Date Published: April 11, 2006
Poultry bill still splits legislators
Proposal would clamp down on rules established by
counties
By LESLIE CANTU Item Staff Writer lesliec@theitem.com
A bill that would impose uniformity on regulations
of poultry houses should head to the South Carolina House of
Representatives this week, though it appears the bill,
intended to prevent counties from enacting regulations
stricter than the state's, would actually tighten up Sumter
County's less stringent regulations.
The bill passed
second reading in the state Senate last week. State Sen. John
Land, D-Manning, is one of the co-sponsors of the bill, while
state Sen. Phil Leventis, D-Sumter, was one of 10 senators to
vote against it.
The bill has changed a great deal
since it was first introduced. It originally pre-empted all
local regulatory plans; a new paragraph specifies that
counties still have zoning power but doesn't allow a county to
impose regulations within a zoning that differ from the
state's.
City-County Planning Director Bill Hoge said
Sumter currently requires only a 50-foot setback from the
property line for poultry houses, but requires them to be at
least 1,000 feet from a neighboring residential
use.
The state Department of Health and Environmental
Control, he said, also requires a 1,000-foot setback from
neighboring residential uses but, in addition, requires a
400-foot setback from property lines.
Other counties,
he said, have enacted setbacks of 2,500 feet or more from
property lines. It would take 574 acres to be able to measure
2,500 feet out in four directions from a single
point.
The bill also now allows DHEC to require extra
setbacks in individual cases, if needed, and requires a
vegetative buffer between poultry houses and
residences.
Despite the amendments, Leventis said he
continues to oppose the bill, which he said isn't truly about
farming.
"We're solving a problem I'm not sure
absolutely exists," Leventis said.
"The basic idea of
grabbing all the authority and putting it in Columbia with no
local input is just a bad idea and it's a bad precedent. ...
It's perfectly frightening," he said.
With this
precedent, he said, Columbia could decide to impose statewide
requirements for industrial, commercial or residential
zoning.
Georgetown isn't the same as Greer, and they
shouldn't be required to follow identical land-use regulations
formulated in Columbia, he said.
Agribusiness does face
challenges, Leventis said, and he doesn't agree with some
counties that have made it virtually impossible for poultry
producers to do business. But, he added, poultry producers
should be attempting to work out differences with local
government, not heading to Columbia.
Dennis Gordon, the
South Carolina Division Manager for Gold Kist, said industry
representatives have spoken to local governments, to no
avail.
Gold Kist needs another 110 houses, he said.
Some would replacements for outdated houses, and others are
needed to expand the business.
The problem doesn't
exist in Sumter, he said, but in some nearby counties that
have imposed stricter regulations.
Gold Kist can't move
too far afield from its Sumter processing plant, said Wayne
Lord, vice president of corporate communications, because
there's about a 60-mile maximum distance that chickens can
travel from farm to plant.
Nor does the company want to
abandon its existing farmers, Lord said.
South
Carolina's regulations are already the most stringent in the
Southeast, Lord said. The company is prepared to work within
those regulations, he said, but shouldn't have to deal with
county councils acting as local DHECs.
State Rep.
Murrell Smith, R-Sumter, hasn't studied the amendments to the
bill but said overall he supports it. He understands the
arguments for home rule, he said, but feels they're outweighed
in this instance by agribusiness' needs, especially as Gold
Kist is one of Sumter's largest employers.
"We've got
to have some statewide regulations on agriculture or certain
counties say, 'We don't want agriculture here anymore, we're
just going to pass ordinances to prevent it,'" he
said.
Zoning is a county function, Smith said, but
counties can't be allowed to run rampant and push businesses
out of South Carolina. Further, he said, he hasn't heard from
anyone in local government here complaining that the bill
threatens home rule.
Proponents have pointed out that
farms and farming acreage are on the decline in South
Carolina. There were fewer farms in 2002 than 1997, and about
128,215 fewer acres devoted to farming, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Poultry production, however,
is up. The USDA reported 162 million broilers produced in
South Carolina in 1995 and 205.5 million produced in
2004Turkey production went up from 6.1 million in 1995 to 12
million in 2004, according to USDA.
Contact
Staff Writer Leslie Cantu at lesliec@theitem.com or
803-774-1250.
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