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Saturday
Sep222018

Storm Causing Duke Coal Ash to Spill into N.C. River

Coal ash is likely entering the Cape Fear River in Wilmington, North Carolina, environmentalists said Friday. Rising water in the area, due to heavy rain and storm surge from Hurricane Florence, is still a problem. 

Duke Energy confirmed breaches to a cooling lake dam at its L.V. Sutton plant in Wilmington, although it said coal ash -- industrial waste created by coal-burning power plants -- is probably not moving into the river. 

The state has been closely monitoring conditions at the facility. Since Thursday night, high water from the Cape Fear River has flowed into Sutton Lake on the north side and into the river on the south side. On Friday morning, state dam safety officials were notified of a dam breach of between 100 and 200 feet at the south end of Sutton Lake. There may also be smaller breaches in the dam, according to the state. 
"The Cape Fear River has spilled into the Sutton Lake. It has spilled over into their transmission yard. Duke has evacuated their employees," Michael Regan, secretary of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, said Friday. "What we don't know at this point is if any coal ash has filtered into the Cape Fear River." 
The department said it is working with other agencies to monitor the situation. It plans to conduct flyovers as well as on-the-ground testing and drone inspections of the dam.
 
Duke Energy spokeswoman Paige Sheehan confirmed that nine employees were at the plant overnight, although "they safely left as the flooding began to occur." The team included regular plant operators and some employees sent to monitor the situation after the hurricane, she said. 
"They left the plant itself but stayed nearby the property on higher ground," she added. Additional engineering experts are being brought in to assist with the situation, and large stones are being added to stop the breach. 
 
"Although river flooding has approached the two inactive coal basins at the facility, it appears there are currently no structural issues with those impoundments," said Bridget Munger, deputy communications director for the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, on Friday, noting that state teams from three regulatory divisions are on site.
Coal ash is one of the largest forms of industrial waste, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency. It contains heavy metals including arsenic, lead and mercury, which can pose serious health risks. 
According to the EPA, exposure to coal ash waste "can cause severe health and environmental problems in the form of cancer and non-cancer risks in humans, lowered IQ among children, and deformities and reproductive harm in fish and wildlife. Many of these pollutants, once in the environment, remain there for years."
Saturday
Sep222018

Autumn Officially Arrives Tonight

Depending on the part of the world in which you live, the season will change on either Sept. 22 or 23. That's because the equinox isn't a daylong event. Rather, the equinox is defined by the position of the Earth and the sun at a particular moment in time. 

Time zones aren't the only source of confusion concerning the date of the equinox. Further complicating our calendars, the autumnal equinox can occur anytime between Sept. 21 and 24. [Autumn Equinox: 5 Odd Facts About Fall

Tonight at 9:54 p.m. EDT (0154 GMT on Sept. 23), the sun will cross the celestial equator, or an imaginary line that projects Earth's equator into space. At this exact moment, the Northern and Southern hemispheres will receive an equal amount of sunshine, and the length of day and night will be approximately equal around the world — hence the term "equinox," which is derived from the Latin phrase meaning "equal night."

Most years, this happens on either Sept. 22 or 23. However, every once in a while, the autumn equinox can occur on Sept. 21 or 24. This happens because the length of a calendar year (365 days) is not equal to the time it takes for Earth to travel around the sun (365.25 days). To make up for this inconsistency, people have observed "leap years" for the last two millennia. By adding a "leap day" (Feb. 29) to the calendar every four years, we have managed to keep our seasons more or less consistent from year to year. 

However, leap years don't ensure that equinoxes always fall on the same date. "Because of leap years, the dates of the equinoxes and solstices can shift by a day or two over time, causing the start dates of the seasons to shift, too," according to The Old Farmer's Almanac. 

The last time the autumnal equinox fell on Sept. 21 was over a thousand years ago, and the last Sept. 24 equinox was in 1931, according to timeanddate.com. While it's been a long time since the equinox occurred on Sept. 21, we can expect to see it happen twice in the next century, first in 2092 and then in 2096. The next Sept. 24 equinox will be in the year 2303. (Keep in mind that these dates are based on Universal Time, so some time zones may not experience these equinoxes on the dates listed here.)

To celebrate this year's not-so-unusual autumn equinox, you can observe the Harvest Moon on Monday (Sept. 24) — and don't forget to mix some Harvest Moon cocktails!

