SCWF joined this lawsuit in accordance with our mission to: conserve and restore South Carolina’s wildlife and wildlife habitat through education and advocacy. Help us continue this important work by donating today: https://www.scwf.org/donate
Groups sue DES over illegal rules for major water withdrawals
Loophole allows removal of all water from rivers
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Today, the Southern Environmental Law Center filed a lawsuit in South Carolina state court against the South Carolina Department of Environmental Services challenging the agency’s “safe yield” rules for large water withdrawals. The DES rules allow major agricultural corporations to remove all the water from rivers and streams across South Carolina. Other state and federal agencies have criticized this loophole.
In the complaint filed on behalf of Friends of the Edisto, American Rivers, and the South Carolina Wildlife Federation, SELC asked the court to strike down the “safe yield” rules because they violate the Surface Water Withdrawal, Permitting, Use, and Reporting Act. This statute requires DES to protect river flows for the people, business, small farms, and endangered wildlife that rely on abundant clean water.
“We asked DES to change its illegal rules and follow the law passed by our elected representatives to protect families, businesses, and wildlife that rely on this water downstream,” said Frank Holleman, Senior Attorney at SELC. “Instead of obeying the law and requiring that our rivers and communities get at least the protections that our state law requires, DES has stuck with illegal rules that allow the complete dewatering of our rivers and streams.”
After SELC filed a petition with DES in November challenging the rules, DES refused to change the rules, resulting in today’s lawsuit.
"There is nothing ‘safe’ about the ‘safe yield’ rules. Just the opposite: they are a blank check for mega farms to completely de-water rivers,” said Hugo Krispyn, the Edisto Riverkeeper. “We are overdue for sensible, sustainable rules that balance everyone’s right to use our rivers and conserve our river ecosystems.”
“DES’s lax water protections draw interstate agriculture operations to South Carolina, where they can drain our rivers for free to the detriment of people and wildlife,” said Sara Green, Executive Director of the South Carolina Wildlife Federation. “The harms will only get worse as population growth and drier, hotter summers further strain our water resources in the coming years.”
“There are ways to sustainably draw from our rivers and leave enough water for swimming, fishing, drinking, farming, and the health of communities and wildlife,” said Peter Raabe, Southeast Regional Director at American Rivers. “Unfortunately, these DES rules put the profit of major agricultural corporations above this greater good.”
###
Banner photo credit: Catawba River by Jacque Weir
Story published here:
07/16/24: Legal battle over future of SC's rivers heats up as state pushes through drought - Post and Courier
07/15/24: Lawsuit accuses state agency of failing to protect rivers as drought grips SC - Rock Hill Herald
07/15/24: Lawsuit accuses state agency of failing to protect rivers as drought grips SC - The State