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COLUMBIA -- Conservationists fought in court Monday to stop what they
see as the first step in the development of 50 homes on an unstable portion
of Kiawah Island.
Chief Administrative Law Judge Ralph Anderson III heard opening arguments by
attorneys for the Kiawah Development Partners, the state Department of
Health and Environmental Control and the Coastal Conservation League.
The Kiawah developers appealed DHEC's December decision to allow only 10
percent, or 270 feet, of the construction of an erosion barrier. The
developers want to build a 2,783-foot bulkhead and revetment to stop erosion
next to Beachwalker Park.
Previous story:
Sam's Spit wall sought, published 06/13/09
The judge can decide whether to uphold DHEC's decision, allow the developers
to construct the full length of the barrier or require the agency to take
another look at the situation. The hearing is expected to continue the rest
of the week. Anderson likely won't rule from the bench, so a decision will
come sometime later.
The developer's attorney Trenholm Walker said DHEC should have based its
decision on the barrier itself, not any "alleged" effects of residential
development. Any new home construction would have to go through a separate
vetting process, Walker said. He also said that the town's zoning laws allow
for residential development on the undeveloped spit of dunes at Kiawah's
southwestern end, an area near Capt. Sam's Inlet that has grown faster than
the rest of the island.
"What's before the court is the effects of the revetment," Walker said.
The agency must, however, make its decisions in the true-life context, said
Davis Whitfield-Cargile, an attorney for DHEC's Office of Ocean and Coastal
Resource Management.
Additionally, the Conservation League argued that the barrier and subsequent
development would put marine life, specifically diamond terrapins turtles
and piping plover birds, in jeopardy. A 40- to 80-year cycle would put
future homes under a breach that the barrier couldn't protect, said league
attorneys Amy Armstrong and James Chandler Jr.
In addition to calling witness Leonard Long, executive vice president for
Kiawah Development, Walker is expected to call on experts to testify on the
lack of impact on marine wildlife.
Long said the state coast is dotted with "hundreds and hundreds" of
revetments. The one his company is proposing would include holes where
vegetation could grow to give it a natural appearance that could harbor
wildlife. He relied on the reputation of Kiawah's longtime investors for
their environmental protections, such as strict beachfront development
setback requirements.
The conservationists are expected to call on witnesses to discuss the marine
wildlife issues and the spit's instability.
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