State committee upgrades drought status

The South Carolina Drought Response Committee, meeting via conference call on Aug. 12, upgraded the drought status for Oconee County and 32 other South Carolina counties . Nine counties were upgraded from normal to incipient, the first level of drought: Oconee, Anderson, Pickens, Beaufort, Colleton, Dorchester, Georgetown, Hampton and Jasper. Eleven counties were maintained at incipient drought. According to the committee, Charleston and Dorchester were the only counties that did not enter drought status. Continued below normal rainfall combined with summer heat has continued to escalate the drought conditions for most counties. While multiple indicators supported the drought status upgrade, the drought’s impacts on crops and pastures were a driving factor, according to Hope Mizzell, S.C. State Climatologist. Dr. John Irwin, a beef cattle producer, reported that some upstate cattle producers are liquidating cattle herds because of incredibly dry pastures, and others are feeding their spring harvested hay to survive. SCDNR hydrologists provided an update that while abundant winter recharge has caused groundwater levels to remain at or above normal for much of the state, and lake levels remain near their target levels; stream flow levels have steadily declined over the past month. These declines helped support an upgrade in drought status for most of the counties in the state. Fortunately even with intensifying drought, water systems are not reporting any supply issues at this time, reported Rob Devlin, SCDHEC, Director, Water Monitoring, Assessment and Protection Division. The committee will continue to monitor the weather and will meet again in three weeks. More information about drought conditions and drought policy in South Carolina is available at www.scdrought.com.