Friday
Sep212018

High School Football Scores

T.L. Hanna 42, Westside 14

BHP 28, Seneca 10 

Wren 56, Broome 28 

Palmetto 58, Powdersville 7

Pendleton 39. Clinton 6 

Crescent 35, Fox Creek 29

Friday
Sep212018

Clemson Forestry Professor Predicts Vibrant Fall Color

CLEMSON — As some sections of the Blue Ridge Parkway reopened for the first time after being cleared from Hurricane Florence, there was little to suggest the storm would put a damper on a vibrant fall color season in the southern Appalachians.

While above average rainfall over the summer months and warm temperatures continuing well into September could delay the display slightly, Clemson University forest ecologist Don Hagan reported few signs Florence should hinder an abundance of autumn hues.

Hagan ventured from Clemson’s campus up to an elevation of almost 5,500 feet near Devil’s Courthouse in Transylvania County, North Carolina, on Sept. 18 — the first morning that portion of the Parkway was reopened — for an annual scouting trip and found the foliage in the Pisgah National Forest relatively undisturbed.

“We didn’t see the direct impacts here along the southern Blue Ridge Parkway like we could have seen,” Hagan said. “Had we seen a little bit more wind and a little bit more rain, we could have seen leaves getting knocked off before they ever had a chance to turn — and we just fortunately didn’t see that this year.”

Many forecasts for Florence had called for heavy winds and rain with the potential to dampen fall colors in the western Carolinas, but the majority of severe weather occurred closer to the coast, leaving only remnants of the then-tropical storm in the southern Appalachians.

Hagan, who has been making fall foliage predictions at Clemson University for six years, saw a stark contrast from the 2017 effects of Hurricane Irma, which reached the area after leaves had already begun to turn due to residual stress from a 2016 drought and blew many of them off trees with its strong winds.

At an elevation around 5,000 feet, just below this perch near Devil’s Courthouse in Transylvania County, North Carolina, tree species transition from evergreens that remain green through the winter to deciduous trees that lose their leaves at lower elevations. Image Credit: Clemson University Relations

“There’s not a whole lot of color happening yet, but it’s coming soon,” said Hagan, an assistant professor in Clemson’s department of forestry and environmental conservation. “What a difference a year makes. Every year we come up here for my dendrology class, but I don’t think in the time that we’ve been doing this, there’s ever been as big a difference as we’re seeing between 2018 and 2017.”

As for when exactly the fall color season would begin, Hagan said that, given the prevalence of green still in the foliage above 5,000 feet, it is too early to tell, but noted the vast majority of fall color in the southern Appalachians would be dictated by the weather from mid-September through mid-October.

“You get some cooler weather and those nice bluebird skies, and the clear skies along with the cooler temperatures help bring out some of the brighter colors and particularly the reds and the purples,” he said. “If we can see that as we transition into fall, I think this could really line up to be a fantastic fall color season.”

From a perch near Devil’s Courthouse, Hagan pointed down to an elevation around 5,000 feet where the trees transitioned from such evergreens as red spruces and Fraser firs that remain green through the winter to deciduous trees that lose their leaves at lower elevations.

“This is a really neat spot,” he said. “This elevation is where you see the fall color happening first, and you’re going to see that change, that wave of color kind of working its way down the mountain, down in elevation as you move into fall.”

Hagan said the deciduous trees in the range of roughly 4,500 to 5,000 feet of elevation would be the first to change colors, noting that many of the tree species are the same that one might find in New England.

The prevalence of full, green foliage between 4,500 and 5,000 feet of elevation in mid-September in the southern Appalachians was a stark contrast to a year earlier, when Hurricane Irma reached the area after leaves had already begun to turn due to residual stress from a 2016 drought and blew many of them off trees with its strong winds. Image Credit: Clemson University Relations

“The species that make New England famous for having such a beautiful fall color season, we have them here too,” he said. “You’ve just got to be up at this higher elevation to see them.”

And while fall color comes later in lower places, an overlap in tree species occurs as elevation changes that can produce a richer palette of colors due to the diversity of trees found in the Piedmont region at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains mixed in with more mountainous species.

“Every tree kind of produces its own characteristic color leaves,” Hagan said. “Birches, for example, are going to be yellow. Dogwoods are going to turn a purplish color. Sourwoods and fire cherries are going to turn red. Red oaks tend to turn red later in the year, as well. Really the more species you have present, the more diverse that palette of colors that you might see at a given point in time is going to be.”

