Charleston MeadWestvaco plans to sell almost 11,000 acres
on the Cooper River and Gov. Mark Sanford and environmental groups
hope it will remain undeveloped.
The paper company says it plans to sell its 10,697-acre Bonneau
Ferry tract in Berkeley County, although no price has been set.
"The company is committed to seeking the best value for its
shareholders while protecting the ecologically and historically
significant features of this property," spokeswoman Jennifer Howard
said.
MeadWestvaco announced last year it would sell 700,000 of the 3.1
million acres it owns nationwide, including Bonneau Ferry.
The tract -- one-third of the 30,000-acre Cooper River Historic
District -- includes an old rice mill and mile markers from what was
a road to Charleston in the 1700s. It also is home to federally
protected eagles and red cockaded woodpeckers.
Sanford plans to meet with John Luke, MeadWestvaco's chairman and
chief executive officer, to ask the company not to sell to
developers.
"The governor feels very strongly that conserving lands like
those under discussion has a material impact on advancing the
quality of life in South Carolina," Sanford spokesman Will Folks
said.
Dana Beach, the director of the South Carolina Coastal
Conservation League, said he has heard the tract might be developed
as a golf community. Company spokesman Casey Canonge said he had
heard nothing of such a development.
Sanford's involvement indicates talks about selling to
conservation groups have broken down, Beach said.
He predicted a golf community would fail because it would be too
far from Charleston and surrounded by the Francis Marion National
Forest and private hunting preserves.
Although part of the Cooper River Historic District, the property
can still be developed, said Katherine Saunders of Historic
Charleston Foundation.
MeadWestvaco had earlier opposed including it in the historic
district. However, inclusion in the National Register of Historic
Places only provides for added review of projects, such as highways,
that use federal dollars.
The land has access to public water but no sewer. Any development
would require a zoning change, Berkeley County planner Harold
LeaMond said
"We would love to see it in conservation, but if it's sold, we
would love to see it be purchased by someone who would be a good
steward of the property and realize what treasures are on it,"
Saunders said.
"We are trying to encourage everyone to do the right thing, but
we know at some point the fair market objectives of the company
would have to be met," said Father Francis Kline of neighboring
Mepkin Abbey.
Canonge said MeadWestvaco hopes the future owners of the Bonneau
Ferry tract will protect those things that make it significant.
"The old Comingtee house, the rice mill, the red cockaded
woodpecker and bald eagles -- those are the things that make the
property attractive to whomever purchases it," he said.