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Article published Apr 19, 2003
Legislators eye environmental funds to balance
budget
Associated Press
COLUMBIA --
Lawmakers have asked the state attorney general whether it's legal to help
balance South Carolina's roughly $5 billion budget by using funds that were
originally set aside for environmental protection programs.
The group of
legislators, three senators and two House members, sent a letter to Attorney
General Henry McMaster on Thursday, seeking a legal opinion on a proposal to
take nearly $16 million from 15 special environmental accounts.
The accounts
include money to clean up leaking underground storage tanks across the state and
funds to protect wildlife and parks. One of the biggest accounts includes
cleaning up hazardous waste near Lake Marion.
The House's version of the
budget would eliminate the account for cleanup of toxic waste near Lake Marion,
but the Senate Finance Committee agreed this week not to take more than $10
million from the fund.
The other money is mostly interest taken on the
established environmental funds, and senators agreed with the House proposal to
take the interest.
House leaders who voted to take the funds said they were
given little choice because the state faces a revenue shortfall for the fiscal
year beginning July 1.
The South Carolina Wildlife Federation released a
report last year criticizing the legislators for raiding the funds and issued a
statement saying lawmakers need to leave the special environmental accounts
alone.
The funds "were meant to be a long-term investment for all South
Carolinians and not an easy way to balance the general fund budget," federation
director Angela Viney said.
Legislators took $53.4 million from environmental
protection accounts to help balance the state's current budget.
McMaster's
opinion would be nonbinding, but lawmakers said it could help the Senate during
budget deliberations, which will begin in a couple of weeks.
The lawmakers
asking for the opinion are Sens. John Drummond, D-Ninety Six, Phil Leventis,
D-Sumter and Greg Gregory, R-Lancaster, and state Reps. Murrell Smith, R-Sumter,
and David Weeks, D-Sumter.