Developer vows to move ahead
KIAWAH ISLAND -- One of the prized scenic getaways for boaters and
beachcombers just got a big reprieve from development.
The state Supreme Court ruled Monday that a lower court was wrong to rule
that a sea wall could be built along Capt. Sam's Inlet. But the issue is not
going away, the developer said.
The half-mile-long concrete sea wall would be built along the Kiawah River
bank on the west end of the mostly gated Kiawah Island beach resort. It
would protect a road from Charleston County's Beachwalker Park to a 50-home
development along an erosive sand cape called Capt. Sam's Spit. The spit is
a wildlife-rich stretch where, for example, dolphins can be seen feeding on
baitfish by driving them onto the beach and jumping after them.
The 150-acre, teardrop-shaped strip of land also is a shorebird feeding
ground. It is one of the few barrier island spits that the public has ready
access to. It's a getaway for thousands in the Charleston area each year,
people who walk down the beach from the park or boat into the inlet and land
on the edge of the spit.
The Supreme Court ruled that a state Administrative Law judge didn't have
authority to overrule a S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control
Board decision on the issue, and ruled the judge didn't take account into
the impact of building the wall on the public interest in the surrounding
coastal area as well as the spit itself.
Conservation advocates called the ruling a decisive victory. The Kiawah
Development Partners said they will continue to fight to build the wall.
"(The court) affirmed public use and access of critical (habitat) areas.
(The developers) can't do a development without the wall. They have to have
something that protects that road. I think this ends the controversy," said
Amy Armstrong, of the South Carolina Environmental Law Project.
The Kiawah partnership will file a petition for a rehearing in the Supreme
Court on other aspects of the case, the partnership said in a news release.
"The Court's opinion does not terminate the revetment application. If the
(Supreme) Court does not grant a rehearing, the (Administrative Law Court)
will once again consider whether the permit should be granted," the release
said.
Ruling reversed
The issue: Kiawah Development Partners wants to build a sea wall to
protect a road to a 50-home development on the fragile sand cape of Capt.
Sam's spit.
What's happened: The S.C. Supreme Court overturned a lower court
ruling that allowed the wall to be built.
What's next: Conservationists consider the ruling decisive.
Developers say they plan to petition the court to rehear the case or to
re-argue other aspects of it in the lower court.
The controversy has become one of those high-profile Lowcountry battles
between property owners and conservationists over the "best use" of land
along a changeable coastline, and the ruling could shift the balance of
subsequent rulings in favor of conservation.
"It's pretty fantastic for the environmental community. It affirms that,
with the Coastal Zone Management Act, the General Assembly said we've got
some really valuable resources in the state, we need to be proactive and
protect them," Armstrong said. "It's a pretty incredible victory."
The partnership news release called the ruling disappointing and agreed with
Chief Justice Jean Toal's dissent, "the court may not substitute its
judgment for the judgment of the administrative law court as to weigh the
evidence on questions of fact."
The case is one of three in state courts involving the development project.
The others are an appeal of a permit to build a small wall into the sand
itself along Capt. Sam's Inlet and a lawsuit alleging that blocking the
development is a regulatory "takings" of private property without
compensation.
Armstrong said she would expect the case about the smaller wall, if not the
takings case, to be dismissed now.
The partnership has also applied for a permit to build a community dock
along the inlet for the use of the prospective property owners. The S.C.
Ocean and Coastal Resource Management division is expected to rule on that
in January, and lawsuits might follow.
The spit drew hunters, anglers and boaters for generations before Kiawah was
developed. Longtime Lowcountry families consider it a piece of their natural
heritage. Sidi Limehouse, a farmer on nearby Johns Island and a member of
Friends of Kiawah River, has called it a special place.
"I don't see them building anything out there now. But we've got to procure
the area for the people of South Carolina," he said.
That, Limehouse said, would take a lot of money.
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