Hagan said a good fall color season typically is defined as a season with a multitude of different colors across the landscape at the same time. He said all signs pointed to that outcome being likely this fall — even if leaf-seekers might have to wait a bit longer to see it.

“If it’s warm, moist and sunny, plants are going to hold onto the leaves as long as they can,” he said. “So if we have a warm fall, like it seems like we’re going to have, we could potentially have a later start to our fall color season and a longer fall color season.”

Friday
Sep212018

Anderson TD Club Announces Week Four Winners

Anderson Touchdown Club Winners for Week 4  - games played on September 13.

Offensive Lineman:

  Quenten Smith, BHP

Offensive Player:

      Paul Johnson, Westside

Defensive Player:

      Harrison Morgan, Wren

Defensive Lineman:

       DJ Jones, T.L. Hanna

Coach:

        Jeff Tate, Wren

 

Friday
Sep212018

Americans Can Now Freeze Credit Reports at No Cost

Sept. 21 (UPI) -- Beginning Friday, you can place a freeze on your credit reports at no cost -- the result of the large-scale Equifax data breach last year.

Congress passed legislation this year for the provision that allows people to lock up their credit information, making the reports unavailable to creditors and identity thieves.

The law requires credit bureaus to freeze a person's credit information within 24 hours after a request. "Unfreezing" the information is also part of the deal.

The adjustments are performed after an individual contacts a credit reporting bureau and fills out a short form to establish identity. A personal identity number is then chosen by the individual.

The law was passed after Equifax's data breach in 2017 that exposed the personal information of 148 million people in the United States.

The new law also extends the time a fraud alert can be filed -- from 90 days to one year.

Freezes on each of the three major reporting bureaus -- EquifaxExperianand TransUnion -- must be accessed separately.

Friday
Sep212018

Walmart "Very Concerned" about Trade War

Walmart, the nation's largest retailer, is sounding the alarm on President Donald Trump's trade war, saying it is "very concerned" about the possible impacts the newly announced tariffs will have on American consumers.

In a letter to US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, the company — which employs 2.3 million people worldwide, and 1.5 million in the US alone — said the immediate impact of the fresh tariffs "will be to raise prices on consumers and tax American business and manufacturers," according to a report from CNN Money.

"As the largest retailer in the United States and a major buyer of U.S. manufactured goods, we are very concerned about the impacts these tariffs would have on our business, our customers, our suppliers and the U.S. economy as a whole," Walmart wrote, according to a separate report from Reuters.

CNN Money reports that in its letter — sent around two weeks ago — Walmart asked Lighthizer and the Trump administration to reconsider putting tariffs on Chinese-made consumer goods including: Christmas lights, shampoo, dog food, luggage, mattresses, handbags, backpacks, vacuum cleaners, bicycles, cooking grills, cable cords, and air conditioners.

The letter did not achieve that goal, with the administration pushing forward earlier this week with the imposition of tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, totaling more than 5,000 different products.

"For months, we have urged China to change these unfair practices, and give fair and reciprocal treatment to American companies," Trump said in a statement at the time.

Thursday
Sep202018

Four More Birds with West Nile Found in Anderson County

Four new cases of West Nile Virus have been confirmed this week in birds found in Anderson County. The birds were located near the intersections of North Avenue and Main Street and Camson Road, and Hembree Road in Anderson; Porter Road and Central Road and Cherry Street Extension and Woodhaven Drive in Pendleton.

The Emergency Management Division in partnership and coordination with the City of Anderson, Pickens County Emergency Management and Gregory Pest Solutions, the County’s pest control contractor, will be spraying affected areas within a one-mile radius of the locations where the dead birds were found.

Weather permitting, spraying will take place on Saturday night and Sunday and will include the placement of larvicide briquettes in standing water on public lands.

There have been no confirmed human cases of the disease in Anderson County; however, the Emergency Management Division is taking appropriate mitigation and abatement actions in the affected areas.

The water-based pesticide used during spraying does not pose a health risk to humans or animals; however, beekeepers with hives in the area should arrange to relocate hives until spraying has been completed. All local beekeeping organizations are being notified.

