Post Tagged with: "vaccine"

A parent waits while a child is being treated for COVID-19 at MUSC.  MUSC photo.

BRACK: Help your community by getting vaccinated

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Charter schools, by their very nature, have governing boards made up of parents.  They’re publicly funded, which requires them to follow general state education rules and keeps teachers in the state system, but the schools also are independent operationally from county school boards. South Carolina has about 75, which is about 1 percent of the nation’s charter schools.

by · 10/11/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
NEW for 9/6: Mask up; S.C’s yahoos; RiverDogs to playoffs

NEW for 9/6: Mask up; S.C’s yahoos; RiverDogs to playoffs

IN THIS EDITION  |  Sept. 6, 2021
FOCUS: Best ways to beat COVID-19: Get vaccinated, wear masks
COMMENTARY, Brack: Meet South Carolina’s Yahoo Caucus
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Morris Financial Concepts, Inc.
NEWS BRIEFS: RiverDogs head to championship playoffs
FEEDBACK:  Where are the leaders?
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Really old photo
CALENDAR:  McLeod Plantation to host Oct. 3 benefit

by · 09/06/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
NEW for 8/16: Shelter crisis; Courage and pride?

NEW for 8/16: Shelter crisis; Courage and pride?

IN THIS EDITION
FOCUS: State animal shelters declare state of emergency
COMMENTARY, Brack: What happened to courage and pride in South Carolina?
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: SCIWAY
NEWS BRIEFS: On Medicaid, federal funds and port traffic
FEEDBACK:  It’s time to protect the children of South Carolina 
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Where’s this streetscape?
CALENDAR:   Grape-stomping festival set for Aug. 28

by · 08/16/2021 · 1 comment · Full issue
BRACK: Get the vaccine to promote the common good

BRACK: Get the vaccine to promote the common good

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Getting immunized with a COVID-19 vaccine is a huge act of kindness to your community. 

While being vaccinated will give one a high level of personal protection against the highly infectious disease, it also helps to dampen its spread around the state.  

by · 04/05/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
Source: S.C. House.

NEWS BRIEFS: $500 million fund is new to state’s $10 billion spending plan

Staff reports  |  South Carolina House members will consider something new this week in the state’s $10 billion budget — a single line item that sets aside $500 million to keep agencies from making midyear cuts that could be brought on by unexpected pandemic expenses.

by · 03/22/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News
NEW for 1/25: On Alterman’s new book; DHEC’s problems; Vaccine rollout

NEW for 1/25: On Alterman’s new book; DHEC’s problems; Vaccine rollout

IN THIS ISSUE
FOCUS: New Alterman book is joyful look of past and present
COMMENTARY, Brack: DHEC has trouble walking, chewing gum in pandemic
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: S.C. Ports Authority
NEWS BRIEFS: Expediting vaccine rollout  
FEEDBACK: Charleston really does have bad drivers
MYSTERY PHOTO: Close-up mystery
CALENDAR: Perfect time of year to see birds at Caw Caw 

by · 01/25/2021 · 1 comment · Full issue
BRACK:  South Carolina can learn from Cuba

BRACK: South Carolina can learn from Cuba

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher | For as long as Americans not old enough to be in the AARP have been alive, Cuba has been a pariah, a non-democratic experiment whose embarrassing Soviet connections caused a geo-political chess game.

But as Soviet regimes crumbled in the early 1990s, Cuba was left hanging, still isolated and cut off from its rich neighbor to the north. Cubans literally lost weight, as food became harder to get. But its economic crisis forced institutional changes. The Cuba of today isn’t the Cuba of the Cold War.

by · 09/07/2015 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
BRACK: A vaccine that saves women’s lives

BRACK: A vaccine that saves women’s lives

By Andy Brack | A pat on the back to the S.C. House for passing a bill last week that will save women’s lives. For seven long years, women’s advocates have been working to get the male-centric legislature to approve a bill that would allow the state to educate and vaccinate girls — with parental permission — to protect them against a virus that causes deadly cervical cancer, a disease that kills about 4,100 women in the U.S. annually. Every month, five South Carolina women die from cervical cancer.

by · 03/23/2015 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views