COLUMBIA - The House overrode a veto by
Gov. Mark Sanford on a bill that creates a memorial for law
enforcement officers on Statehouse grounds.
The House spent two days debating the veto before they overrode
it Wednesday with an 89-21 vote.
All Horry and Georgetown area members voted to override the veto
except Vida Miller, D-Pawleys Island.
Although Sanford said he supports putting the monument on the
Statehouse grounds, he said he vetoed the measure last week because
the $500,000 for the project could be better used by law enforcement
agencies during the state's budget crunch.
The governor had said he would work with legislators to raise
private funds for the project, but the House wouldn't go along.
"We even say here's another angle to getting there, and yet
people can become accustomed to 'no, we'll just get the state money
and keep on moving.' I think that's a shortsighted view,
particularly given the degree of budget crisis that's before us,"
Sanford said Wednesday afternoon.
The S.C. Troopers Association agreed with Sanford's veto, saying
the money could pay troopers' salaries or buy equipment.
Rep. Harry Ott, D-St. Matthews, said law enforcement officers in
Calhoun County need a camera for a squad car and protective
vests.
Veto supporters also said a monument to fallen officers already
exists at the Criminal Justice Academy.
But other members say it's important to honor the officers on
Statehouse grounds.
Rep. Michael Pitts, R-Laurens, who's a retired police officer,
read the names of several who died in the line of duty, including
his partner of three years, who died in 1981.
"Should there be a memorial on the Statehouse grounds ... yes,
there should," Pitts said. "Why should it be on the Statehouse
grounds? Because every officer I just named and many others fell
enforcing the laws that are enacted by the body that serves on the
Statehouse grounds."
Members said the money already was appropriated in last year's
budget from a Public Safety Department building fund.
The two days of emotional debate could have been avoided through
better communication with the governor, said Rep. Bobby Harrell,
R-Charleston.
Harrell said the first time he heard the governor was considering
a veto was last week.
By that time, the bill had been approved by committees and the
full House and Senate.
Staff writer Zane Wilson contributed to this
report.