WSPA
Scene on 7 Carolina's CW Your Carolina
|
 
Statehouse WatchStatehouse Watch

SC Senators Advance Choice For DHEC Commissioner

DHEC Nominee Questioned

DHEC commissioner nominee Catherine Templeton answers questions Thursday before a state Senate confirmation committee.


»  Comments | Post a Comment

Gov. Nikki Haley's choice to lead the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control cleared an important hurdle Thursday afternoon, when a state Senate committee voted to confirm Catherine Templeton as DHEC's new commissioner.

The vote was 13-0, with three senators abstaining, and came after hours of intense questioning by Democrats on the panel, who wonder whether Templeton has the qualifications needed to run such a large and complex agency. Templeton is a lawyer who's currently serving as the director of the state Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation.

Sen. Clementa Pinckney, D-Ridgeland, noted that she has no background, experience or training in health or environmental issues and asked her what he should say to people in his district.

"I've gotten calls from constituents who said, 'Senator, how can you support someone who does not come with the background for the job, especially when there are so many more eminently-qualified people?'" DHEC's board chose her over more than 300 other applicants.

Templeton said the position does not require a specialist in any one area of health or the environment, especially since the agency deals with so many areas, but needs an effective manager. "I think that your constituents can rest easy in the fact that I respect the employees at DHEC and their expertise, that I have the energy to go do what's best for the state," she said.

Sen. Brad Hutto, D-Orangeburg, also grilled her on her background and experience.

He asked her, "This General Assembly, whether people or like it or not, unanimously just publicly rebuked the DHEC board's decision on Savannah River. And a lot of what they told us when they came before us is, 'We relied on staff. We relied on staff.' And what I hear you saying is, 'I'm going to rely on staff.' And I guess what the question is, without any public health background yourself, how are you going to know if the staff is misleading you?"

The state House and Senate passed a resolution to undo DHEC's controversial decision to allow dredging in the Savannah River to deepen Savannah's port, which critics say helps Georgia at South Carolina's expense. DHEC had been against the permit, but the board reversed course after agreeing to hear from Georgia's governor, at the request of Gov. Haley.

Templeton answered Sen. Hutto, "

I think it's wonderful that my predecessors have had a public health background, but there's the whole environmental half as well. You've got to have somebody intelligent up there. And I think it's a great bonus to the state that I'm a lawyer. That entire agency is almost exclusively run by statutes and regs. I can go look at those."

Hutto and Sen. Joel Lourie, D-Columbia, also asked Templeton about her plans to remain in Mt. Pleasant, instead of moving to Columbia and working out of DHEC's headquarters. Lourie said, "I have some concerns about the Columbia thing. I mean I really do. I've run businesses my whole life and I kind of like to be, many times, the first there and the last to leave."

And Hutto asked her, "Where do you think your office will be as the DHEC commissioner, in Columbia or in Charleston?"

She answered, "

I think I'll have a place to sit in both places. I think it will largely be behind my steering wheel. All 46 counties have got not just a health department but a number of different functions for DHEC. And one thing I told the board that I wanted to do, and they thought it was a good idea, was to go to all of the locations for DHEC, and you've got to be on the ground to understand."

Despite the grilling by Democratic senators, several of the Republicans on the panel praised her. Sen. Phillip Shoopman, R-Greer, said, "There was a question earlier made about management experience, but I think for the last year we've seen you in a trial run. You've been managing an agency at LLR. And from what I'm hearing from another member across this panel and other ones is that things have gotten better."

Now that the committee has voted to confirm her, the nomination goes to the full state Senate for a vote.

 

Many senators praised her job at LLR.

(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Terms and Conditions

Advertisement

 
View More: No tags are associated with this article
Not what you're looking for? Try our quick search:
 
 

Advertisement

Reader Comments

*Facebook Account Required to Comment. If you are not already logged into Facebook, please click the comment button to do so.

Deal of the Day

Advertisement

Top Stories

Man Intentionally Runs Over Fiancee, Kills Young Girl

Police: Man Intentionally Runs Over Fiancee, Kills Young Girl

A man has been charged with first-degree murder after he ran over his fiancee and her daughter, police say.

Wanted: Bigfoot Hair Samples for European Study

Upstate Man Says He's Got Proof of Bigfoot

European researchers are planning to use new techniques to analyze DNA that could help crack the mystery of whether Bigfoot exists, but one Upstate man says he's got all the proof he needs.

"Powder-Like" Substance Found In Envelope By Warehouse Employee

Worker At Anderson County Warehouse Finds "White Powder" In Envelope

A worker at a Anderson County warehouse found a white substance after opening an envelope Thursday afternoon.

Free Cats

Greenville Co. Shelter Overwhelmed With Cats; Offering Free Adoptions

We’ve all heard “there’s no room at the inn.”  But at Greenville County Animal Care, that’s not so far from the truth. 

doctor

Report: SC Worst State at Disciplining Doctors

South Carolina is the worst state in the nation when it comes to disciplining doctors, according to a new report by Public Citizen's Health Research Group.

Advertisement

Video

Furman Survives In SoCon Tourney
Furman Survives In SoCon Tourney

Paladins walk-off with win over WCU

Video

"Powder-Like" Substance Found In Envelope By Warehouse Employee
"Powder-Like" Substance Found In Envelope By Warehouse Employee

A "powder-like" substance was found by a warehouse employee in Anderson County.

Video

"Powder-Like" Substance Found In Envelope By Warehouse Employee
"Powder-Like" Substance Found In Envelope By Warehouse Employee

A powder-like substance was found in an envelope by a warehouse employee in Anderson County.

Advertisement

Media General
KewlBoxBoxerJam: Games & Puzzles
Games, Puzzles & Trivia
Blockdot: Advergaming and Branded Media
Advergaming and Branded Media

MyYahoo!