TMDL program? How does it work? 1. Assess the quality of surface waters--are they meeting water quality standards? (Surface Water Quality Standards - Chapter 62-302) 2. Determine which waters are impaired--that is, which ones are not meeting water quality standards for a particular pollutant or pollutants. (Impaired Waters Rule (IWR) - Chapter 62-303) 3. Establish and adopt, by rule, a TMDL for each impaired water for the pollutants of concern --the ones causing the water quality problems. (TMDLs - Chapter 62-304) 4. Develop, with extensive local stakeholder input, Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs) that.... 5. Implement the strategies and actions in the BMAP 6. Measure the effectiveness of the BMAP, both continuously at the local level and through a formal re-evaluation every five years. 7. Adapt--change the plan and change the actions if things aren't working 8. Reassess the quality of surface waters continuously FDEP is working on a more comprehensive approach to protecting Florida water quality involving basin-wide assessments and the application of a full range of regulatory and non-regulatory strategies to reduce pollution. The TMDL is the heart of this comprehensive approach. https://floridadep.gov/dear/water-quality-evaluation-tmdl/content/total-maximum-daily-loads-tmdl-program
publication date
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Applied Technology & Management, Inc., Florida Department of Environmental Protection: Watershed Assessment Section, Florida Department of Transportation.
GeoPlan relied on the integrity of the attribute information within the original data.
This data is provided 'as is'. GeoPlan relied on the integrity of the original data layer's topology.
This data is provided 'as is' by GeoPlan and is complete to our knowledge.
This data is provided 'as is' and its horizontal positional accuracy has not been verified by GeoPlan.
This data is provided 'as is' and its vertical positional accuracy has not been verified by GeoPlan.
Spatial and Attribute Information
Water body ID layer (Run47) was attributed with Verified Impaired Assessment Data, TMDL Data, and RA Data from the Watershed Assessment Section to create the WBIDs impairment dataset.
GeoPlan received the following datasets via email from Janet Hearn of Applied Technology & Management, Inc. on September 11th, 2018. Feb2017Update.gdb - Containing 5 feature classes (1 for each Group) The 5 data sets were received in the following projections: WGS84 and FDEP Albers The projection file was redefined from the FDEP Albers projection to the FGDL Albers projection. For features with WGS84 projection they were reprojected to the FGDL Albers projection. Next the 5 layers were combined and renamed to vi_tmdl_ra_feb17.shp GeoPlan added and populated the following fields: - RA - RUN - DATASOURCE - SOURCEDATE - DESCRIPT - FGDLAQDATE Finally all of the fields and records were uppercased.
Dataset copied.
Internal feature number.
ESRI
Feature geometry.
ESRI
Unique Alpha Numeric Water Body Identification. WBIDs make up a are statewide polygon layer in which each polygon has a unique Water Body Identification number (WBID). The assessment units are drainage basins, lakes, lake drainage areas, springs, rivers and streams, segments of rivers and streams, coastal, bay and estuarine waters in Florida. The polygons roughly delineate the drainage basins surrounding the water body assessment units. The WBIDs are used in the Basin Rotation Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) program as well as other applications. WBIDs are assigned a FDEP district as part of their attribution. There are multiple instances where a WBID may be assigned to an FDEP district, but physically fall within the boundary of a different district. This is because WBIDs are grouped together into basins called Planning Units and there are instances where a Planning Unit basin will fall across FDEP district boundaries. In these cases, for consistency's sake, all the WBIDs that are in the Planning Unit will be assigned to the same FDEP district. For information on which district the WBID physically falls in, please refer to the FDEP Regulatory Districts layer.
FDOT
The Basin name of the waterbody being assessed.
FDOT
Name of planning unit, a grouping of WBIDs within a larger basin.
FDOT
Name of the waterbody.
FDOT
Basin Rotation Group number.
FDOT
Waterbody Type.
FDOT
Class of the waterbody as defined in Chapter 62-302.200 and Chapter 62-302.400.
FDOT
Identifies if the waterbody has a verified nutrient impairment (YES/NO).
FDOT
Identifies if the waterbody has a verified dissolved oxygen impairment (YES/NO).
FDOT
Identifies if FDEP has adopted a TMDL for this waterbody. Unless updated impairment information was provided by FDEP, for water bodies with adopted TMDLs, the impairments listed are the impairments addressed by the TMDL. The water body may or may not still be impaired for those parameters. A project specific determination is needed to determine if nutrient loading calculations are required (YES/NO).
FDOT
Has FDEP Watersheds Reasonable Assurance Management Plan Status (YES/NO/Not Available = N/A)
FDOT
Notes.
FDOT
The last WBID Run Number that is represented by this dataset, please note this may vary by feature.
GeoPlan
Data Source or Original File Name.
GeoPlan
The last date the data was updated by the Source, this may vary by feature.
GeoPlan
FGDL added field based on the fields WATER and WBID.
GeoPlan
Date FGDL acquired the data from the Source.
GeoPlan
Unique ID added by GeoPlan
GeoPlan
Area in meters
GeoPlan
Perimeter in meters
GeoPlan
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The Florida Geographic Data Library is a collection of Geospatial Data compiled by the University of Florida GeoPlan Center with support from the Florida Department of Transportation. GIS data available in FGDL is collected from various state, federal, and other agencies (data sources) who are data stewards, producers, or publishers. The data available in FGDL may not be the most current version of the data offered by the data source. University of Florida GeoPlan Center makes no guarantees about the currentness of the data and suggests that data users check with the data source to see if more recent versions of the data exist. Furthermore, the GIS data available in the FGDL are provided 'as is'. The University of Florida GeoPlan Center makes no warranties, guaranties or representations as to the truth, accuracy or completeness of the data provided by the data sources. The University of Florida GeoPlan Center makes no representations or warranties about the quality or suitability of the materials, either expressly or implied, including but not limited to any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement. The University of Florida GeoPlan Center shall not be liable for any damages suffered as a result of using, modifying, contributing or distributing the materials. A note about data scale: Scale is an important factor in data usage. Certain scale datasets are not suitable for some project, analysis, or modeling purposes. Please be sure you are using the best available data. 1:24000 scale datasets are recommended for projects that are at the county level. 1:24000 data should NOT be used for high accuracy base mapping such as property parcel boundaries. 1:100000 scale datasets are recommended for projects that are at the multi-county or regional level. 1:125000 scale datasets are recommended for projects that are at the regional or state level or larger. Vector datasets with no defined scale or accuracy should be considered suspect. Make sure you are familiar with your data before using it for projects or analysis. Every effort has been made to supply the user with data documentation. For additional information, see the References section and the Data Source Contact section of this documentation. For more information regarding scale and accuracy, see our webpage at: http://geoplan.ufl.edu/education.html
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