The larvicide briquettes placed in areas of standing water to reduce the mosquito threat should not be handled or disturbed by the public and will remain effective up to 45 days after placement.

A CodeRed message will be sent out to residents within a one-mile radius of where the infected birds were located alerting them to plans for spraying and directing them to the Emergency Management Division website for more information. In addition, the agency will use its social media accounts as well as other county media resources to provide information about West Nile Virus and mosquito-borne illnesses.

Residents are reminded of the most effective ways to prevent mosquito-borne illnesses, including West Nile Virus:

  • Repellents help keep mosquitoes from biting. Apply insect repellent containing DEET, picaridin, oil of lemon eucalyptus, or IR 3535 according to label instructions.
  • Make sure that your doors and windows have tight-fitting screens to keep out mosquitoes.

  • Eliminate all sources of standing water on your property, including flowerpots, gutters, buckets, pool covers, birdbaths, old car tires, rain gutters and pet bowls.
  • Wearing light-colored clothing to cover the skin reduces the risk of bites.

For additional information regarding the West Nile Virus and other mosquito-borne illnesses, as well as other important tips, follow @ACSCEMD on Facebook and Twitter or visit the following websites:

https://emd.andersonsheriff.org/wnv

http://www.scdhec.gov/HomeAndEnvironment/Insects/Mosquitoes/

https://www.cdc.gov/westnile/index.html

Thursday
Sep202018

Bassmaster Announces Big Changes for 2019 Season

The Bassmaster Elite Series, which will vist Anderson's Green Pond Landing April 4-7 of next year, is announcing some major changes for the 2019.

After 50 years of setting the world standard for professional bass tournament competition, B.A.S.S. made historic changes to the Bassmaster Elite Series on Monday, which will attempt to elevate the sport new levels. Elite Series pros will begin the 2019 season with a smaller field of competition, vastly increased payouts, dramatically reduced entry fees and the promise of more exposure through the company’s industry-leading media platforms.

“We just celebrated our 50th anniversary at B.A.S.S., and made the decision to create an environment second to none in the world of professional bass fishing,” said Bruce Akin, CEO of B.A.S.S. “Our anglers have been loyal to the Elite Series, and we want to not only reward that loyalty, but also redefine what it means to be a professional angler. We feel the new Elite Series format accomplishes these goals, and also provides bass fishing fans with more of the content they crave.”

The 2019 Elite Series field size will be based on 80 anglers, down from 110 last year. This reduction in the number of competitors will not only allow the pros to get more exposure through B.A.S.S. media platforms, but also will improve their odds of winning and qualifying for the Bassmaster Classic.

The new format features three no-entry fee events that will payout $1 million each: Toyota Bassmaster Texas Fest benefiting Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship and the Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods, bass fishing’s crown jewel. Additionally, the eight regular-season Elite Series events will now pay the entire field of anglers, a first in the world of professional fishing. First-place prize will remain $100,000, but now the last-place angler will earn $2,500. In total, B.A.S.S. is investing an additional $3 million in payouts and reduced entry fees for the 2019 Elite Series.

Not only has B.A.S.S. made a historic financial commitment to anglers through lower entry fees and higher payouts, but the organization also announced an increased investment in exposure opportunities for the pros. Starting with the 2019 season, the incredibly popular Bassmaster LIVE show on Bassmaster.com, which has generated over 2.5 million video views and 59 million minutes of content consumed by fans, will be produced all four days of Elite Series events. Plus, there will be live-streaming cameras on every boat on semi-final Saturday, as well as Bassmaster LIVE cameras on every angler for Championship Sunday.

The Bassmasters TV show is being revamped with a renewed focus of on-the-water footage featuring more anglers, catching more bass. Other opportunities for Elite Series anglers to get exposure for their sponsors include Bassmaster Magazine, which has a readership of 4.4 million; B.A.S.S. Times, which reaches 100,000 of the nations most avid anglers; Bassmaster Radio, which airs on 200 stations on the SB Nation network; and Bassmaster.com, which averages over 1 million unique visitors per month.

“We are beyond excited here in Anderson County to be hosting the Bassmaster Elite Series at Lake Hartwell and Green Pond Landing,” said Neil Paul, executive director of Visit Anderson. “To be able to host the Elite Series on the heels of the most-attended Bassmaster Classic of all time is a tremendous honor for our community. We look forward to providing a great experience to the best anglers in the world, the team at B.A.S.S. and the multitude of passionate fans of bass fishing.”

