Island Packet Online HILTON HEAD ISLAND - BLUFFTON S.C.
Southern Beaufort County's News & Information Source 

Erosion funds eyed for beaches

advertisement
Legislation would benefit Hunting Island


Published Thursday, May 20th, 2004

BEAUFORT -- Only the governor's signature stands between Hunting Island State Park and $5 million designated to help prevent the park's beaches from washing into the ocean.

The $5.4 billion state budget the House approved Tuesday was passed Wednesday by the Senate and included money to help safeguard Hunting Island from the erosion.

"It's going to enable us to continue the beach renourishment project that we need to do there," said Rep. Catherine Ceips, R-Beaufort.

Hunting Island, which attracts more than a million visitors every year, is losing about 15 feet of beach a year to erosion. The $5 million will be added to the $3.2 million the state already has set aside for an estimated $9 million project to renourish and protect the park's beach from erosion.

Ceips lobbied successfully earlier this year to get the money put into the House version of the budget, originally taking it from the state's Land Conservation Bank. The Senate decided the money should remain in the Conservation Bank, not be used for Hunting Island.

On Monday, a budget compromise agreed to by a House and Senate conference committee included the money for Hunting Island, but it will come from the state's general fund instead of the Conservation Bank.

Ceips credited Rep. Bobby Harrell, R-Charleston, the House Ways and Means chairman, with pushing the funding through the committee. She also applauded the efforts of the Friends for Hunting Island, which had members travel to Columbia to lobby in support of the park.

"It took a lot of work," Ceips said.

Ceips said she talked to Gov. Mark Sanford about the budget, and while he hasn't made any promises about Hunting Island, she's hopeful he'll sign off.

"It's such an important project for the state and for the nation," Ceips said. "Hunting Island is very unique and very special."

Sanford spokesman Will Folks said the governor will be looking closely at every item in the state budget and will "take as much time as the law allows" to go over it.

If the money comes through, the project could start as early as this winter, after turtle season ends, said Ray Stevens, superintendent at Hunting Island State Park. It would include the construction of five groins and take about four months to complete.

"That would stabilize the beach and drop the erosion rate from 15 feet a year to about six feet," Stevens said.

The project's "life expectancy" is about 20 years, although some maintenance will be needed during that time, he said.

One of the most popular of South Carolina's state parks, Hunting Island's profits are used to keep the state's less financially successful parks alive. Officials with the S.C. Parks, Recreation and Tourism Department have called Hunting Island the "crown jewel" of the state park system.

Getting the groin project started as soon as possible is incredibly important to Hunting Island's future, Stevens said.

"Every year we delay, that's another 15 feet of beachfront gone ... hundreds of trees, a lot of lost resources," he said.

Copyright © 2004 The Island Packet | Privacy Policy | User Agreement