ORDERS:
FINAL ORDER AND DECISION
STATEMENT OF CASE
This contested case arises from the decision of the South Carolina Department of Health and
Environmental Control (Department) to grant State Construction Permit, #18,380-AG, to Tony
Carter Broiler Facility (Carter) for the construction of a chicken broiler facility. Construction of this
facility is proposed in Lexington County, South Carolina. Petitioner is a neighboring property owner
who seeks denial of the permit. A hearing was held on May 5, 1998, at the Administrative Law
Judge Division Offices.
The issue considered was the suitability of the construction of a broiler facility which consists
of six chicken broiler houses.
ISSUES PRESENTED
Petitioner asserts that the permit allowing construction of the Carter broiler facility should
be denied because:
1. The facility will constitute a nuisance because it will cause noxious odors emanating from the facility.
2. The facility will result in harm to the Petitioner's property values because of noxious odors and noise.
3. The facility will result in water-borne and airborne health hazards, as well as contamination of surface and groundwater.
The Department and Carter assert that in view of the restrictions on the permit preventing
excessive odors the permit is properly granted. Additionally, the Department asserts it complied
with all appropriate and available guidance on agricultural facility permitting.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Having observed the witnesses and exhibits presented at the hearing and closely passed upon
their credibility, taking into consideration the burden of persuasion by the Parties, I make the
following Findings of Fact by a preponderance of evidence:
General Findings
1. Carter submitted an application and Waste Management Plan with the Department
for an expansion to his chicken broiler facility in a rural, agricultural area Lexington County, South
Carolina. The expanded chicken facility would consist of six broiler houses, each holding a
maximum of 25,000 birds for a maximum total of 150,000 birds. The proposed project will produce
a substantial amount of waste in the form of manure, matter and dead chickens.
Carter was required to obtain approval of his plans for a waste disposal system and acquire
a permit for the installation or operation of the waste disposal system because this waste will be
discharged into the environment. See, South Carolina Pollution Control Act, S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-10 et seq. (1987 and Supp. 1997). Therefore, the site was inspected by the Department and the
Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and a plan was developed for Carter by the United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA). The Department's Division of Water Pollution Control
reviewed this application under the S.C. Pollution Control Act, S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-10 et seq. (Rev. 1987 & Supp. 1995), S.C. Code Regs. § 61-9 (Supp. 1995), and the "Agricultural Facility
Permitting Requirements of the Bureau of Water Pollution Control" manual (December 1, 1994)
(guidelines).
2. All landowners within 1,000 feet of the proposed facility were notified of the
construction plans. DHEC received objections from a number of citizens. After consideration of
the objections, DHEC issued construction permit #18,380-AG for the broiler house facility to Carter
on December 18, 1997 with 21 special conditions. Those conditions are listed and summarized as
follows:
Condition 1: Carter must notify the Central Midlands EQC District office
when construction is complete in order to allow the district office to conduct the final
inspection and issue the permit to operate. The permit to operate must be in place
before Carter can remove any litter from the broiler houses.
Condition 2: Carter must obtain prior approval from the Central Midlands
EQC District if any manure is to be land-applied on weekends.
Condition 3: All medical wastes must be disposed of according to DHEC
regulations.
Condition 4: Erosion problems must be eliminated from the facility by
performing additional grading and filling.
Condition 5: Carter must operate and maintain the system, including all
special conditions in accordance with the Waste Management Plan developed by
Thomas Stone, NRCS District Conservationist.
Condition 6: Carter must obtain written approval from neighbors if wastes are
to be spread on hay or pasture lands within 200 feet of the neighbors dwelling.
Condition 7: All waste spread on cropland must be disced into the soil within
24 hours after it is applied.
Condition 8: Waste may be applied only when weather and soil conditions are
favorable and when prevailing winds are blowing from nearby opposite dwellings.
Any waste that contains fly larvae and fly pupae must be disced into the ground
immediately or be treated with an approved and effective fly control method. If the
waste disposal on a land area creates a fly problem for the community, the owner or
applicator will be responsible for the control of all flies resulting from the application
of the waste.
Condition 9: Allow a minimum 4-week recovery period between applications.
Sufficient acreage must be available to rotate applications to utilize nutrients in waste
for crop production.