This year’s Classic was held at Green Pond in mid-March and drew more than 143,000 fans — a record for the "Super Bowl of Bass Fishing.

Thursday
Sep202018

Scientists Fear Non-Pest Insects on Decline

OXFORD, Pa. (AP) — A staple of summer — swarms of bugs — seems to be a thing of the past. And that's got scientists worried.

Pesky mosquitoes, disease-carrying ticks, crop-munching aphids and cockroaches are doing just fine. But the more beneficial flying insects of summer — native bees, moths, butterflies, ladybugs, lovebugs, mayflies and fireflies — appear to be less abundant.

Scientists think something is amiss, but they can't be certain: In the past, they didn't systematically count the population of flying insects, so they can't make a proper comparison to today. Nevertheless, they're pretty sure across the globe there are fewer insects that are crucial to as much as 80 percent of what we eat.

Yes, some insects are pests. But they also pollinate plants, are a key link in the food chain and help decompose life.

"You have total ecosystem collapse if you lose your insects. How much worse can it get than that?" said University of Delaware entomologist Doug Tallamy. If they disappeared, "the world would start to rot."

He noted Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson once called bugs: "The little things that run the world."

The 89-year-old Wilson recalled that he once frolicked in a "Washington alive with insects, especially butterflies." Now, "the flying insects are virtually gone."

It hit home last year when he drove from suburban Boston to Vermont and decided to count how many bugs hit his windshield. The result: A single moth.

WINDSHIELD TEST

The un-scientific experiment is called the windshield test. Wilson recommends everyday people do it themselves to see. Baby Boomers will probably notice the difference, Tallamy said.

Several scientists have conducted their own tests with windshields, car grilles and headlights, and most notice few squashed bugs. Researchers are quick to point out that such exercises aren't good scientific experiments, since they don't include control groups or make comparisons with past results. (Today's cars also are more aerodynamic, so bugs are more likely to slip past them and live to buzz about it.)

Still, there are signs of decline. Research has shown dwindling individual species in specific places, including lightning bugs, moths and bumblebees. One studyestimated a 14 percent decline in ladybugs in the United States and Canada from 1987 to 2006. University of Florida urban entomologist Philip Koehler said he's seen a recent decrease in lovebugs — insects that fly connected and coated Florida's windshields in the 1970s and 1980s. This year, he said, "was kind of disappointing, I thought."

University of Nevada, Reno, researcher Lee Dyer and his colleagues have been looking at insects at the La Selva Biological Station in Costa Rica since 1991. There's a big insect trap sheet under black light that decades ago would be covered with bugs. Now, "there's no insects on that sheet," he said.

But there's not much research looking at all flying insects in big areas.

THE EVIDENCE

Last year, a study that found an 82 percent mid-summer decline in the number and weight of bugs captured in traps in 63 nature preserves in Germany compared with 27 years earlier. It was one of the few, if only, broad studies. Scientists say similar comparisons can't be done elsewhere, because similar bug counts weren't done decades ago.

"We don't know how much we're losing if we don't know how much we have," said University of Hawaii entomologist Helen Spafford.

The lack of older data makes it "unclear to what degree we're experiencing an arthropocalypse," said University of Illinois entomologist May Berenbaum. Individual studies aren't convincing in themselves, "but the sheer accumulated weight of evidence seems to be shifting" to show a problem, she said.

After the German study, countries started asking if they have similar problems, said ecologist Toke Thomas Hoye of Aarhus University in Denmark. He studied flies in a few spots in remote Greenland and noticed an 80 percent drop in numbers since 1996.

"It's clearly not a German thing," said University of Connecticut entomologist David Wagner, who has chronicled declines in moth populations in the northeastern United States. "We just need to find out how widespread the phenomenon is."

THE SUSPECTS

Most scientists say lots of factors, not just one, caused the apparent decline in flying insects.

Suspects include habitat loss, insecticide use, the killing of native weeds, single-crop agriculture, invasive species, light pollution, highway traffic and climate change.

"It's death by a thousand cuts, and that's really bad news," Wagner said.

To Tallamy, two causes stand out: Humans' war on weeds and vast farmland planted with the same few crops.

Weeds and native plants are what bugs eat and where they live, Tallamy said. Milkweeds, crucial to the beautiful monarch butterfly, are dwindling fast. Manicured lawns in the United States are so prevalent that, added together, they are as big as New England, he said.

