Date Published: May 16, 2006
E-mail on poultry bill fuels talks
Council opinion divided on state vs. county issue
By LESLIE CANTU Item Staff Writer lesliec@theitem.com
An e-mail from Sumter County Council urging
legislators to vote against the so-called poultry bill hatched
ever-widening circles of confusion during the weekend and
Monday as some council members wondered when council had taken
a stand on the bill.
Council hadn't debated the bill,
which would centralize regulations for agricultural facilities
under the state Department of Health and Environmental
Control.
The bill applies to all agricultural
facilities, excepting hog farms and slaughterhouses, to
include crop farms, honeybee operations, commercial
aquaculture and roadside markets, among others, though most of
the focus has been on chicken houses.
Opponents argue
the bill chips away at home rule, while supporters argue the
poultry industry is beginning to suffer because some counties
have enacted setbacks for chicken houses stricter than DHEC's,
which reduces the amount of land available for poultry
farming.
The issue is particularly divisive in Sumter
County, home to a Gold Kist processing plant that's one of the
county's largest employers.
County Administrator Bill
Noonan said he asked Clerk Mary Blanding to send the e-mail to
Sumter's House delegation urging them to vote against the bill
after the South Carolina Association of Counties asked members
to lobby against it.
"When we're asked to support the
position of the association of counties, generally speaking we
do. ... This particular issue apparently creates a divide and
that surfaced after I'd asked Mary to go ahead and write the
letter," Noonan said.
He said he'll have the clerk
write another letter explaining that council members are not
unanimous on the subject.
The e-mail prompted Council
Chairwoman Vivian Fleming-McGhaney to write a letter to the
delegation expressing her concerns about both sides of the
debate.
"I agree wholeheartedly that there are certain
aspects of government that must be exclusively handled on the
local level, and I respect the persistence of Senator (Phil)
Leventis in standing at the forefront in this argument," she
wrote.
Yet she doesn't want to endanger Gold Kist and
the jobs it represents.
"As you approach your decision
on this Bill, please consider the total spectrum. After all,
there has to be a way that you all can protect home rule
and make provisions for the farmers," she
wrote.
Unfortunately, Fleming-McGhaney said Monday,
some counties have not been able to develop solid working
relationships across business, industry and community lines to
come up with compromise ordinances, and "it has caused our
legislators to want to usurp the authority of home
rule."
Council Vice Chairman Gene Baten said Monday he
hadn't seen the message copied to his e-mail address, but he
would have had a few questions had the subject come before
council.
"I would have questioned why were we opposing
DHEC standards and are we going to get a second opinion before
we oppose DHEC standards," Baten said.
Although he
sympathizes with neighbors who are unhappy with the smells
chicken houses can produce, Baten said the county and its
delegation need to protect jobs.
"What really upsets me
is Lee County wants to come up with some strong rules ... but
at the same time they've got a lot of their residents crossing
county lines coming over to Gold Kist to work," Baten
said.
The issue is so strongly felt in Sumter that
Baten and Councilman Charles Edens, whose views are often
polar opposites, find themselves on the same side of the
table.
Councilman Jimmy Byrd also said his position is
the opposite of the e-mail sent on council's behalf.
Byrd said he supports home rule, but sometimes local
governments overreach.
"Someone needs to step in and
say, 'Listen, you're going too far,'" he said.
Edens, a
poultry farmer himself, said he believes the DHEC standards
are strict enough. In addition, poultry farming is one of the
few viable options left to small farmers, he
said.
Councilman Roland Robinson, however, said he
agreed with the gist of the e-mail.
"I think they
should leave that to the county," he said.
Lawmakers
have a tendency to start passing laws without consulting local
officials, he said, and while Sumter certainly doesn't want
Gold Kist to close, there are other ways to deal with their
problems, such as the stricter setbacks that Orangeburg County
passed.
"They should deal with Orangeburg and try to
get them to change it," Robinson said.
Sumter's
resident House members both appear poised to support the
bill.
State Rep. David Weeks, D-Sumter, said he is
leaning toward supporting the bill.
"This has been one
of the bills that I've agonized over as much as any bill
that's come before us this year," he said.
He supports
home rule, he said, but he's also concerned about local
industry. Whether the poultry industry will be affected as
much as its publicity suggests is still up in the air, but
he's still coming down on the side of jobs this time, Weeks
said.
State Rep. Murrell Smith, R-Sumter, said he was
"quite shocked" and "real disappointed" when he received the
e-mail opposing the bill, until he began hearing from council
members who didn't agree with the message.
He said he
doesn't buy the argument that the bill affects home
rule.
"It should not be up to the individual counties
to completely eradicate poultry houses," he said.
He
used the analogy of speed limits on interstates. County
councils can't unilaterally change the speed limit on I-95, he
said, then set up speed traps to make money on unsuspecting
motorists who assume the speed limit remains the same from
rural county to rural county.
Noonan, however, said
this bill is a step in the wrong direction, though he agreed
it won't single-handedly dismantle home rule.
"By
itself? Probably not. But the way you tear a building down is
one brick at a time and then it falls down. And that's what we
see here," Noonan said.
The bill appears on the
House's uncontested calendar today, but Weeks said it will
probably be moved to the contested calendar and could be
debated later this week or early next week.
Contact Staff Writer Leslie Cantu at lesliec@theitem.com or
803-774-1250.
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