Case Name: LORIDA WILDLIFE FEDERATION and Collier County Audubon Society, Appellants, v. COLLIER COUNTY, Florida; State of Florida, Department of Community Affairs; James A. Brown, Jr., as Trustee of East Naples Land Company; Barron Collier Partnership; Collier Enterprises, Ltd.; Consolidated Citrus Limited Partnership; Pacific Tomato Growers; Alico, Inc.; and Jack Price and Russell Priddy, individually and jointly as Eastern Collier Property Owners, Appellees
Court: Florida District Court of Appeal
Jurisdiction: Florida
Decision Date: 2002-05-28
Citations: 819 So. 2d 200
Docket Number: No. 1D01-1299
Parties: LORIDA WILDLIFE FEDERATION and Collier County Audubon Society, Appellants, v. COLLIER COUNTY, Florida; State of Florida, Department of Community Affairs; James A. Brown, Jr., as Trustee of East Naples Land Company; Barron Collier Partnership; Collier Enterprises, Ltd.; Consolidated Citrus Limited Partnership; Pacific Tomato Growers; Alico, Inc.; and Jack Price and Russell Priddy, individually and jointly as Eastern Collier Property Owners, Appellees.
Judges: LEWIS, J, concurs. VAN NORTWICK, J., concurs and dissents with Opinion.
Reporter: Southern Reporter, Second Series
Volume: 819
Pages: 200–208

Head Matter:
LORIDA WILDLIFE FEDERATION and Collier County Audubon Society, Appellants, v. COLLIER COUNTY, Florida; State of Florida, Department of Community Affairs; James A. Brown, Jr., as Trustee of East Naples Land Company; Barron Collier Partnership; Collier Enterprises, Ltd.; Consolidated Citrus Limited Partnership; Pacific Tomato Growers; Alico, Inc.; and Jack Price and Russell Priddy, individually and jointly as Eastern Collier Property Owners, Appellees.
No. 1D01-1299.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
May 28, 2002.
Thomas W. Reese, St. Petersburg, for Appellants.
Martha Harrell Chumbler and Nancy G. Linnan of Carlton Fields, P.A., Tallahassee, and Marjorie M. Student, Assistant County Attorney, Naples, for Appellee Collier County; Jack J. Aiello, Ernest A. Cox and Patrick W. Maraist of Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart, P.A., West Palm Beach, for Appellee Eastern Collier Property Owners; Cari L. Roth, General Counsel, Shaw P. Stiller, Assistant General Counsel, Department of Community Affairs, Tallahassee, for Appellee Department of Community Affairs.

Opinion:
ERVIN, J.
The Florida Wildlife Federation and the Collier County Audubon Society, appellants, appeal from a final order of the Department of Community Affairs, appel-lee, which approved a recommended order from the Division of Administrative Hearings finding amendments to the Collier County comprehensive plan to be in compliance with state law. We affirm.
In 1997, appellee, Collier County, promulgated certain amendments to its comprehensive plan, but the Department of Community Affairs rejected those amendments as not in compliance with state law. Following an administrative challenge in which appellants intervened, the Governor and Cabinet, sitting as the Administration Commission, issued a final order directing the County to take specific remedial measures with regard to its plan, one of which was that the County designate certain specified areas within the county as Natural Resource Protection Areas (NRPAs). The principal purpose of this designation is to protect indigenous fauna and flora, especially the Florida panther, a highly endangered species. The final order provided further that the NRPAs "shall be refined as actual data and analysis is made available." The Commission finally directed that within the NRPAs "only agricultural and directly-related uses and one single family dwelling unit per parcel or lot created prior to June 22, 1999, shall be allowed."
Pursuant to the order, Collier County adopted certain interim amendments to its comprehensive plan, including amendments which designated as NRPAs those areas specifically identified in the Adminis tration Commission's final order. The Department reviewed the amendments and determined that they were in compliance with state law. Appellants subsequently challenged that determination, and the matter proceeded to a formal hearing before the Division of Administrative Hearings.
In the recommended order which followed, the administrative law judge (ALJ) discussed in detail the mapping of the NRPAs. Appellants sought expansion of these areas, based upon telemetry data gathered regarding the movement of panthers and upon a 1994 report prepared by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission. In rejecting the argument that the NRPA boundaries were not sufficient to protect wildlife and were not based on a thorough assessment, the ALJ observed that "the 1999 Final Order [of the Administration Commission] contemplates that the Interim NRPAs are a necessary prelude to that very assessment." He added that appellants, in effect, had asked "the County to reach its conclusions as to the natural resource issues before it undertakes the Assessment mandated by the Final Order . [and such a] request is impracticable." Appellants thereafter took exception to the ALJ's recommended conclusion that the agricultural uságe of land was not subject to an intensity-of-use standard. The Department rejected this exception in its final order, which adopted the ALJ's findings of fact and conclusions of law.