Those landscapes are "essentially dead zones," he said.

Light pollution is another big problem for species such as moths and fireflies, bug experts said. Insects are attracted to brightness, where they become easy prey and expend energy they should be using to get food, Tallamy said.

Jesse Barber of Boise State is in the middle of a study of fireflies and other insects at Grand Teton National Park. He said he notices a distinct connection between light pollution and dwindling populations.

"We're hitting insects during the day, we're hitting them at night," Tallamy said. "We're hitting them just about everywhere."

Lawns, light pollution and bug-massacring highway traffic are associated where people congregate. But Danish scientist Hoye found a noticeable drop in muscid flies in Greenland 300 miles (500 kilometers) from civilization. His studies linked declines to warmer temperatures.

Other scientists say human-caused climate change may play a role, albeit small.

RESTORING HABITAT

Governments are trying to improve the situation. Maryland is in a three-year experiment to see if planting bee-friendly native wildflowers helps.

University of Maryland entomology researcher Lisa Kuder says the usual close-crop "turf is basically like a desert" that doesn't attract flying insects. She found an improvement — 70 different species and records for bees — in the areas where flowers are allowed to grow wild and natural alongside roads.

The trouble is that it is so close to roadways that Tallamy fears that the plants become "ecological traps where you're drawing insects in and they're all squashed by cars."

Still, Tallamy remains hopeful. In 2000, he moved into this rural area between Philadelphia and Baltimore and made his 10-acre patch all native plants, creating a playground for bugs. Now he has 861 species of moths and 54 species of breeding birds that feed on insects.

Wagner, of the University of Connecticut, spends his summers teaching middle schoolers in a camp to look for insects, like he did decades ago. They have a hard time finding the cocoons he used to see regularly.

"The kids I'm teaching right now are going to think that scarce insects are the rule," Wagner said. "They're not realizing that there could be an ecological disaster on the horizon."

Thursday
Sep202018

Storms, Climate Show Outer Banks $2.4B Economy May Not Be Sustainable

RODANTHE, N.C. (Reuters) - When Florence was raging last Friday on North Carolina’s Outer Banks, the hurricane tore a 40-foot (12-meter) chunk from a fishing pier that juts into the ocean at the state’s most popular tourist destination. 

The privately owned Rodanthe pier has already undergone half a million dollars in renovation in seven years and the owners started a new round of repairs this week. 

“The maintenance and upkeep on a wooden fishing pier is tremendous,” said co-owner Terry Plumblee. “We get the brunt of the rough water here.” 

Scientists have warned such rebuilding efforts are futile as sea levels rise and storms chew away the coast line but protests from developers and the tourism industry have led North Carolina to pass laws that disregard the predictions. 

The Outer Banks, a string of narrow barrier islands where Rodanthe is situated, may have been spared the worst of Florence, which flooded roads, smashed homes and killed at least 36 people across the eastern seaboard. 

Still, the storm showed North Carolinians on this long spindly finger of land that ignoring the forces of nature to cling to their homes and the coast’s $2.4 billion economy may not be sustainable. 

Some have called for halting oceanside development altogether. 

A backhoe removes sand from the street after the pass of Hurricane Florence, now downgraded to a tropical depression in Rodanthe, North Carolina, U.S., September 18, 2018. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

“We need to actually begin an organized retreat from the rising seas,” said Duke University geologist Orrin Pilkey. 

In a government study published in 2010, scientists warned that sea levels could rise 39 inches by 2100. (bit.ly/2xAqn6y

Higher sea level will cause more flooding and render some communities uninhabitable, as well as affect the ocean vegetation, jeopardize the dune systems that help stabilize the barrier islands, and cause more intense erosion when storms like Florence make landfall, scientists said. 

Developers said the study was too theoretical to dictate policy. 

Some argue policymakers do not need a 90-year projection to know something needs to change. 

“When we have a hurricane, that shows everybody where their vulnerabilities are today, forget 100 years from now, but right now,” said Rob Young, a geologist at Western Carolina University who co-authored the study by the state’s Coastal Resources Commission (CRC). 

Young said he would like to see development move back from the ocean’s edge and laments that homeowners and developers rebuild almost any structure damaged or destroyed by a bad storm.

