Ruling would allow 1/2-mile erosion prevention wall near Captain Sam's Spit
KIAWAH ISLAND - The island's developers won a major court victory this week
in their effort to build homes on a sand spit next to Charleston County's
Beachwalker Park when a judge granted a permit to build a half-mile erosion
prevention wall along the Kiawah River.
The judge's ruling reversed an earlier decision by the state Department of
Health and Environmental Control.
Kiawah Development Partners wants to build a 2,783-foot bulkhead and
revetment to stop erosion next to Beachwalker Park. Administrative Law Judge
Ralph Anderson ruled Monday in favor of the development company, reversing
an earlier decision by the state Department of Health and Environmental
Control.
Last year, DHEC said that Kiawah Development Partners could build a 270-foot
wall along the county's park, but determined that a proposed 2,783-foot
bulkhead would prevent "shoreline movement in an area that historically has
seen inlet formation," and that it would "facilitate development in a
pristine dune area." Kiawah Development Partners appealed DHEC's decision to
the South Carolina Administrative Law Court.
On Monday, Chief Administrative Law Judge Ralph Anderson ruled in favor of
the development company, writing in a 31-page order that "... the project
will clearly reduce and likely stop erosion rather than precipitate any
erosion. In fact, the benefit from protection of its upland through
stabilization of the riverbank is considerable when compared with the
benefit of leaving the riverbank in its unaltered state and allowing the
erosion to continue unabated into the forested highland and dune areas along
the river. This erosion has no positive benefit for anyone and clearly is a
detriment to the landowner."
In a statement, Buddy Darby, Kiawah Development Partners chairman and chief
executive officer, said the judge's decision "is further validation that
sensitive, low-density development can be done and will be done responsibly
at Kiawah Island as well as on other sea island communities."
Darby said that sand has been building up at the southern end of the island,
known as Captain Sam's Spit, for more than 60 years, sometimes at a rate of
15-feet per year. He said the design of the revetment will allow marsh grass
to grow between holes in the concrete.
The developers have said they hope to build up to 50 homes on the spit,
which covers about 150 acres.
Conservation groups vowed to continue their fight. "The people will win this
in the end," said Sidi Limehouse, a Johns Island farmer and head of Friends
of Kiawah River. "I read the order, and it looks like Darby wrote it. I
think the judge came to the wrong decision."
Limehouse said he is buoyed by a decision earlier this month by the
appointed board of DHEC, which nixed a separate plan by the developers to
plant a wall in the sand spit to prevent erosion from affecting future
utilities and road on the spit.
The development battle began two years ago after Post and Courier Watchdog
revealed U.S. Rep. Henry Brown's attempt to give the developers an insurance
break on any future homes that were built on the spit. Brown eventually
withdrew his bill.
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