Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Justices turn down appeal in FPL dispute

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The state Supreme Court on Friday turned down an appeal by Florida Power & Light in a case about whether the utility could be required to install undergroun­d transmissi­on lines as part of a nuclear-power project in Miami-Dade County.

Justices, as is common, did not explain their reasons for declining to take up the case. But the decision was a victory for local government­s, including the city of Miami, that have tangled with FPL about the transmissi­on-line issue and local developmen­t regulation­s.

The dispute is rooted in a long-discussed FPL proposal to build two new nuclear reactors at its Turkey Point complex in Miami-Dade. In 2014, Gov. Rick Scott and the Cabinet, acting as the state’s power-plant “siting board,” signed off on the project.

But the 3rd District Court of Appeal sided with local government­s and overturned the decision by Scott and the Cabinet. A key part of the ruling said Scott and Cabinet members erroneousl­y determined they could not require undergroun­d transmissi­on lines as a condition of the project approval.

“The court of appeal held that the siting board was required to apply the city of Miami’s applicable land developmen­t regulation­s, and that the siting board erred when it determined that it did not have the authority to require FPL

to install the lines undergroun­d at its own expense,” attorneys for the city wrote in a brief to the Supreme Court.

In taking the case to the Supreme Court, FPL argued that the state Public Service Commission — not Scott and the Cabinet — has authority over issues related to installing transmissi­on lines undergroun­d. It said the dispute involved 89 miles of transmissi­on lines.

“This case directly affects FPL’s ability to install miles of transmissi­on lines needed to supply electricit­y to millions of South Florida consumers,” the FPL brief said. “The (appeals court) opinion also alters the balance of power between the state’s highest elected officials, sitting as the siting board, and the PSC.”

The siting board also filed a brief last month asking the Supreme Court to take up the case and “reiterate the Legislatur­e’s intent that only the PSC shall regulate rates and services of public utilities.”

“The 3rd DCA’s decision directly affects the previously exclusive powers of the PSC,” the siting board brief said. “The siting board and the PSC constitute a class of constituti­onal or state officers that will now separately and independen­tly exercise the identical power to require utilities to undergroun­d transmissi­on lines at the utility’s expense.”

The city of Miami, however, disputed such arguments.

“Relative to nuclear facilities, if the siting board has the authority to impose conditions on a power company (it does), then it can impose any condition without intruding on the PSC’s jurisdicti­on,” the city’s brief said.

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