Sanford signs bill
focusing on water coordination
Associated
Press
ROCK HILL, S.C. - Gov. Mark Sanford hopes a
bill he has signed helps South Carolina avoid some of the water
problems it faced a few years ago, during one of the worst droughts
in recent memory.
The Republican governor signed a bill Tuesday that creates two
river basin advisory commissions, one to oversee the Yadkin and
Great Pee Dee rivers; the other for the Catawba and Wateree
rivers.
The commissions will focus on coordination, conversation and
conservation, Sanford said.
During the fall of 2002, the Southeast was suffering through a
severe drought that had lasted several years. Rivers that originated
in North Carolina and flowed into South Carolina were becoming
dangerously low or close to drying up altogether.
South Carolina officials were worried about drinking water
supplies and the impact on economic development for industries that
use the rivers. State officials had to negotiate a deal with North
Carolina to ensure its northern neighbors kept enough water flowing
into the rivers. The talks became contentious at times, but
eventually a deal was reached.
The commissions were recommended by Sanford's water law review
committee, which was formed in June 2003.
At Landsford Canal State Park on Tuesday, Sanford told government
and business officials as well as nature enthusiasts the Catawba
River was critical to economic development.
"It's important we manage this river between the two states,"
Sanford said. "It has the unusual nature of crossing two Carolinas.
This river is critical to the quality of life of this area."
Florence Mayor Frank Willis, a member of the governor's
committee, said the bill was a proactive move.
"We think this is a necessary step to manage the water basins in
a way that's conducive to everyone," he said. "The problem in the
past is that there was no coordinated effort or communication among
the parties involved. We were working in the dark."
The governor's law committee report also called for a compact
between South Carolina and Georgia detailing how much water each
could pull out of the Savannah River and how much wastewater each
could put back in.
The 300-mile-long Savannah River is critical to development in
both states, which have communities relying on it for drinking water
and industries using it to discharge treated wastewater.
Sanford and Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue have discussed how the
river should be shared, Perdue's spokeswoman Loretta Lepore
said.
"They are very amiable discussions, but I don't think there has
been finality on this issue," she said.
The governors have talked about forming committees to work toward
a water-sharing agreement, similar to what the Carolinas are doing
now, said Mike McShane, the chairman of the South Carolina
Department of Natural Resources board.
"We got North Carolina started," he said. "Now we can start on
Georgia." |