The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Contentiou­s water bill related to Hyundai plant in Bryan Co. passes

Private systems can service new homes without local OK.

- By Adam Van Brimmer Adam.VanBrimmer@ajc.com and Meris Lutz meris.lutz@ajc.com

The Georgia Senate on Thursday addressed one obstacle to residentia­l developmen­t near the $7.6 billion Hyundai Metaplant under constructi­on 20 miles west of Savannah, passing a bill that would allow private water systems to service new homes without local government approval.

House Bill 1146 passed 3222; it now heads to Gov. Brian Kemp for his signature.

The measure is targeted at Bryan County, where state-imposed limitation­s on water withdrawal­s from the Floridan aquifer have forced the county government to work with neighborin­g Bulloch County to expand its water system. Those counties are in the process of securing permits to drill four Bulloch wells to serve the Hyundai facility and other developmen­t tied to the 8,500-worker plant.

New connection­s to the aquifer are allowed from Bulloch County, but the timetable for the Bryan-Bulloch system remains uncertain.

The slow pace of residentia­l developmen­t in the area near the plant, set to open later this year, worries local lawmakers. One developer recently abandoned plans to build a 500-home subdivisio­n in the area, although he cited infrastruc­ture concerns with the city of Pembroke rather than frustratio­n with water connection­s and the Bryan County government.

HB 1146 sparked the first heated Senate debate of the final day of the legislativ­e session, with Sens. Frank Ginn, R-Danielsvil­le, and Nikki Merritt, D-Grayson, expressing reservatio­ns about privatizin­g water and what it could mean elsewhere in the state in the future. Sen. Ben Watson, R-Savannah, who introduced the bill and represents most of Bryan County, and Sen. Max Burns, R-Sylvania, spoke in support.

“This is an economic developmen­t bill,” said Watson, who also said Bryan County was not issuing approval letters to private water systems and warned that without changes to the law, developers would turn to drilling thousands of wells and septic tanks along the coast.

“Part of the role of government is infrastruc­ture and it is working with the private partners, and that’s what this bill does,” he said.

Critics say the proposal would undermine local control across a huge swath of South Georgia and could negatively impact drinking water for the region, parts of which already are facing limits on how much water they can draw from the aquifer that supplies much of Georgia, Alabama, Florida and South Carolina. The bill was opposed by the Georgia Municipal Associatio­n, the Associatio­n County Commission­ers of Georgia and the Georgia Associatio­n of Water

Profession­als, as well as environmen­tal groups.

The water utility operator who stands to benefit from the bill, Savannah’s Mark Smith, said the change provides a “relief valve” for shortterm developmen­t. His company, Water Utility Management, already holds permits for about 50 wells in Bryan County with the capacity to serve about 3,000 new homes in the county.

Smith said he won’t be seeking new permits — difficult to obtain because of state limitation­s on water withdrawal­s in Bryan County — but he said he needs HB 1146 to expand service without the county’s approval. His company currently serves 10 subdivisio­ns in Bryan County under previous agreements with the county.

Bryan County officials began withholdin­g permits for private water systems out of fear that providers such as Water Utility Management could undercut the public system once it is built out.

Ginn urged his colleagues to vote against the bill. He said granting private systems new powers would create a “hole” in the local public water system and make it harder for it to meet its obligation­s. Bryan County representa­tives told lawmakers during hearings on the bill that the county already has spent about $150 million of a planned $360 million investment in water and sewer expansion, $120 million of which was being financed with debt.

“In medical terms, we’re killing part of the county,” Ginn said.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Water system access near the under-constructi­on Hyundai Metaplant near Savannah is limited because of state-imposed restrictio­ns on withdrawal­s from the Floridan aquifer.
AJC FILE Water system access near the under-constructi­on Hyundai Metaplant near Savannah is limited because of state-imposed restrictio­ns on withdrawal­s from the Floridan aquifer.

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