SC Coastal Conservation League v. SCDHEC

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 1, 2024
Docket2021-000158
StatusPublished

This text of SC Coastal Conservation League v. SCDHEC (SC Coastal Conservation League v. SCDHEC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SC Coastal Conservation League v. SCDHEC, (S.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

South Carolina Coastal Conservation League, Appellant,

v.

South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control and DeBordieu Colony Community Association, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2021-000158

Appeal From The Administrative Law Court Ralph King Anderson, III, Administrative Law Judge

Opinion No. 6058 Heard March 7, 2024 – Filed May 1, 2024

AFFIRMED

Benjamin David Cunningham and Leslie S. Lenhardt, both of S.C. Environmental Law Project, of Pawleys Island, for Appellant.

Tracey Colton Green, of Columbia, and John Joseph Owens and Randolph Russell Lowell, both of Charleston, all of Burr & Forman, LLP, for Respondent DeBordieu Colony Community Association.

Bradley David Churdar, of Charleston, and Sallie Page Phelan, of North Charleston, for Respondent South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control. KONDUROS, J.: The South Carolina Coastal Conservation League (the League) appeals the administrative law court's (ALC's) order affirming the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control's (DHEC's) issuance of a permit to Debordieu Colony Community Association (the Association) for the construction of anti-erosion groins on the beach of Debordieu Colony (Debordieu Beach). 1 The League contends the ALC erred in finding the groins would be placed in a "high erosion" area, erosion threatened existing structures, and the groins would not detrimentally impact the downdrift of sand to other beaches. We affirm.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Association applied for a permit to execute a renourishment plan and construct three groins 2 in an area of Debordieu Beach designated as Reach 3. 3 DHEC issued the permit. The Belle W. Baruch Foundation 4 (Baruch), the neighboring downdrift

1 The ALC reviewed the grant of the permit based on the original application and second amended application; the application was modified slightly based on mediation with another party, Belle W. Baruch Foundation. For our purposes, the difference between the two submissions is not important. 2 A groin is "a structure designed to stabilize a beach by trapping littoral drift. Groins are usually perpendicular to the shore and extend from the shoreline into the water far enough to accomplish their purpose. Groins are narrow and vary in length from less than one hundred feet to several hundred feet. Groin fields are a series of two or more groins which, because of their proximity to each other, have overlapping areas of influence. Consequently, the entire groin field must be considered as one system in order to accurately analyze beach response." S.C. Code Ann. Reg. 30-1(26)(D) (Supp. 2023). 3 In the application, Debordieu beach is divided into four Reaches going north to south and numbered sequentially. 4 Belle W. Baruch Foundation is a non-profit organization and owner of the 17,500-acre wildlife refuge, Hobcaw Barony, preserved for "purposes of teaching and/or research in forestry, marine biology, and the care and propagation of wildlife, flora and fauna" in connection with colleges and universities in the state. https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/baruch_institute/about/index. php property owner, and the League opposed the issuance of the permit. Baruch negotiated a settlement with the Association, which provided for further assurances that its property would not be negatively impacted by the construction of the groins. The League remained in the suit and the ALC conducted a contested case hearing.

Section 48-39-290(A)(8) of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2023) provides that for new groins to be erected seaward of the baseline, they must be on beaches:

that have high erosion rates with erosion threatening existing development or public parks. In addition to these requirements, new groins may be constructed, and existing groins may be reconstructed, only in furtherance of an ongoing beach renourishment effort which meets the criteria set forth in regulations promulgated by the department and in accordance with the following:

(a) The applicant shall institute a monitoring program for the life of the project to measure beach profiles along the groin area and adjacent and downdrift beach areas sufficient to determine erosion/accretion rates. For the first five years of the project, the monitoring program must include, but is not necessarily limited to:

(i) establishment of new monuments;

(ii) determination of the annual volume and transport of sand; and

(iii) annual aerial photographs.

Subsequent monitoring requirements must be based on results from the first five-year report.

(b) Groins may be permitted only after thorough analysis demonstrates that the groin will not cause a detrimental effect on adjacent or downdrift areas. The applicant shall provide a financially binding commitment, such as a performance bond or letter of credit that is reasonably estimated to cover the cost of reconstructing or removing the groin and/or restoring the affected beach through renourishment pursuant to subitem (c).

At the contested hearing before the ALC, the League presented Matt Slagel, the DHEC/Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management's (OCRM's) project manager for the permit at issue, as an adverse witness in its case-in-chief. Slagel stated the OCRM considers anything above about -3 feet per year to be a high erosion rate "based on an analysis of our [almost 500] statewide network of beach monuments." He indicated knowing the range of erosion rates rather than the average was more important in evaluating whether an erosion rate is high. He stated the rate of erosion in the proposed groin field was about -6 feet to -8 feet per year. In examining a report created by OCRM for setback purposes, 5 Slagel agreed some of the relevant area showed a rate of erosion less than -4 feet per year. However, he explained the 2017 data for the report was skewed based on the inclusion of a 2016 renourishment of Debordieu beach. Over time, renourishment will artificially inflate the rate of erosion because more sand is there to erode. But in this case, the aerial photograph of the shoreline used to establish the setback was so close in time to the renourishment that it diminished the appearance of the shoreline change rate. Slagel also referenced Regulation 30-21, entitled Beachfront Management Plan, in which a subpart discussing beach access describes Debordieu Colony as "a private beach community. Access is controlled by a security gate. The entire beach is developed, and public access is nonexistent. The island is highly erosional in areas." 6 As to threatened structures, Slagel testified the relevant statute does not define the term. He stated DHEC has considered the emergency order regulation in determining this question, noting that the emergency order qualifies a structure as in "imminent danger" if it is twenty

5 The OCRM is charged with designating setback lines on all oceanfront properties of the state at a distance forty times the average annual erosion rate. No setback line can be less than twenty feet. This process must happen every seven to ten years. See S.C. Code Ann. § 48-39-280(B)(C) (Supp. 2023); S.C. Code Ann. Reg. 30-1 (C)(6),(D)(47) (Supp. 2023). 6 S.C. Code Ann. Reg. 30-21(D)(5)(b) (2011). feet from erosion. 7 He indicated about eighteen homes in the permit area have a repeated history of being threatened depending on conditions.

Slagel stated the entire application for the permit was around 2,600 pages including comments and letters from the public and other parties and agencies. He indicated OCRM incorporated several recommendations, specifically from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.

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Bluebook (online)
SC Coastal Conservation League v. SCDHEC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sc-coastal-conservation-league-v-scdhec-scctapp-2024.