Fla. Stat. 381.0062
Supervision; private and certain public water systems


(1)

DEFINITIONS.As used in this section:“Contaminant” means any physical, biological, chemical, or radiological substance or matter in water.“Department” means the Department of Health, including the county health departments.“Florida Safe Drinking Water Act” means part VI of chapter 403.“Health hazard” means any condition, contaminant, device, or practice in a water system or its operation which will create or has the potential to create an acute or chronic threat to the health and well-being of the water consumer.“Limited use commercial public water system” means a public water system not covered or included in the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, which serves one or more nonresidential establishments and provides piped water.“Limited use community public water system” means a public water system not covered or included in the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, which serves five or more residences or two or more rental residences, and provides piped water.“Maximum contaminant level” means the maximum permissible level of a contaminant in potable water delivered to consumers.“Multifamily water system” means a water system that provides piped water to three or four residences, one of which may be a rental residence.“Person” means an individual, public or private corporation, company, association, partnership, municipality, agency of the state, district, federal, or any other legal entity, or its legal representative, agent, or assignee.“Potable water” means water that is satisfactory for human consumption, dermal contact, culinary purposes, or dishwashing as approved by the department.“Private water system” means a water system that provides piped water for one or two residences, one of which may be a rental residence.“Public consumption” means oral ingestion or physical contact with water by a person for any purpose other than cleaning work areas or simple handwashing. Examples of public consumption include, when making food or beverages available to the general public, water used for washing food, cooking utensils, or food service areas and water used for preparing food or beverages; washing surfaces accessed by children as in a child care center or similar setting; washing medical instruments or surfaces accessed by a patient; any water usage in health care facilities; emergency washing devices such as eye washing sinks; washing in food processing plants or establishments like slaughterhouses and packinghouses; and water used in schools.“Public water system” means a water system that is not included or covered under the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, provides piped water to the public, and is not a private or multifamily water system. For purposes of this section, public water systems are classified as limited use community or limited use commercial.“Supplier of water” means the person, company, or corporation that owns or operates a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system, a multifamily water system, or a private water system.“Variance” means a sanction from the department affording a supplier of water an extended time to correct a maximum contaminant level violation caused by the raw water or to deviate from construction standards established by rule of the department.

(a)

“Contaminant” means any physical, biological, chemical, or radiological substance or matter in water.

(b)

“Department” means the Department of Health, including the county health departments.

(c)

“Florida Safe Drinking Water Act” means part VI of chapter 403.

(d)

“Health hazard” means any condition, contaminant, device, or practice in a water system or its operation which will create or has the potential to create an acute or chronic threat to the health and well-being of the water consumer.

(e)

“Limited use commercial public water system” means a public water system not covered or included in the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, which serves one or more nonresidential establishments and provides piped water.

(f)

“Limited use community public water system” means a public water system not covered or included in the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, which serves five or more residences or two or more rental residences, and provides piped water.

(g)

“Maximum contaminant level” means the maximum permissible level of a contaminant in potable water delivered to consumers.

(h)

“Multifamily water system” means a water system that provides piped water to three or four residences, one of which may be a rental residence.

(i)

“Person” means an individual, public or private corporation, company, association, partnership, municipality, agency of the state, district, federal, or any other legal entity, or its legal representative, agent, or assignee.

(j)

“Potable water” means water that is satisfactory for human consumption, dermal contact, culinary purposes, or dishwashing as approved by the department.

(k)

“Private water system” means a water system that provides piped water for one or two residences, one of which may be a rental residence.

(l)

“Public consumption” means oral ingestion or physical contact with water by a person for any purpose other than cleaning work areas or simple handwashing. Examples of public consumption include, when making food or beverages available to the general public, water used for washing food, cooking utensils, or food service areas and water used for preparing food or beverages; washing surfaces accessed by children as in a child care center or similar setting; washing medical instruments or surfaces accessed by a patient; any water usage in health care facilities; emergency washing devices such as eye washing sinks; washing in food processing plants or establishments like slaughterhouses and packinghouses; and water used in schools.

(m)

“Public water system” means a water system that is not included or covered under the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act, provides piped water to the public, and is not a private or multifamily water system. For purposes of this section, public water systems are classified as limited use community or limited use commercial.

(n)

“Supplier of water” means the person, company, or corporation that owns or operates a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system, a multifamily water system, or a private water system.

(o)

“Variance” means a sanction from the department affording a supplier of water an extended time to correct a maximum contaminant level violation caused by the raw water or to deviate from construction standards established by rule of the department.