On appeal, appellants argue, as they did before the Department, that the NRPAs, as designated in the interim amendments, do not comply with section 163.3177(6)(a), Florida Statutes (1999). More particularly, appellants maintain that this statute, as well as case law and the Department's rule, require application of an "intensity" standard as to agricultural uses contained within the NRPAs. Appellants also claim that the record evidence does not establish, "beyond fair debate," that the NRPA's boundaries do not require further expansion to protect the Florida panther, as the ALJ found and as the Department accepted in its final order.
Turning to the first issue, appellants rely primarily on the following emphasized language in section 163.3177(6), which provides, in pertinent part:
(6) In addition to the requirements of subsections (l)-(5>, the comprehensive plan shall include the following elements:
(a) A future land use plan element designating proposed future general distribution, location, and extent of the uses of land for residential uses, commercial uses, industry, agriculture, recreation, conservation, education, public buildings and grounds, other public facilities, and other categories of the public and private uses of land. The future land use plan shall include standards to be followed in the control and distribution of population densities and building and structure intensities. The proposed distribution, location, and extent of the various categories of land use shall be shown on a land use map or map series which shall be supplemented by goals, policies, and measurable objectives. Each land use category shall be defined in terms of the types of uses included, and specific standards for the density or intensity of use.
(Emphasis added.)
Appellants observe that the above statute explicitly requires a designation of the "extent of the uses of land for . agricultural . uses of land," and further that each land use, including agriculture, must be reviewed pursuant to "standards for the density or intensity of use." Because of this language, they contend the approved interim NRPA amendments are not in compliance with the statutory directives because there is no standard within them regulating the intensity of an agricultural use.
Appellants also point out that the Department's own rule, Florida Administrative Code rule 9J-5.003(60), requires designation of an intensity standard, because this rule defines "intensity" as:
[A]n objective measurement of the extent to which land may be developed or used, including the consumption or use of the space above, on or below ground; the measurement of the use of or demand on natural resources; and the measurement of the use of or demand on facilities and services.
(Emphasis added.) Appellants continue that the language in the rule clearly reflects that the use of the term "intensity" within the statute does not refer solely to buildings and structures, contrary to the Department's non-rule policy decision. Consequently, the Department's order violates not only the statute but its own rule in failing to apply an intensity-of-use standard to an agricultural land use category.
The Department of Community Affairs, Collier County and other appellees argue in response that the term "intensity" is applicable only to the presence of buildings and structures, as provided in subsection (a) of the statute. Moreover, because buildings and structures are incompatible with the agricultural use of land, there is no corresponding necessity for imposing an intensity standard on a land use designated agricultural within the NRPAs.
In that the legislature delegated to the Department the power to enforce section 163.3177, we note that we are required to be highly deferential to the agency's interpretation of such statute. As the supreme court recently reaffirmed in Verizon Florida, Ine. v. Jacobs, 810 So.2d 906 (Fla.2002), an "agency's interpretation of the statute it is charged with enforcing is entitled to great deference." See also BellSouth Telecomms., Inc. v. Johnson, 708 So.2d 594, 596 (Fla.1998). Moreover, a court will not depart from the contemporaneous construction of a statute by a state agency charged with its regulation unless the construction is "clearly erroneous." PW Ventures, Inc. v. Nichols, 533 So.2d 281, 283 (Fla.1988). Accord Miles v. Fla. A & M Univ., 813 So.2d 242 (Fla. 1st DCA 2002).
The interpretation the Department has given section 163.3177(6)(a) is not clearly erroneous. Although certain isolated portions of the statute support appellants' argument that all land use categories must be subjected to an intensity-of-use standard, an established statutory maxim emphasizes that all parts of a statute should be given effect in order to achieve a harmonious whole. See State v. Knight, 98 Fla. 891, 124 So. 461 (1929). Not only do the provisions within section 163.3177(6)(a) undergird the Department's interpretation that an agricultural use of land is excluded from an intensity review, but other pertinent statutes do as well.
Section 163.3177 is included within the Local Government Comprehensive Planning and Land Development Regulation Act. A primary purpose of the Act is that it be carried out in conformity with and in furtherance of the Florida Environmental Land and Water Management Act of 1972, chapter 380, in order "to utilize and strengthen the existing role, processes, and powers of local governments in the establishment and implementation of comprehensive planning programs to guide and control future development." § 168.8161(2), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis added). In implementing the legislative mandate, the Department, acting in its role as the state land planning agency, is required to review local governments' proposed plans for the purpose of determining whether they are in compliance with the Act. § 163.3184(8), Fla. Stat. (1999).
It is obvious, as the regulatory agency charged with enforcing the statutes, that the Department must conduct its review in accordance with the legislative mandate that a submitted plan comply with the Act's overarching concern that future development be subjected to objective standards of guidance and control. To that end, the appropriate land use elements of section 163.3177 are required to be set out in the local comprehensive plans.
The reference made to an agricultural use in the first sentence of section 163.3177(6)(a) and the requirement in the fourth sentence thereof that each land use category include "specific standards for the density or intensity of use" must be understood in conjunction with the language contained within the subsection's second sentence, providing that the plan "include standards to be followed in the control and distribution of population densities and building and structure intensities." The latter provision is entirely consistent with the stated legislative intent in creating the Act: to provide for orderly future development without endangering the state's natural resources.
Although the pertinent language within 163.3177(6)(a), considered as a whole, furnishes adequate support for the Department's interpretation, other relevant provisions in the Act substantially strengthen our conclusion that not only is the Department's construction of the statute not clearly erroneous, but, in fact, it is entirely consistent with the broad objectives of the Act. While the specific use of "agriculture" is not defined in section 163.3164, the definitional portion of the Act, the more general term, "land use," is, which refers to developments that have either occurred or will be proposed, or to uses that are permissible or permitted under a comprehensive plan. § 163.3164(12), Fla. Stat. (1999).
From our reading of the Act, we agree with the Department that each land use must be set out in the comprehensive plan in a statement considering what effect, if any, the use contemplates future development, and if it does, the extent of the intensity of such use on local resources. As the Department explained in its final order, the definition of "development" in section 163.3164(6) "applies to impacts of development activities on natural resources, not to the requirement of depicting agricultural areas on the Future Land Use Map." The above provision simply refers to the definition of development furnished in section 380.04, Florida Statutes, which in turn states in section 380.04(1), Florida Statutes (1999), that it "means the carrying out of any building activity or mining operation, the making of any material change in the use or appearance of any structure or land, or the dividing of land into three or more parcels." An agricultural use or operation is explicitly excluded from the definition of development. § 380.04(3)(e), Fla. Stat. (1999). Because the definition of development has the same meaning under both chapters 163 and 380, the intentional legislative omission of agriculture therefrom cannot be lightly disregarded. Its exclusion clearly supports the Department's interpretation that only a use which involves development requires the application of intensity standards.
Section 380.04, included within the provisions of the Florida Environmental Land and Water Management Act of 1972, was enacted to implement the stated purpose of the Act, which, similar to-the goal of the Local Government Comprehensive Planning and Land Development Regulation Act, was designed to protect the natural resources of the state by, among other things, adequately planning for and guiding growth and development in the state. § 380.021, Fla. Stat. (1999). This Act, which predated the Local Government Comprehensive Planning and Land Development Regulation Act by three years, was devised, as was the latter act, to provide for orderly developmental growth without endangering the state's finite natural resources. Under both acts, the Department, acting as the state land planning agency, is empowered to review a local government's developmental plans which may have an impact on the state's environment. Under chapter 380, part I, it has the responsibility of reviewing developments of regional impact, and under chapter 163, part II, of reviewing comprehensive plans.
The primary purpose of the review under both acts is to ensure that developmental uses comply with statutory standards for the conservation of the state's environment. It is obvious to us that if a land use can be excluded from review under chapter 380 because it does not meet the definition of a development, a use not involving development need not be reviewed for its intensity under chapter 163.
For the above reasons, the interpretation the Department placed on section 163.3177(6)(a) is not clearly erroneous. The interim amendments provide, consistent with the final order, that only agricultural and directly related uses, and one single family dwelling unit per parcel or lot, are permitted in NRPAs. Thus, the comprehensive plan, as amended, does provide a standard regarding the "extent of the uses of land," as required by section 163.3177(6)(a), and appellants have failed to show that the Department was obliged to require an intensity standard in order to certify the interim amendments in compliance with law.
We also reject appellants' argument that the Department's rule 9J-5.003(60) requires that an intensity standard be applied to all designated land uses, contrary to the agency's non-rule interpretation. The rule's broad language does not establish that the Department has erroneously interpreted section 163.3177. We assume that in adopting the rule, the Department did not deliberately expand the statutory powers delegated to it, but was instead cognizant of the provisions of section 380.04, removing agricultural activities from the definition of development. An agency's rule, of course, may not expand a statute. See Makar v. Investors Real Estate Mgt., Inc., 553 So.2d 298 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989).
As for the second issue raised on appeal, that the evidence does not support the finding that the approved NRPA boundaries were sufficient to protect the Florida panther, we also affirm. Appellants claim that such finding was erroneous because there was evidence that such wildlife frequented areas not included within the NRPAs' boundaries. Even if we were to accept this argument as established by the evidence, appellants have failed to1 demonstrate how such a fact makes the boundaries of the NRPAs erroneous. As the ALJ noted, the boundaries approved are only intended to be tempo rary, subject to additional adjustment as further studies indicate may be necessary.
AFFIRMED.
LEWIS, J, concurs. VAN NORTWICK, J., concurs and dissents with Opinion.
. No issue has been raised as to the standing of appellants to bring this appeal.
. § 163.3161-.3245, Fla. Stat. (1999).
. § 380.06, Fla. Stat. (1999).
. § 163.3184, Fla. Stat. (1999).