Condition 10: When applying waste, follow the procedures below:
a. Do not apply waste closer than 100 feet to waterways, streams,
lakes, wells, springs, or ponds.
b. Spread and immediately incorporate manure on flood plains after
danger of major runoff events is past.
c. Use lower rates of application on shallow soils over bedrock to
reduce possible pollution of groundwater.
d. On slopes over 300 feet long in cropland, install terraces or surface
drains to trap sediment and increase flow time to outlet.
Condition 11: Repair any leaking waters promptly and practice good
sanitation to prevent or reduce fly problems and prevent runoff from inside the
houses. Any wastes wet enough to cause fly or other problems will be removed from
the houses, applied to the land and disced in if needed to eliminate the fly problem.
Should any spillage occur during the transportation of the waste, the owner/operator
shall take immediate steps to clean up the waste.
Condition 12: Keep written logs and make them available for DHEC to
review. The logs must contain the following information:
a. Carter will have a soil test performed annually on all the areas that
waste has been applied. This soil test must monitor for nitrogen,
potassium, and phosphorous.
b. An estimate of the amount of solids and/or liquids removed from
the individual facility.
c. A listing identifying upon which site the solids and/or liquids were
land applied and the amount applied.
d. The date when solids and/or liquids were applied.
e. The number of birds which died per month.
f. Record where and how dead birds were ultimately disposed.
Condition 13: Use all sanitary precautions in the collection, storage, transportation, and spreading of wastes.
Condition 14: Wastes shall not be stockpiled more than three (3) days prior
to spreading unless it is stored on a concrete pad and/or other acceptable means
covered with black plastic to prevent fly breeding. A four (4) inch diameter hole
should be cut in the plastic at the top of the pile and vented with screen wire to let the
gases escape. Sod should cover the edges of the plastic to secure it down.
Condition 15: The body of all vehicles transporting waste shall be wholly
enclosed, or shall at all times, while in transit, be kept covered with a canvas cover
provided with eyelets and rope tie-downs, or any other approved method which will
prevent blowing or spillage of loose material or liquids.
Condition 16: Dead birds must be disposed of in a disposal pit as detailed in
the waste management plan or in another manner approved by the Department. If a
massive die-off occurs, Carter must notify the Department's twenty-four hour number
at once.
Condition 17: Any nuisance generated at this facility that results as a transport
nuisance (dust, odor, flies, noise, surface and groundwater degradation) must be
abated within a time frame designated by DHEC.
Condition 18: The waste management system must be operated and
maintained in accordance with State and Federal law so as to prevent discharges to
the environment. Should this waste management plan fail to function as intended,
then additional control or treatment of the wastes may be required. Also, Carter
agrees that should conditions such as abandonment and/or expansion occur, the
Department will be notified immediately.
Condition 19: The permit may be transferred to another party only under the
following conditions:
(a)Carter must notify DHEC of the proposed transfer at least thirty
(30) days in advance of the proposed transfer date;
(b)A written agreement must be submitted to DHEC between the
existing and new permittee containing a specific date for the transfer
of permit responsibility, coverage, and liability for violations up to
that date and thereafter.
Condition 20: Carter must maintain an all-weather access road to the facility
at all times.
Condition 21: Carter must secure an approval to operate prior to placing
facility in operation.
3. Petitioner appealed the issuance of the permit by letter dated January 12, 1998.
Waste Management Plan
4. Carter's Waste Management Plan consist of land application of dry litter from the
broiler houses. This system is called a "dry litter facility" because the manure the animals produce
is deposited on the concrete floor of the houses and absorbed by dry sawdust. The birds are raised
in completely closed houses. There is no direct discharge to the ground or surface water from the
buildings themselves. The watering system in the houses is designed to avoid spillage.
Carter plans to dispose of the manure and the sawdust by scraping the concrete floor of the
houses annually and applying the litter in an agronomically sound manner over agricultural cropland
and fields as fertilizer. Dead animals will be disposed of by a disposal pit unless an alternate method
is approved. The total waste production from the operation is estimated to be 915 tons per year.