(2)

SUPERVISION.The department and its agents shall have general supervision and control over all private water systems, multifamily water systems, and public water systems not covered or included in the Florida Safe Drinking Water Act (part VI of chapter 403), and over those aspects of the public water supply program for which it has the duties and responsibilities provided for in part VI of chapter 403. The department shall:Administer and enforce the provisions of this section and all rules and orders adopted or issued under this section, including water quality and monitoring standards.Require any person wishing to construct, modify, or operate a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system or a multifamily water system to first make application to and obtain approval from the department on forms adopted by rule of the department.Review and act upon any application for the construction, modification, operation, or change of ownership of, and conduct surveillance, enforcement, and compliance investigations of, limited use community and limited use commercial public water systems, and multifamily water systems.Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of reviewing and acting upon any application for the construction, modification, or operation of a limited use community and limited use commercial public water system, of not less than $10 or more than $90 annually.Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of reviewing and acting upon any application for the construction or change of ownership of a multifamily water system, of not less than $10 or more than $90.Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of sample collection, review of analytical results, health-risk interpretations, and coordination with other agencies when such work is not included in paragraphs (b) and (c) and is requested by the supplier of water, of not less than $10 or more than $90.Require suppliers of water to collect samples of water, to submit such samples to a department-certified drinking water laboratory for contaminant analysis, and to keep sampling records as required by rule of the department.Require all fees collected by the department in accordance with the provisions of this section to be deposited in an appropriate trust fund of the department, and used exclusively for the payment of costs incurred in the administration of this section.Prohibit any supplier of water from, intentionally or otherwise, introducing any contaminant which poses a health hazard into a drinking water system.Require suppliers of water to give public notice of water problems and corrective measures under the conditions specified by rule of the department.Require a fee to cover the cost of reinspection of any system regulated under this section, which may not be less than $25 or more than $40.

(a)

Administer and enforce the provisions of this section and all rules and orders adopted or issued under this section, including water quality and monitoring standards.

(b)

Require any person wishing to construct, modify, or operate a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system or a multifamily water system to first make application to and obtain approval from the department on forms adopted by rule of the department.

(c)

Review and act upon any application for the construction, modification, operation, or change of ownership of, and conduct surveillance, enforcement, and compliance investigations of, limited use community and limited use commercial public water systems, and multifamily water systems.

(d)

Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of reviewing and acting upon any application for the construction, modification, or operation of a limited use community and limited use commercial public water system, of not less than $10 or more than $90 annually.

(e)

Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of reviewing and acting upon any application for the construction or change of ownership of a multifamily water system, of not less than $10 or more than $90.

(f)

Require a fee from the supplier of water in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of sample collection, review of analytical results, health-risk interpretations, and coordination with other agencies when such work is not included in paragraphs (b) and (c) and is requested by the supplier of water, of not less than $10 or more than $90.

(g)

Require suppliers of water to collect samples of water, to submit such samples to a department-certified drinking water laboratory for contaminant analysis, and to keep sampling records as required by rule of the department.

(h)

Require all fees collected by the department in accordance with the provisions of this section to be deposited in an appropriate trust fund of the department, and used exclusively for the payment of costs incurred in the administration of this section.

(i)

Prohibit any supplier of water from, intentionally or otherwise, introducing any contaminant which poses a health hazard into a drinking water system.

(j)

Require suppliers of water to give public notice of water problems and corrective measures under the conditions specified by rule of the department.

(k)

Require a fee to cover the cost of reinspection of any system regulated under this section, which may not be less than $25 or more than $40.

(3)

RIGHT OF ENTRY.For purposes of this section, department personnel may enter, at any reasonable time and if they have reasonable cause to believe a violation of this section is occurring or about to occur, upon any and all parts of the premises of such limited use public and multifamily drinking water systems, to make an examination and investigation to determine the sanitary and safety conditions of such systems.

(4)

ENFORCEMENT AND PENALTIES.Any person who constructs, modifies, or operates a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system, a multifamily water system, or a private water system, without first complying with the requirements of this section, who operates a water system in violation of department order, or who maintains or operates a water system after revocation of the permit is guilty of a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.This section and rules adopted pursuant to this section may be enforced by injunction or restraining order granted by a circuit court as provided in s. 381.0012(2).Additional remedies available to county health department staff through any county or municipal ordinance may be applied, over and above the penalties set forth in this section, to any violation of this section or the rules adopted pursuant to this section.

(a)

Any person who constructs, modifies, or operates a limited use community or limited use commercial public water system, a multifamily water system, or a private water system, without first complying with the requirements of this section, who operates a water system in violation of department order, or who maintains or operates a water system after revocation of the permit is guilty of a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.

