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Police monitor the Calhoun monument at Marion Square.

FOCUS: Council vote may bring down Calhoun statue this week

Staff reports  |  Charleston City Council is poised Tuesday evening to vote on a resolution forwarded by Mayor John Tecklenburg to remove the statue of John C. Calhoun from atop a 110-foot pedestal at Marion Square.

Calhoun, a former vice president and powerful senator in the years before the Civil War, advocated and developed the political theory of nullification, which holds that states should be able to invalidate federal laws.  Never legally upheld in federal courts, this principle of state’s rights was used by slave-holding states to break away from the United States when, most historians agree, the war was caused for economic reasons to perpetuate the system of human bondage of enslaved Africans.

If the Wednesday vote, which reportedly has the backing of all members of council, is not challenged in the courts, observers say the statue could be down as early as Wednesday morning, a relatively swift end to a controversial statue that has been a thorn in the side for the city’s African Americans for more than a century.

by · 06/22/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
NEWS BRIEFS: On the Heritage Act, Fresh Future Farm and coronavirus

NEWS BRIEFS: On the Heritage Act, Fresh Future Farm and coronavirus

4/5ths of current lawmakers haven’t voted on Heritage Act.  Only 30 of the state’s current 170 legislators cast votes 20 years ago on whether the state should protect monuments from removal. 

by · 06/22/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
Photo provided.

NEWS BRIEFS: New amenities open at Folly Beach County Park

Staff reports  |  Folly Beach County Park now features big improvements that will help you enjoy a popular park even more. In addition to new boardwalk access paths from the parking lot to the beach, there are  outdoor showers, changing stations and improvements to the Pelican Watch Pavilion.

by · 06/15/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
FOCUS: Primary voting opens 7 a.m. Tuesday

FOCUS: Primary voting opens 7 a.m. Tuesday

Staff reports  |  Voters who haven’t already cast absentee ballots to avoid the coronavirus and potentially long lines will head to the polls Tuesday for the state Democratic and Republican primaries. 

Polls open at 7 a.m. and close 12 hours later.  While it’s not clear how busy polls will be, poll managers have received public health training for the pandemic to protect people’s health, according to the state election commission.  Social distancing policies will be in place and managers are expected to clean common surfaces. 

Voters are advised to bring photo identification.  Several voting locations also have changed in recent days in Charleston County.

Also in this post: A list of recent endorsements by sister publication, Charleston City Paper.

by · 06/08/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
S.C. Rep. Marvin Pendarvis, D-North Charleston, speaks at a recent protest rally.  Photo by Gavin Shelton.

NEWS BRIEFS: Lawmakers urged to address hate crimes, gun safety bills

Staff reports  |  Two state lawmakers said last week that it’s time to move forward promptly with bills to make hate crimes illegal and promote gun safety in South Carolina. S.C. Rep. Wendell Gilliard, D-Charleston, told sister publication Statehouse Report that a hate crimes bill would go a long way toward race relations in the state. Earlier this year, the bill got important bipartisan support from then-House Judiciary Chair Peter McCoy, “but of course, then COVID-19 hit.”

by · 06/08/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
Photo by Jackson Bailes.

FOCUS: Peaceful protest followed by looting, clean-up and curfew

Staff reports  |  Saturday brought a pretty peaceful protest of up to 1,000 people marching through the streets of downtown Charleston.  But as night fell, looters ransacked stores and eateries already suffering from weeks of closure due to the novel coronavirus.  

Police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd as rioters, generally thought to be a different set of people from protesters, threw bricks, rocks and furniture through windows along King Street, particularly causing damage north of Calhoun Street. By 10 p.m., a countywide curfew was in effect.

Just before midnight, Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg released the following statement:  “The murder of George Floyd has rightly caused outrage here and across the country. And while we as Charlestonians strongly support all of the good men and women who are peacefully and lawfully protesting that terrible crime, we cannot and will not condone acts of violence and vandalism in our city. …

by · 06/01/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Photo Essay, Photos
NEWS BRIEFS: Free parking downtown after 6 p.m. 

NEWS BRIEFS: Free parking downtown after 6 p.m. 

Staff reports  |  Starting today and lasting through the end of the year, metered parking enforcement will cease in the city of Charleston after 6 p.m. Why? To support local businesses and help stimulate an economic recovery, according to a press release.

Officials said that in conjunction with the change, regular parking meter enforcement will resume between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.

by · 06/01/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
West Ashley High School Senior Heity Gonzalez.  Source:  Charleston County School District.

FOCUS: A few life lessons for new graduates

By Reba Hull Campbell, special to Charleston Currents  |  When May 23 rolls around every year, I put aside all the other renowned celebrations that fall on the same day  — Eliza Doolittle Day, Pick Strawberries Day, Buy a Musical Instrument Day, or Weights and Measures Day — and take a few minutes to appreciate May 23 as the anniversary of when I started my first post-graduation job. I like to call it my “adultiversary.”  

May 23, 1983, was the day I walked into 123 Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill sporting big hair, a shoulder-padded power suit and aspirations to be a press secretary working for a freshman congressman from Florence. 

Each year on my adultiversary, I’m grateful for the fact I was able to land my dream job as my first job. This year, however, this milestone feels a bit bittersweet as I see all the new graduates flooding the market with no jobs to absorb them. 

by · 05/25/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
NEWS BRIEFS: State looks at stockpiling medical equipment again

NEWS BRIEFS: State looks at stockpiling medical equipment again

Staff reports  |   South Carolina no longer stores medical equipment like masks and gowns, but some in Columbia want to revive a stockpile following the struggle to obtain vital supplies in the pandemic, according to a Friday news item in sister publication Statehouse Report. 

by · 05/25/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
FOCUS: One Region releases guidelines for reopening economy

FOCUS: One Region releases guidelines for reopening economy

Staff reports  |  New phased guidelines for safely reopening the local economy provide detailed suggestions for small businesses and restaurants shut down for weeks due to coronavirus.

“It does little good for businesses to reopen only to find there is no business,” said Charleston Regional Development Alliance Chairman John Hagerty in a recent press release.  “With the help of One Region’s re|IGNITE phase one plan and industry-specific guidelines, employers can utilize consistent safety precautions and standards appropriate for businesses of all sizes.  Employees and customers need to feel confident their health and safety is paramount. Acting together as One Region, we can reopen quickly, safely, and rebuild our thriving economic and social community.” 

The plan, called re|IGNITE, includes high-level recommendations on how and when to safely reopen in a phased approach along with health care metrics from MUSC and best practice workplace procedures. …

by · 05/18/2020 · 2 comments · Focus, Good news