S.C. Code Ann. § 44-56-440
(A) The Board of the Department of Health and Environmental Control shall establish a moratorium on administrative and judicial actions by the department concerning drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply facilities resulting from the discharge of drycleaning solvents to soil or waters of the State. This moratorium applies only to those facilities deemed eligible as defined in this section. The board may review and determine the appropriateness of the moratorium at least annually. This review must include, but is not limited to, consideration of these factors:
(5) corrective action plans submitted to the department.
After review, the board may suspend all or a portion of the moratorium if necessary.
(B) A drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility that is being operated as a drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility at the time a request for determination of eligibility is filed and at which there is contamination from drycleaning solvents is eligible under this section regardless of when the contamination was discovered if the drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility:
(C) If a request for determination of eligibility is filed for a former drycleaning facility at which there is contamination from drycleaning solvents, the former drycleaning facility is eligible under this section regardless of when the contamination was discovered; however, the owner or operator of the drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility shall provide documented evidence of the contamination by drycleaning solvents and the owner or operator has an operating drycleaning facility in the fund and has paid all annual fees, surcharges, and solvent fees on every drycleaning facility registered in the fund and in existence under their control since July 1, 1995, as required by the Department of Revenue. For any former drycleaning facility seeking eligibility under this section after November 24, 2006, the deductible is twenty-five thousand dollars, if the following are met:
(E) If the facility started operation before November 24, 2004, and an eligible drycleaning or wholesale owner or operator or person applies for monies from the fund:
(2) after November 24, 2005, the deductible is twenty-five thousand dollars.
An eligible drycleaning or wholesale supply facility that has applied for monies from the fund before May 24, 2004, shall have a deductible of one thousand dollars regardless of any deductible previously assigned to the facility based on its application date or type of site. Any approved assessment or remedial costs in excess of one thousand dollars previously incurred by the owner, operator, or property owner shall be refunded, without interest, to the party by the department. A facility first starting its operations on or after November 24, 2004, shall have a deductible of twenty-five thousand dollars if it is determined to be eligible and if the owner, operator, or property owner applies for money from the fund within six months of obtaining evidence of contamination.
(F)
(2) If the facility is not eligible because contamination has not been found and the department has determined that the facility is a high priority, the department shall notify the owner, operator, or property owner that a secondary assessment must be conducted. If the owner, operator, or property owner can demonstrate, based on criteria developed by the department, that they are unable to afford to hire a contractor to conduct this secondary assessment, the department shall upon payment of one thousand dollars within thirty days, conduct the secondary assessment.
(a) If the payment of one thousand dollars is received within thirty days, the department shall conduct a secondary assessment. If evidence of contamination: