Archive for February, 2019

FOCUS, Palm: I-526 Extension is a huge boondoggle

FOCUS, Palm: I-526 Extension is a huge boondoggle

By Fred Palm, contributing editor  |  The S.C. Joint Bond Review Committee last week sent Charleston County’s funding application to extend Interstate 526  to a four-person subcommittee to provide the due diligence of the facts of the financing.  Why? Because years of skittish details about the project just do not fly.

Core issue: The basic problem that caused the delay by the Joint Bond Review Committee is found in the half-truths, equivocations, shell games, bait and switch, balderdash and peekaboo funding sources draped with inchoate statements about other displaced projects from  the majority of Charleston County Council that backs the I-526 extension (I-526X).  Through  proposed no-see-em fiscal sleights of hand, the council’s Majority of Five offers to push through this incredibly expensive highway with zero contingency built off of a well-founded cost estimate because at its root, the extension is unjustifiable.

by · 02/25/2019 · 1 comment · Common Good, Focus, Good news, Views
ERA advocates in Tennessee in the late 1970s.  Via Wikipedia.

BRACK: When being last can do the nation some real good

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Here’s a way that by being last, South Carolina lawmakers could do something really good:  Pass the Equal Rights Amendment. Only one more state legislature has to approve it for it to become part of our nation’s basic protections.

You might have forgotten about the amendment, first approved by Congress in 1972, following the rise of the women’s movement in the 1960s.  After approval, the amendment went to the states for ratification.  Thirty-eight states are needed for ratification.

by · 02/25/2019 · 1 comment · Andy Brack, Views
Gammons

GOOD NEWS: Gammons named Charleston Bar’s first black president

Staff reports  |  Debra J. Gammons, who directs diversity efforts at the Charleston School of Law, today will become the county’s first black president of the Charleston County Bar Association.

“I am looking forward to continuing my work for equality, education and engagement,” said Gammons, a distinguished visiting professor and director of the Office of Diversity Initiatives at the law school.  “I am looking forward to working with attorneys at the school and throughout the community to bring about positive changes here, across the state and across the country.”

by · 02/25/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY PHOTO: Top of building shows wear and tear

MYSTERY PHOTO: Top of building shows wear and tear

Today’s mystery could be kind of tough.  A reader sent along this shot, accompanied by a good story.  The photo is in South Carolina, but that’s the only hint you’ll get. Send your guess to:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous Mystery Photo: Our previous mystery, “Who’s this old guy?,” was a Charles Fraser painting of South Carolina’s Henry Laurens that is on display at the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston.

by · 02/25/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
2/25: The I-526 boondoggle; Pass the ERA; More

2/25: The I-526 boondoggle; Pass the ERA; More

IN THIS ISSUE of Charleston Currents #11.15  |  Feb. 18, 2019 

FOCUS:  I-526 Extension is a huge boondoggle
COMMENTARY, Brack: When being last can do the nation some real good
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  Magnolia Plantation and Gardens
GOOD NEWS: Gammons named Charleston Bar’s first black president
FEEDBACK: Reform bill provides some optimism
MYSTERY PHOTO: Top of building shows wear and tear
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Union County
CALENDAR: Last-ever Junior League Whale of a Sale set for March 2

by · 02/25/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS:  Photos from a Lowcountry oyster roast

FOCUS:  Photos from a Lowcountry oyster roast

Staff reports  |  Local Realtor Rob Byko has a real eye for capturing the essence of the world around us.  Whether he’s scouting birds in the wild or people with his camera, his photos provide a real feel that puts you inside the spaces and places he sees.

In this issue, we welcome Byko, who lives on Sullivan’s Island, as a contributing photographer who will provide periodic photo essays of what he’s seeing around the area.  In today’s essay, you get a real feel for the grittiness and steaminess of a Lowcountry oyster roast. It’s easy to smell and taste the briny sweetness of oysters as they left the cooker and were dumped on the tables of hungry patrons of a roast earlier this month on Sullivan’s Island.  Enjoy these — and future — photos from Rob.

by · 02/18/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Photo Essay, Photos
S.C. House Speaker Jay Lucas, R-Darlington.

BRACK: Don’t miss the opportunity for education reform

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  | House Speaker Jay Lucas is a man on a mission to reform South Carolina’s failing education system for the first time in more than 30 years.

“We have left generations of children in poverty behind in this state and every year that we don’t act [on education], we’ll continue to do that,” said Lucas, a powerfully built Hartsville Republican whose tired eyes mask a palpable intensity.

by · 02/18/2019 · 2 comments · Andy Brack, Views
GOOD NEWS: Celebrating azaleas, history and sweet tea in Summerville

GOOD NEWS: Celebrating azaleas, history and sweet tea in Summerville

Staff reports  | The Rev. John Drayton Azalea Chapter of the American Azalea Society and Magnolia Plantation and Gardens will host the society’s 2019 convention on March 14-16 in Summerville.

“We are honored to have some of the top azalea experts coming to Summerville to experience the beauty of the gardens we have in the Charleston area,” said Tom Johnson, Magnolia’s executive director who also is president of the local azalea chapter.

by · 02/18/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY PHOTO: Who’s the old guy>?

MYSTERY PHOTO: Who’s the old guy>?

This long-dead South Carolinian isn’t someone you might recognize easily.  But there’s a pretty good bet he was pretty important to the United States at some point in his life.  Who is he?  end your guess to:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous mystery, “Curly hair,” is a bust in the Gibbes Museum of Art on in front gallery under the Tiffany-style dome that is of George Washington in a Roman style by an Italian sculptor. FYI: If Washington were alive, he’d turn 287 on Feb. 22!

by · 02/18/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
2/18: Oyster roast photos; Education reform; Azaleas

2/18: Oyster roast photos; Education reform; Azaleas

IN THIS ISSUE of Charleston Currents #11.15  | Feb. 18, 2019

FOCUS:  Photos from a  Lowcountry oyster roast
COMMENTARY, Brack: Don’t miss the opportunity for education reform
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  SCIWAY
GOOD NEWS: Celebrating azaleas, history and sweet tea in Summerville
FEEDBACK: Tell us what you think
RECOMMENDED: Party of One: A Memoir in 21 Songs, by Dave Holmes
MYSTERY PHOTO: Who’s this old guy?
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Reformed Episcopal Church
CALENDAR: Charleston Museum oyster roast is Saturday

by · 02/18/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue