(Columbia-AP) March 18, 2004 - Governor Mark Sanford
says he's considering legal action after the Legislature
on Wednesday overrode his veto Tuesday on a massive
economic development bill.
The Senate voted 39-4 Wednesday to override the bill,
while the House voted 81-24 with no discussion. The bill
was originally passed overwhelmingly by both chambers of
the legislature, 35-5 in the Senate and 96-15 in the
House before the governor vetoed it.
The governor says the state Constitution requires
that bills relate to only one issue. He says the Life
Sciences Bill (560) covers several topics ranging from a
four-year culinary arts program for Trident Technical
College in the Lowcountry, an international convention
center in Myrtle Beach and a four-year degree program at
University of South Carolina-Sumter, "We know this
process was flawed and blatantly unfair to the taxpayer.
We may find out that it was unconstitutional as well."
House Minority Leader James Smith says the
legislature is an imperfect system, but it's the best
the can be derived. He says he's not sure a lawsuit is a
good use of tax dollars.
Sanford says he vetoed the bill because legislators
added unnecessary projects to it. He says he's also
considering working with lawmakers to create legislation
that would stop the practice of attaching unrelated
items to a single bill, "This politics as usual process
of tacking on numerous pieces of totally unrelated pork
barrel spending to individual bills has raised any
number of constitutional concerns."
The main goal of the bill was to provide college
research opportunities and economic development in
biotechnology and related fields, and it allows the
state to borrow up to $500 million to those ends.
Amendments to the bill included an international
convention center in Myrtle Beach, new residency
criteria for LIFE scholarships and a new four-year
culinary arts program for Trident Technical College.
The governor also said he objected to the Life
Sciences Bill's provision allowing the University of
South Carolina at Sumter offer four-year degrees. The
governor earlier said he favors USC-Sumter cutting
expenses through more cooperation with a neighboring
technical college.
USC President Andrew Sorenson was also opposed to the
bill, saying the school hadn't met a number of academic
requirements to become a four-year school, including
improving enrollment numbers and bringing in more
outside money. He also wrote the number of
faculty-published research is, "grossly inadequate for a
full-time faculty of 40," though some dispute that
opinion.
USC-Sumter and the Sumter community lobbied for the
change, arguing students should not have to travel 45
miles to the main campus in Columbia to get a degree.
Sanford, a Republican, has had little success in
getting bills through the GOP-controlled Legislature or
having his vetoes sustained.
updated 3:28pm by Chris
Rees