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SCDNR News

Pee Dee River basin planning meetings set next week in Conway, Florence

COLUMBIA, S.C.

March 18, 2022

The Pee Dee River The Great Pee Dee River will be part of the discussion at water planning meetings to be held in Conway and Florence. (Photo by Larry Price)

Pee Dee River basin planning meetings set next week in Conway, Florence

Two public meetings to be held next week in Conway and Florence will provide citizens with an overview of a new water planning framework that will guide surface water management in the Pee Dee River basin over the next half-century.

The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) has scheduled a meeting in Conway at Coastal Carolina University on Monday, March 21 and in Florence at Clemson University’s Pee Dee Research and Education Center on Tuesday, March 22. Both meetings will be held from 6-8 p.m. and similar material will be covered at each meeting.

The meetings will also serve as venues for engaging volunteers interested in serving on a council that will develop and implement the plan for the Pee Dee River basin.

Meeting locations and times:

Conway--March 21, 2022, 6-8 p.m.
Coastal Carolina University
Wall Building – Johnson Auditorium
119 Chanticleer Drive East
Conway, SC 29528
[Directions via Google Maps]

Florence--March 22, 2022, 6-8 p.m.
Pee Dee Research and Education Center – Clemson University
2200 Pocket Rd.
Florence, SC 29506
[Directions via Google Maps]

In March 2018, SCDNR established the State Water Planning Process Advisory Committee to help draft a “framework” document that will guide the development of individual river basin plans for each of the state’s eight major river basins. The Planning Process Advisory Committee includes representatives from a wide range of organizations, including the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, Clemson University’s S.C. Water Resources Center, municipal and rural water systems, conservation groups, power companies and agricultural interests. In 2019, the group completed a report, the “South Carolina State Water Planning Framework,” which describes the river basin planning process and the intended contents of a river basin plan.

“The Planning Framework represents a foundation for the development of regional and state water plans, which are essential for our continued economic growth and protection of the resources and environment that we all share,” said Ken Rentiers, deputy director for SCDNR’s Land, Water & Conservation Division.

Each river basin plan will be created and overseen by a river basin council, a working group of stakeholders with water interests in the basin. River basin councils in the Edisto and Broad River basins have already been established and planning activities in those basins are ongoing. The Pee Dee River basin has been selected as the next basin to implement the new planning framework. Planning efforts and councils in the other five basins will follow as funding becomes available.

At its most fundamental level, a river basin plan will address four basic questions:

  1. What is the basin’s current available water supply and demand?
  2. What are the current permitted and registered water uses within the basin?
  3. What will be the water demand in the basin throughout the Planning Horizon (50-year planning period) and will the available water supply be adequate to meet that demand?
  4. What water management strategies will be employed in the basin to ensure the available supply meets or exceeds future projected demand?

As stated in the Planning Framework, “Answering the fourth question is the heart of the water-planning process and greatly benefits from cooperation and consensus among all stakeholders throughout the basin. A successful and equitable river basin plan addresses the effects all water users have on one another and on the resource.”

Public involvement is critical to the goal of ensuring that future generations of South Carolinians have secure, well-managed supplies of our most critical natural resource—water. You can download a copy of the “South Carolina State Water Planning Framework” and learn more about the Planning Process Advisory Committee and the research underpinning this initiative at: http://hydrology.dnr.sc.gov/state-and-river-basin-planning.html.