The Waste Management Plan (Plan) identifies 188 acres in specific fields available for land-applying litter. According to the Department's calculations, 188 acres of land can dispose of up to
1361 tons of waste. Therefore, Carter will have more than sufficient acreage to meet the 915 ton per
year manure demand.
5. The permit provides an adequate waste disposal system for the proposed broiler house
expansion.
Health and Nuisance Concerns
6. In granting the permit, DHEC relied upon Departmental guidelines and the Waste
Management Plan. DHEC guidelines address site selection, waste management, manure storage and
handling, dead animal disposal, nuisances caused by odors and vectors such as flies, and
maintenance and operation of the facility.
7. DHEC personnel also inspected the proposed site upon which Carter intends to place
the proposed broiler facility. The facility will be sited on property owned entirely by Carter. Present
on the site are tree and vegetative buffers that will aid in dispersion and reduction of dust and odors
transported away from the broiler houses.
8. In granting the permit DHEC imposed 21 special conditions designed to govern
operation and maintenance of the facility, removal of waste from the facility, and transportation and
land application of the waste. Those conditions are included to give protection to adjoining
landowners from nuisances that may result from the chicken operation and require immediate
abatement of any nuisance created. Special conditions in the Permit are specifically included to
prevent fly and odor nuisances from occurring. For example, Condition 11 requires Mr. Carter to
immediately disc-in any wet manure into the sod to prevent potential fly and odor problems.
Condition 14 contains a requirement that if waste is stockpiled on site for more than three days, it
must be placed on a concrete pad or other acceptable means and covered with black plastic to
prevent fly breeding. Moreover, Condition 17 requires Mr. Carter to abate any complaints resulting
from flies and odors within a time frame designated by DHEC.
9. Frank Dial, Vicki Woods, Alice Mills, and Julie Poynter own homes within 1,000 feet
of Carter's property line. In fact, Ms. Mills lives a mere 200 feet from Carter's property line. The
Petitioner owns property within 1,000 feet of Carter's property line.
However, Carter already operates a properly permitted chicken broiler house facility upon
this property. Furthermore, though the Petitioner did establish the proximity of the above individuals
to Carter's property line, the Petitioner did not present any evidence as to the proximity of the local
residences to the broiler facilities, themselves, or even if the additional broiler houses will be closer
to the residents' property than the existing facility. Moreover, other than speculation, the Petitioner
did not establish how the dispersion of the facility's odors would be effected by wind currents or land
topography.
10. Proper management of the facility is a primary factor in prevention and reduction of
odors and flies from a chicken operation. If the facility is operated and managed according to the
permit and the above 21 special conditions, any nuisance from flies and odors from the facility will
be minimized. However, though minimized, Mr. Carter's operation will occasionally emit offensive
odors that will permeate the area to some degree even if it is properly managed. Moreover, the
combination of the proximity of Carter's facility and the proximity of the dry litter land application
to the eleven-acre tract identified as Tract # 9003 to the local residences would result in a nuisance
to the residents.
11. Under the circumstances of this case, after the removal of Tract # 9003 from the waste
management plan, the permit restrictions provide adequate measures to control flies and pests; dust
and noise; the maintenance and operation of the facility; and the time and manner of "land applying"
the litter.
Water Contamination
12. There are no major water bodies in the immediate vicinity of the Carter facility. The
proposed broiler houses are enclosed, and will prevent contact between the fitter in the house and
rain-water runoff. There will not be any discharge directly from the houses.
13. The permit prohibits applying waste within 100 feet of watercourses and requires that
waste must be immediately spread with incorporation on flood plains allowed only after the danger
of major runoff events has past. The permit also requires that a lower rate of application must be
made on shallow soils to avoid groundwater contamination. Furthermore, where slopes are over 300
feet long, terraces or surface drains must be installed to slow the movement of waste over the land.
14. Petitioner presented evidence of her concerns about the possibility of health problems
caused by surface and groundwater contamination. However, she did not introduce credible
evidence tending to show that operation of the site would result in surface or groundwater
contamination in the neighboring area.
15. The operation and maintenance of the broiler facility, the method of spreading, and
the method of accumulating manure will not present a danger of improper water runoff or
groundwater contamination.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Based on the foregoing, I conclude the following as a matter of law:
1. DHEC has general responsibilities over matters that present threats, whether real or
potential to the health of the people of the State with such threats including the handling and disposal
of animal wastes. S.C. Code Ann., § 48-1-100 (C) (Supp. 1997).