Wednesday
Sep192018

Millions Using Home Equity Line to Pay Bills, Survey Shows

Millions of Americans are using the equity in their homes to pay bills.

Ramsey Solutions financial expert Chris Hogan discusses the new survey from Bankrate.com, which shows that homeowners think it’s a good idea to tap into the value of their homes to pay bills and the best time for millennials to buy a house.

As personal debt continues to climb, many flat-broke Americans believe maintaining everyday household bills is a good reason to tap into the value of their homes.

Twenty-four million Americans think that withdrawing cash from their home equity is suitable for making home improvements, according to a new Bankrate.com survey.

Home equity is the property’s market value minus any outstanding loan balance, typically the mortgage. A home equity line of credit, often referred to as a HELOC, is a second mortgage that gives homeowners access to cash and uses their home’s equity as collateral.

“Home equity lines of credit are essentially a big credit card attached to your home,” Ramsay Solutions financial expert Chris Hogan explained to FOX Business’ Dagen McDowell on Wednesday.  “It’s a brilliant marketing plan by the banking industry because they never call it what it is — it’s a mortgage. It is a lien on your home.”

By taking out a HELOC, homeowners increase the risk of losing their home, he said, and devising a savings strategy is a much better way to pay for renovations.

“Home improvements are not a necessity; that’s a want. And what we can’t do is get our wants confused with our needs,” he said. “Leave your equity alone, save up, pay cash for improvements and other things you want to do.”

Tuesday
Sep182018

Council Oks Studies on Courthouse Square, Best Way to Use Hospitality Tax Revenue

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Anderson County Council moved forward on a new subdivision, a self-insurance plan for county employees, a market study on the development of old Bailes/Woolworth property, the sale of property for an expansion at TTI,  and supported a study on the best use of hospitality tax money, should it be implemented in the unincorporated areas of Anderson County, as part of Tuesday night’s meeting

During the meeting, held at the Anderson Civic Center due to the failure of the elevator in the historic courthouse, council approved, on second reading,  a new 74.6-acre subdivision in the area around Midway Road, Harriet Circle and Crestview Road which would bring between 170-180 single-family houses to the property. Council also approved moving forward with a plan to  

As part of the new project, Anderson County Councilman Craig Wooten said he supports reaching out to S.C. Rep. Brian White and the Anderson County Legislative Delegation to secure funding to expand the intersection of Midway Road and Crestview Road. 

The proposed project, which will be renamed “Spencer’s Trail,” would be built by Falcon Real Estate Development, and would set aside 25 acres of the property as green space, which would include a trail, a dog run and playground area. Two entrances to the subdivision, one on Crestview, one on Midway would also be included in the current plan. More details on the project here. 

Following up a special council meeting last week, council gave an update on a plan to provide an improved health insurance plan for county employees. The goal of the plan which would be a self-insurane program, is to offer improved service for employees and to save the county money. 

“This is something we’ve been talking about for months and really working on for over a year,” said Anderson County Council Chairman Tommy Dunn. “What where’re trying to do is make the healthcare for our employees better, and to make it sustainable for the future.” 

“If we go to a self-insured program, we have a lot more flexibility to provide better services and save money at the same time,” said Anderson County Councilman Tom Allen. “We do not want to degrade the current health program. What ever we come up with will be just and good and probably better.”

The program could be in place by January of 2019.

More information on the plan here.

On Tuesday night, council also approved a resolution for an outside study to discover the best way to spend an money collected from a hospitality tax in unincorporated parts of the county which do not currently have the tax. An advisory opinion on the hospitality tax is already on the November ballot. Wooten said the study would also be an advisory move to give the council direction on the best way to use the funds based on state law.

Passing a resolution before the election, if were to pass, we would pursue an independent feasibility study on the best use of the hospitality tax money for the county, the greatest impact. 

“The community wants to know what would be of maximum benefit,” Wooten said. “Such a study would also be purely informational, but it would hold us accountable.”

Opinion: Hospitalty Tax Critical for Growth 

Meanwhile, the county gave the go ahead to Peach Properties of Columbia to do a market study and explore options for the development of the courthouse square property, former location of the Bailes/Woolworth Building 

“We are not embarking on any path without the information we need to begin the process of what should go on that site,” Burns said. “This should be a significant building that will benefit all the citizens of Anderson County.” 

