Myrtle Beach Online - News, Sports & Entertainment from The Sun News
Myrtle Beach Online's Mug Shots Index Career Builder
Search for

Web Search powered by YAHOO!
News - Local

Friday, Jan. 27, 2012

$2,235 DHEC meeting draws fire

- McClatchy Newspapers
email this story to a friend E-Mail print story Print 0 comments Reprint or license
Text Size:

tool name

close
tool goes here

Taxpayers spent $2,235 for the state’s environmental protection board and two staffers to hold an overnight, out-of-town retreat that few members of the public attended.

The cost of the Greenville session isn’t a huge expense in the context of the Department of Health and Environmental Control’s $80 million state budget, but critics question why the state needed to spend money for meetings away from the agency’s main office in Columbia.

Columbia is more easily accessible to most people than Greenville, since the capital city is in the middle of South Carolina and Greenville is in the state’s northwest corner, critics say. With possible changes in the direction of DHEC, it is important to ensure most people have easy ways to attend meetings, they say.

Similar stories:

  • DHEC rips federal air rules

  • Haley staffers may have to testify

  • Conspiracy to oust DNR head alleged

  • Haley under fire in port decision

  • SC Senate panel votes to subpoena Haley staff

“It’s not a smart time to be conducting the public’s business in a place that does not facilitate full participation,” said Columbia lawyer Bob Guild, who has often tangled with DHEC and now is concerned the agency will become too accommodating to business under Gov. Nikki Haley.

Board chairman Allen Amsler, who did not return telephone calls to The State to discuss the meeting cost, said in November the session was open and not intended to shut out public participation. He described the retreat as an opportunity for board members to brainstorm ideas. Fewer than a dozen members of the public attended.

Records show DHEC spent $703 for six board members, a staff attorney and a clerk to stay at a hotel for the Nov. 17-18 meetings.

DHEC also spent $200 renting a board room at the Holiday Inn Express Suites on North Main Street in Greenville, according to the agency’s response to an open-records request from The State newspaper. DHEC spent $821 for mileage and $91 on meal money, the response said. The six board members received another $420 in per diem payments, or $70 each, the records show.

The entire DHEC board attended the retreat. Those members are Amsler of Lexington, Mark Lutz of Mount Pleasant, Kenyon Wells of Lexington, Clarence Batts of Pacolet, Ann Kirol of Rock Hill and John Hutto of Orangeburg. Batts is the only board member who lives in the Greenville area. Haley appointed the board in early 2011, and the panel has been working on changes at the agency, which Haley has said should be more business friendly.

During the retreat, the board discussed a recent – and hotly disputed – decision to allow dredging at the port of Savannah, despite a bevy of questions about how the deepening project would affect water quality and a rare freshwater marsh nearby.

The board also discussed changing the certificate-of-need program for hospital expansions, also a controversial topic in recent years.

Subscribe to The Sun News Print Edition
The Sun News allows readers to comment on stories as a privilege; the views expressed in story comments are not those of the Sun News or its staff. Readers are required to adhere to all commenting policies, and must avoid commenting behavior such as personal attacks, libelous posts or inappropriate remarks. Users in violation of The Sun News' commenting policies can have their comments blocked, removed, and/or ultimately see their account banned from the site. Some comments may be reprinted in the newspaper. Registered user names will be posted with comments.
The Sun News Terms & Conditions and Commenting Policies can be reviewed here.
   Connect with Us:
Connect with The Sun News on Twitter
Connect with The Sun News on Facebook
Sign up for The Sun News' newsletters, breaking and local news straight to your email inbox
Get up to the minute news from The Sun News Text Alerts.
Get late-breaking Weather News from The Sun News' Weather Text Alerts
Get The Sun News Newspaper online everyday, just as it appears in print
Subscribe too our RSS feeds
Twitter Facebook News
Letters
Text
Alerts
Weather Alerts Daily
E -Edition
RSS
 
Events Calendar:
Career Builder Quick Job Search
Quick Job Search
Top Jobs