Richland County should acquire Cooks Mountain one of the Columbia areas most significant natural landmarks for use as a public nature preserve, a county conservation board agreed Monday.
The Richland County Conservation Commission acknowledged that buying Cooks Mountain faces many hurdles, including funding. But a board resolution says county ownership of the 1,131-acre property is the best way to maintain public access to this unique natural resource.
This opportunity doesnt come along daily; this doesnt come along even once in a lifetime, said Carol Kososki, the Conservation Commissions chairwoman. It is an opportunity for Richland County to preserve this for future generations.
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What will happen to Cooks Mountain has been a point of discussion in Richland County since the tract went up for sale earlier this year.
A landfill company says it has a deal to buy Cooks Mountain from its longtime owners, who had for decades allowed the public to use the property as an unofficial nature park. Now, people worry that a new owner could shut off future access and build houses on the top 30 acres, which, unlike the rest of the land, are not protected from development.
The recommendation to acquire Cooks Mountain, approved unanimously by the advisory board, is being forwarded to Richland County Council for consideration next month.
County officials say they do not have the money to buy the land, which could cost $5 million or more. But some say Richland should seek help from land trusts. If the county cant acquire the property, it should seek access and management rights from the mountains owner, the commission said.
Cooks Mountain is an unusually tall land formation in otherwise flat lower Richland County. Rising 374 feet above sea level, the forested mountain offers commanding views of the Wateree River flood plain. Mountain plants not often seen in central South Carolina grow on its upper slopes. At its base are deep swamps more typical of the coastal plain. Walking trails and an education pavilion were developed by its private owners.
Mildred Myers, a conservation commission member from lower Richland County, said Cooks Mountain should be preserved by the county, but not at any cost.
The landfill company that currently is buying the mountain from its owners plans to resell the property. But the landfill company, an arm of national waste giant Republic Services Inc., also wants Richland County not to close the companys lower Richland landfill in 2019, as scheduled. The company already has offered the county more revenue, potentially millions of dollars, in exchange for keeping the site open.
Some commissioners expect Republic to offer to resell Cooks Mountain to the county only if the county agrees to drop a requirement that the waste site close. The Conservation Commission agreed to recommend a special study of the waste dump.
I am totally against the landfill having their lifetime extended, Myers said. I dont like the idea of them buying Cooks Mountain, then selling it to the county for favors.
Landfill lawyer Weston Adams III acknowledged the effort to acquire Cooks Mountain is continuing.