2. DHEC is authorized to require a party to obtain approval of plans for agricultural
facilities and waste disposal systems. S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-50(10) (Rev. 1987).
3. DHEC may grant its approval by the issuance of a permit "under such conditions as
it may prescribe ... for the installation or operation of disposal systems. . . " S.C. Code Ann. § 48-150(5) (1987).
4. It is unlawful to construct or install a waste disposal system until the plans for such
have been submitted to and approved by DHEC through the issuance of a permit. S.C. Code Ann.
§ 48-1-110(a)(1) (Supp. 1997).
5. It is unlawful for a person to discharge wastes into the environment of the State
except in compliance with a permit issued by DHEC. S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-90(a) (1987).
6. A waste disposal system includes any system for disposing of "sewage, industrial
wastes or other wastes." S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-10(12) (1987).
7. "Sewage, industrial wastes or other wastes" are broadly defined and encompass dead
animals and manure resulting from a chicken broiler facility. S.C. Code Ann. § 48-1-10(4), (5), and
(6) (1987).
8. DHEC is principally charged with assuring the health and welfare of the public by
controlling air and water pollution.
9. The 1994 DHEC guidelines, "Agricultural Facility Permitting Requirements of the
Bureau of Water Pollution Control - Site Selection Criteria," set forth that "[F]actors that could have
an effect on site selection," in part, are:
b. distance from dwellings (public and /or private) on adjacent property, transport nuisance, i.e.: odor, dust, noise, etc.;
d. distance from the lot line of the site on which the production unit is located; (1,000 ft. standard). NOTE: All property owners within 1,000 ft. are asked to sign a form stating their approval/ disapproval of the facility (Appendix B)
h. prevailing winds;
I. surface features (Topography of land surface);
10. The 1994 DHEC guidelines, the "Agricultural Facility Permitting Requirements of
the Bureau of Water Pollution Control - Nuisance" states under the "Source" heading that: "[o]dors
from buildings with confined animals can be a significant nuisance. This can result in community
complaints registered against the owner.... If manure accumulates, odors increase and become more
offensive." Under the heading, "Procedures That Will Minimize Odor Complaints," the permitting
requirements state that nuisance odors can be virtually eliminated by employing "[p]roper site
selection, correct design of the waste handling and disposal system, and keen management skills. .
Specifically, "[a] good site selection takes into consideration the location of neighbors when
planning the placement of the buildings and manure handling facilities."
11. DHEC was mandated to promulgate regulations to implement the Pollution Control
Act, to govern DHEC's procedure with respect to the issuance of permits and all other matters
relating to procedure. S.C. Code Ann. §48-1-30 (Rev. 1987). The 1994 Permitting Requirements
are not promulgated regulations, land therefore, do not have the force and effect of law. See Captain's Quarters Motor Inn. Inc. v. South Carolina Coastal Co., 306 S.C. 488, 413 S.E.2d 13
(1991). At the time the permit was granted in this case, no regulations detailing guidelines and
procedures for agricultural facility permitting, and the waste disposal systems for those Facilities,
had been adopted by the General Assembly. Therefore, in the absence of duly authorized
regulations, this Court may consider any and all relevant evidence in deciding whether a permit was
properly or improperly granted. in other words, the determination to approve or deny a permit
application must be based upon the individual merits of each application. For example, the distance
of the proposed expansion and disposal fields from adjacent property lines is one of the site selection
criteria to be considered along with the topography of the site, the distance to neighboring residences
and institutions, cover crops and trees in the area, prevailing wind directions, and the distance to any
drinking water wells, rivers, tributaries, or other water bodies.
12. Petitioner failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence that Construction Permit
#18,380-AG should not be issued with the modification below.
ORDER
Based upon the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, It is hereby:
ORDERED that DHEC shall grant State Construction Permit #18,380-AG to Tony Carter
upon the removal of Tract # 9003 from the waste management plan.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
_________________________________
Ralph King Anderson, III Administrative Law Judge
Columbia, South Carolina
October 29, 1998 |