Peach Properties has already purchased and developed the future site of Groucho’s Deli across the street from the property.

In other moves, council also approved the sale of 4.04 acres at the Southwest corner of Martin Road and Orange Way, to One World Technologies, Inc., (TTI), for $155,000, the appraised value of the property. 

“They intend to put another facility on the property, which I think will be a great benefit to Anderson County and will be on the tax books,” said Anderson County Administrator Rusty Burns.

Council also gave the go ahed to a emergency shelter, paid for by Duke Energy Carolinas, at the Anderson Sports and Entertainment Complex. The shelter will provide “solar photovoltaic power aways, voltage regulations, and power quality regulation,” offering citizens a shelter with electricity in the event of an emergency. 

Wooten said the solar project would cost the county $8 million if not for Duke Energy constructing the project. “This will be a tremendous benefit to public safety,” said Anderson County Councilman Ray Graham. “We want to thank Duke Energy for their investment in Anderson County."

Also on Tuesday night, council:

 

  1. Approved the finalizing of an agreement with Peach Properties of Columbia to develop the vacant lot behind the historic Anderson County Courthouse which formerly served as home to the Bailes/Woolworth businesses. The goal has long been to build a public/private partnership facility on the site, one which will bring more people downtown and provide both retail, office and potentially residential space. Burns said he would like whatever is constructed on the site to be the most significant building downtown. 
  2. Gave final approval to a $2.8 million for plans to expand the Starr-Iva Landfill which is nearing capacity. The expansion will be paid by new debt service payment of $289,000. The current debt service payment of $358.000 wil be complete this year, so the new funds for expansion could represent some savings. A mulcher/grinder machine for the site is also being considered. The machine would cost approximately $550,000, with an estimated $75,000 per year additional cost to run the new equipment. More information here: https://youtu.be/3pdCg_QUZp0 The mulch created at the facility would be free to Anderson County citizens.  
  3. Gave final approval to tax incentives for JB Ferguson Properties, LLC, to purchased and renovate a number of buildings on South Main across from City Hall. The properties are expected to eventually generate approximately $70,000 in tax payments for the county. 
  4. Gave final approval to tax incentives for the collaborative project with the City of Anderson for a $12 million, 90-bed hotel downtown at the corner of South Main and East Market Streets. 
  5. Approved, on second reading, tax incentives for an established international company which will bring $6.2 million in capital investment, and 31 highly skilled jobs with an average salary of $23.81 per hour, and an annual payroll of $1.2 million. Anderson County Economic Development Director Burriss Nelson. said the 20-year economic impact of the company (in business for more than 100 years old) on the community is estimated at more than $261 million. The business, which will involve detailed technical testing of equipment, will require highly-skilled positions and require a two- or four-year degree. It will be located in Anderson County Council District Six, which makes up the northeast corridor of the county. 
  6. Approved, on second reading, a tax-incentive agreement to work with the City of Anderson to help develop unused buildings in downtown Anderson to recruit and bring in new businesses. The buildings are directly across South Main Street from City Hall. The buildings are being renovated for commercial use. The infrastructure credit agreement will allow investors to pay reduced property taxes on those properties.
  7. Gave final approval to tax incentives for the collaborative project with the City of Anderson for a $12 million, 90-bed hotel downtown at the corner of South Main and East Market Streets. 
  8. Agreed, on first reading to lease .75 acres at the Anderson County Sports and Entertainment Complex to Duke Energy Carolinas, to provide “solar photovoltaic power aways, voltage regulations, and power quality regulation.” The move is for an emergency shelter that will provide power for Anderson County citizens in the event of an emergency. Wooten said the value of the solar project would cost the county $8 million if not for Duke Energy constructing the project. “This will be a tremendous benefit to public safety,” said Anderson County Councilman Ray Graham. “We want to thank Duke Energy for their investment in Anderson County."

 

At an earlier meeting Tuesday night, council also honored Anderson County Public Works Director and Deputy County Administrator Holt Hopkins for being named the South Carolina American Public Works Association’s Manager of the Year for his leadership and management over the past three years at Anderson County Pets Are Worth Saving (P.A.W.S.). Under his direction, P.A.W.S. has been transformed, and has become a resource for neighboring counties and agencies.

“Mr. Hopkins is passionate about his work with public works and is very deserving of this award,” said Anderson County Administrator Rusty Burns.