Post Tagged with: "Palmetto Project"

FOCUS: Special window open to sign up for health insurance

FOCUS: Special window open to sign up for health insurance

Staff reports |  If you are uninsured and want health insurance but missed signing up in a short window just before Christmas, you have until May 15 to apply for coverage.  Local groups are ready to help.

Last month, an executive order by President Joe Biden, who promised to make health care more affordable and available for people without work-provided coverage, reopened Affordable Care Act enrollment on the federal health insurance exchange in a special enrollment period. 

The Palmetto Project’s director of programs, Shelli Quenga, said that the only thing stopping many people from enrolling before was the lack of information, and the new administration has helped. 

“When people know the facts and the truth of the ability to enroll, that really helps,” Quenga said. “Most people are covered by their employer-sponsored coverage, but they just don’t know how individual coverage works. It’s stuff you don’t need to know until you need to know it.”

by · 03/01/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
NEW for 3/1: Open enrollment; Travel itch; Lessons learned

NEW for 3/1: Open enrollment; Travel itch; Lessons learned

IN THIS ISSUE
FOCUS: Special window open to sign up for health insurance
COMMENTARY, Brack: Scratch your itch to travel in South Carolina
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
NEWS BRIEFS:  Police say lessons learned; coalition pushes back on report
FEEDBACK: Speak out against Dominion solar proposal on March 23
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Raised house
CALENDAR: Safe Sounds to start April 17 after show rescheduled

by · 03/01/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
BRACK: Early books are first step to education reform success

BRACK: Early books are first step to education reform success

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  | If you want real education reform, give a free book a month to every child under five in South Carolina.

It’s a common-sense, quick, practical, affordable and proven investment that can make more of a difference than most of the fiddle-faddle in thick policy papers. It’s low-hanging fruit.  And it’s easily achievable because there’s a delivery network already in place. It’s something Gov. Henry McMaster and legislators like GOP House Speaker Jay Lucas and Democratic Sen. Vincent Sheheen should embrace now.

by · 01/28/2019 · 1 comment · Andy Brack, Views
1/28, full issue: Flagship center opens; Early reading is key; More

1/28, full issue: Flagship center opens; Early reading is key; More

IN THIS ISSUE  | Jan. 28, 2019

FOCUS: Flagship-Bridge incubator opens with 20 tech businesses
COMMENTARY, Brack: Early books are first step to education reform success
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  Charleston Gaillard Center
GOOD NEWS:  Feb. 8 symposium to focus on Second Amendment, gun policy
FEEDBACK: Readers appreciate King’s principles, frosted on overdevelopment
MYSTERY PHOTO: Lowcountry-style building might be tough to identify
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: South Carolina’s opera houses
CALENDAR: Three workshops this week on rapid transit

by · 01/28/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
Whipper

FOCUS: Visionary Whipper has made good things happen

By Steve Skardon  |  It is hard to imagine The Palmetto Project without Carrie Fulse Whipper.

For eighteen years, she has guided some of our most essential programs, including our signature statewide initiatives in African American health.  After this month, she will be moving on to new work that also includes time for her grandson, Benjamin.

Carrie is the definition of a change agent. When she came to The Palmetto Project, she already had a vision for new ways that religious and community institutions could turn around soaring rates of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and stroke in marginalized communities.

by · 07/23/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
7/23, full issue: About Carrie Whipper; Trump and Russia; more

7/23, full issue: About Carrie Whipper; Trump and Russia; more

FOCUS:  Visionary Whipper has made good things happen COMMENTARY, Brack:  Trump on Russia makes S.C. GOP leaders squirm IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY GOOD NEWS:  New Charleston Waterfront Pass debuts WHAT WE LOVE:  Tell us what you love FEEDBACK:  Teaching kids to swim makes a difference MYSTERY PHOTO:  Extreme close-up S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA:  Sassafras Mountain CALENDAR, July 23+:  Sales tax free weekend […]

by · 07/23/2018 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
12/7: Families helping families, Palmetto Priorities, “A Christmas Apron”

12/7: Families helping families, Palmetto Priorities, “A Christmas Apron”

In the Dec. 7, 2015, issue of Charleston Currents:
https://charlestoncurrents.com/2015/12/dec7-issue/

PHOTO: Holiday cinch
FOCUS, Steve Skardon: Help for flood victims over holidays
BRACK: Legislature needs more strategic, long-term thinking
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Charleston Green Commercial
PALMETTO POEM, Marjory Wentworth: The Christmas Apron
GOOD NEWS: Pinckney, Haley, Riley to be honored
FEEDBACK: Likes Haley on immigration
CALENDAR, Dec. 7+: A Christmas Story, holiday lights, more
MYSTERY: Maritime pastoral scene
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: The New Deal

by · 12/07/2015 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS: Helping S.C.’s flood victims over the holidays

FOCUS: Helping S.C.’s flood victims over the holidays

By Steve Skardon | The circumstances of many destitute South Carolinians this holiday season are among the most distressing since Hurricane Hugo. The aftermath of massive flooding, broken dams, and swollen rivers has left thousands in the Midlands and Lowcountry displaced and in chaos as they face the holiday season.

Assistance from both government and non-profit agencies is slow, and many of these families cannot expect to be in back in their own stable living situations for another six to eight months.

The effects of this netherworld weigh heavily on children, especially with Christmas only weeks away. Many of them have been forced to leave their friends and neighborhoods and sleep on the floors of generous family members, while their parents struggle to make ends meet.

by · 12/07/2015 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
Daja Dial

BRACK: Fear must not win in South Carolina

By Andy Brack | In the midst of the pall cast over the state following the Charleston church massacre, you might have missed last week’s Miss South Carolina pageant.

Ten days after the shootings that left nine dead and shocked the world, the show went on in Township Auditorium in Columbia. What came out of it highlights the stuff South Carolina is really made of.

by · 07/06/2015 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
Brack: Mayor’s race is shaping up

Brack: Mayor’s race is shaping up

Boy, this year’s race to replace Charleston Mayor Joe Riley, retiring in his 40th year at the top spot, is shaping up to be a doozy. First, just try to wrap your brain around the notion of whether anyone can replace Joe.

by · 02/23/2015 · Comments are Disabled · 2015 Mayor, Andy Brack, Views