(b)

This section and rules adopted pursuant to this section may be enforced by injunction or restraining order granted by a circuit court as provided in s. 381.0012(2).

(c)

Additional remedies available to county health department staff through any county or municipal ordinance may be applied, over and above the penalties set forth in this section, to any violation of this section or the rules adopted pursuant to this section.

(5)

VARIANCES AND EXEMPTIONS.The department may grant variances and exemptions from the rules adopted under this section through procedures set forth by the rule of the department.Any establishment with a limited use commercial public water system which does not make tap water available for public consumption and meets the water quality standards and installation requirements established by the department shall be exempt from obtaining an annual operating permit from the department, if the supplier of water:
Registers with the department; if the establishment changes ownership or business activity, it must register; and pay a $15 registration fee; and
Performs an initial water quality clearance of the water supply system.

A system exempt under this subsection may, in order to retain potable water status, conduct annual testing for bacteria in the form of one satisfactory microbiological sample per calendar year.

(a)

The department may grant variances and exemptions from the rules adopted under this section through procedures set forth by the rule of the department.

(b)

Any establishment with a limited use commercial public water system which does not make tap water available for public consumption and meets the water quality standards and installation requirements established by the department shall be exempt from obtaining an annual operating permit from the department, if the supplier of water:Registers with the department; if the establishment changes ownership or business activity, it must register; and pay a $15 registration fee; andPerforms an initial water quality clearance of the water supply system.

A system exempt under this subsection may, in order to retain potable water status, conduct annual testing for bacteria in the form of one satisfactory microbiological sample per calendar year.

1. Registers with the department; if the establishment changes ownership or business activity, it must register; and pay a $15 registration fee; and
2. Performs an initial water quality clearance of the water supply system.

Source: Section 381.0062 — Supervision; private and certain public water systems, https://www.­flsenate.­gov/Laws/Statutes/2024/0381.­0062 (accessed Aug. 7, 2025).

381.001
Public health system
381.002
Grant of title to prescriptive medical personal property to client
381.003
Communicable disease and AIDS prevention and control
381.004
HIV testing
381.005
Primary and preventive health services
381.006
Environmental health
381.008
Definitions of terms used in ss
381.009
Toilets required by department regulations
381.0011
Duties and powers of the Department of Health
381.0012
Enforcement authority
381.0016
County and municipal regulations and ordinances
381.0018
Application for and acceptance of gifts or grants
381.0019
Disposition of equipment and material
381.0021
Client welfare accounts
381.0022
Sharing confidential or exempt information
381.026
Florida Patient’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities
381.028
Adverse medical incidents
381.0031
Epidemiological research
381.0034
Requirement for instruction on HIV and AIDS
381.0035
Educational course on HIV and AIDS
381.0038
Education
381.0039
Oversight of AIDS education programs
381.0041
Donation and transfer of human tissue
381.0042
Patient care for persons with HIV infection
381.0043
Blood Donor Protection Act
381.0045
Targeted outreach for pregnant women
381.0046
Statewide HIV and AIDS prevention campaign
381.0051
Family planning
381.0052
Dental health
381.0053
Comprehensive nutrition program
381.0055
Confidentiality and quality assurance activities
381.0056
School health services program
381.0057
Funding for school health services
381.0059
Background screening requirements for school health services personnel
381.0061
Administrative fines
381.0062
Supervision
381.0063
Drinking water funds
381.0064
Continuing education program for installation and use of onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems
381.0065
Onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems
381.0066
Onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems
381.0067
Corrective orders
381.0072
Food service protection
381.74
Establishment and maintenance of a central registry
381.75
Duties and responsibilities of the department
381.0075
Regulation of body-piercing salons
381.76
Eligibility for the brain and spinal cord injury program
381.78
Advisory council on brain and spinal cord injuries
381.79
Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Program Trust Fund
381.0081
Permit required to operate a migrant labor camp or residential migrant housing
381.82
Ed and Ethel Moore Alzheimer’s Disease Research Program
381.0082
Application for permit to operate migrant labor camp or residential migrant housing
381.0083
Permit for migrant labor camp or residential migrant housing
381.84
Comprehensive Statewide Tobacco Education and Use Prevention Program
381.0084
Application fees for migrant labor camps and residential migrant housing
381.0085
Revocation of permit to operate migrant labor camp or residential migrant housing
381.86
Institutional Review Board
381.0086
Rules
381.0087
Enforcement
381.88
Emergency allergy treatment
381.0088
Right of entry
381.89
Regulation of tanning facilities
381.91
Jessie Trice Cancer Prevention Program
381.93
Breast and cervical cancer early detection program
381.95
Medical facility information maintained for terrorism response purposes
381.96
Pregnancy support and wellness services
381.98
The Florida Public Health Institute, Inc.
381.0098
Biomedical waste
381.99
Rare Disease Advisory Council
381.0101
Environmental health professionals
381.0201
Technical and support services
381.0202
Laboratory services
381.0203
Pharmacy services
381.0204
Vital statistics
381.0205
Emergency medical services
381.0261
Summary of patient’s bill of rights
381.0303
Special needs shelters
381.00315
Public health advisories
381.00316
Discrimination by governmental and business entities based on health care choices
381.00318
Complaints and investigations regarding mandate prohibitions
381.00319
Prohibition on mask mandates and vaccination and testing mandates for educational institutions
381.00321
The right of medical conscience of health care providers and health care payors
381.00322
International health organization policies
381.402
Florida Reimbursement Assistance for Medical Education Program
381.0402
Area health education center network
381.0405
Office of Rural Health
381.0406
Rural health networks
381.00591
Department of Health
381.00593
Public school volunteer health care practitioner program
381.0601
Self-derived and directed-donor blood programs
381.00651
Periodic evaluation and assessment of onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems
381.00655
Connection of existing onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems to central sewerage system
381.735
Office of Minority Health and Health Equity
381.739
Short title
381.745
Definitions
381.755
Benefits not assignable
381.765
Retention of title to and disposal of equipment
381.00771
Definitions of terms used in ss
381.00773
Application of ss
381.775
Applicant and recipient records
381.00775
Tattoo artists
381.00777
Tattoo establishments
381.00779
Practice requirements
381.00781
Fees
381.00783
Grounds for discipline
381.00785
Criminal penalties
381.785
Recovery of third-party payments for funded services
381.00787
Tattooing prohibited
381.00789
Rulemaking
381.00791
Local laws and ordinances
381.814
Sickle Cell Disease Research and Treatment Grant Program
381.815
Sickle-cell program
381.825
Education and public awareness relating to Alzheimer’s disease and related forms of dementia
381.853
Florida Center for Brain Tumor Research
381.875
Enhanced potential pandemic pathogen research prohibited
381.885
Epinephrine auto-injectors
381.887
Emergency treatment for suspected opioid overdose
381.00893
Complaints by aggrieved parties
381.895
Standards for compressed air used for recreational diving
381.00895
Prohibited acts
381.00896
Nondiscrimination
381.00897
Access to migrant labor camps and residential migrant housing
381.911
Prostate Cancer Awareness Program
381.915
Casey DeSantis Cancer Research Program
381.922
William G. “Bill” Bankhead, Jr., and David Coley Cancer Research Program
381.925
Cancer Center of Excellence Award
381.931
Annual report on Medicaid expenditures
381.932
Breast cancer early detection and treatment referral program
381.933
Mammography reports
381.981
Health awareness campaigns
381.982
Short title
381.983
Definitions
381.984
Educational programs
381.985
Screening program
381.986
Medical use of marijuana
381.987
Public records exemption for personal identifying information relating to medical marijuana held by the department
381.988
Medical marijuana testing laboratories
381.989
Public education campaigns
381.991
Andrew John Anderson Pediatric Rare Disease Grant Program
381.02035
Canadian Prescription Drug Importation Program
381.4015
Florida health care innovation
381.4018
Physician workforce assessment and development
381.4019
Dental Student Loan Repayment Program
381.4021
Student loan repayment programs reporting
381.04065
Rural health network cooperative agreements
381.06014
Blood establishments
381.06015
Public Cord Blood Tissue Bank
381.06016
Umbilical cord blood awareness
381.7351
Short title
381.7352
Legislative intent
381.7353
Reducing Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities: Closing the Gap grant program
381.7354
Eligibility
381.7355
Project requirements
381.7356
Local matching funds
381.7395
Legislative intent
381.8531
Florida Center for Brain Tumor Research
381.9312
Uterine fibroid research database
381.9315
Gynecologic and ovarian cancer education and awareness
381.9855
Dr. and Mrs. Alfonse and Kathleen Cinotti Health Care Screening and Services Grant Program
381.40195
Donated Dental Services Program
381.92201
Exemptions from public records and public meetings requirements

Current through Fall 2025

§ 381.0062. Supervision; private & certain public water systems's source at flsenate​.gov