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Monday
Feb142022

News Notes for Monday

A Different Kind of Fishing Tournament for High School/College Fishing Teams Saturday

On Saturday, local high school and college fishing teams, along with other volunteers will have a chance to compete for a different kind of championship at Green Pond Landing at the surrounding areas of Hartwell Lake. The Lake Hartwell Clean Up Tournament, set for 8 a.m.- noon, will challenge teams and groups to see who can pick up the most trash and debris, complete with weigh-ins to see who brings in the biggest “catch.”  School teams are asked to wear their competition jerseys for the event. The top three teams in the High School Division and top three teams in the College Division will receive $500 for first place, $300 for second place and $200 for third place. More information here. http://andersonobserver.com/news/2022/1/26/green-pond-trash-clean-up-tournament-weighs-in-on-beautifica.html?SSScrollPosition=0

Belton Preparatory Academy Named Among Top Charter Schools

Belton Preparatory Academy (BPA) was recently named one of the Charter Institute at Erskine’s 2020-2021 Diamond Schools of Excellence. The school was also presented with South Carolina House resolution H.4731 in recognition for their “outstanding performance,” by S.C. Rep. Jay West, R–Anderson. The academy scored in the top one percent in the state in Math and in the top two percent in the state in English in the 2020-2021 school year. BPA is also the highest-performing Title I school in the state of South Carolina and the sixth highest-performing elementary school in the state. For more information about the Charter Institute at Erskine’s School of Excellence Awards, visit https://erskinecharters.org/accountabilitymodel.

City Council meeting tonight. More information here.

County Council meets tomorrow night. More information here.

Saturday
Feb122022

City Council to Consider Judges, Medical Contract for Jail

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Anderson City Council will consider the medical contract for the detention center, a request for on-call consulting services for engineering, surveying and architecture, and the appointments of municipal judges as part of Monday's meeting in the council chambers downtown.

The names of the judges will be discussed in exectutive session near the end of the meeting.

Council will also have a final vote on the rezoning of Fairway Green.

Agenda here.

Saturday
Feb122022

County to Consider New Development Approval Process 

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer
Anderson County Council will consider changes to requests for certain development projects approval by the planning commission and private ambulance services in the county as part of Tuesday's meeting at 6:30 p.m. at the Civic Center.
A 6 p.m. awards ceremonwy will honor Estella Williams for her lifetime service to the Anderson County and Gerald Black for his decades of service.
Friday
Feb112022

Anderson County to Kick Off New Litter Cleanup Initiative

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Anderson County is launching an renewed cleanup initiative to curb litter and illegal dumping.

Last year the county collected nearly 20,000 bags of roadside garbage, more than triple the amount from 2013, and that number does not include all efforts. 

The county hopes to boost the "Adopt-A-Spot" program, which allows neighborhoods, individuals or groups to commit to keeping a certain area free of trash. The program is the local version of the national "Adopt-A-Highway" program, which is also active in the county.

Currently there are 88 groups participating in "Adopt-A-Spot" and 34 participating in "Adopt-A-Highway" in Anderson County.

A date for the return of the annual "Great Anderson County Cleanup," which was limited to individuals for the past two years do to the pandemic, is expected to be announced next week.

 

Thursday
Feb102022

County Wants to Hear from Citizens without Reliable Broadband

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Got broadband problems? Anderson County wants your help.

If you have no access or slow/limited to access to broadband internet, the county wants your stories about the challenge and frustations of being left without reliable access. Email: ineedbroadband@andersoncountysc.org 

Anderson County announced a partnership with Upcountry Fiber last week to provide high-speed broadband to areas of the county which are unserved or underserved.

Working with the county, Upcountry Fiber, an internet service provider created by utility cooperatives Blue Ridge Electric Co-op (BREC) and West Carolina Rural Telephone Cooperative (WCTEL) will provide more than 2,800 miles of high-speed fiber internet access to those areas of Anderson County currently in need of the service. A projected $175 million will be needed, which will be paid by federal and state infrastructure funds, to complete the project.

Thursday
Feb102022

Neil Paul Joins Bass Fishing Hall of Fame Board

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Visit Anderson Executive Director Neil Paul has joined the Bass Fishing Hall of Fame Board of Directors.

Paul is one of eight new members added to the board who volunteers their time to celebrate, promote and preserve the sport. 

"This group includes individuals who rank among the best professional bass anglers of all times, as well as those who know the ins-and-outs of the bass fishing industry and tournament operations, and their talents will only strengthen the Board," said Todd Hammill of Wired2fish.com. 

Paul has been instrumental in the development of Anderson County's Green Pond Landing and Event Center on Hartwell Lake which has served as the site of multiple BASSMASTER Classics.

For more information on all the board members, visit https://www.bassfishinghof.com/the-board.

Wednesday
Feb092022

Anderson to Host Five-State Student Robotics Regional

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

More than 750 high school students K-12 students from South Carolina, North Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama, and Tennessee will visit Anderson March 9-12 for the Electric City Regional at the Anderson Sports and Entertainment Center to compete in South Carolina’s only FIRST® Robotics Competition (FRC). 

This year’s FRC game, sponsored by Boeing, is called RAPID REACT, and attending teams are being given two months to design, prototype, build, test, code, and refine their 100+ lb. robots before facing each other at the Electric City Regional to vie for a spot at the FRC Championship.   

Teams compete in two alliances of three robots each to intake ‘cargo’ from the Terminal and score it in either the lower or upper Hub before climbing up to 8 feet in the Hangar. The matches last 2.5 minutes and are played on a field just a bit smaller than a basketball court. The top two teams on the winning alliance will advance to the FIRST® Robotics Competition Championship in Houston, Texas, April 20-23, where they will compete against teams from all around the world. 

The event will be livestreamed on the FIRST SC Twitch channel.  

Students who participate in FIRST® Robotics Competition are also eligible for more than $80 million in college scholarships provided by participating universities and sponsors. To learn more about FRC visit: firstinspires.org.

Teams will also contend for STEM awards recognizing innovation in programming, design, entrepreneurship, and manufacturing, excellence in community outreach.   

Volunteers are always welcome. To volunteer, contact FIRST SC Volunteer Coordinator, Carla Rickenbaker.

FIRST® is a global, nonprofit robotics community that prepares young people for the future through exciting and accessible k-12 robotics competitions.  

Wednesday
Feb092022

Striped Bass Event Raises $21,325 for Food Bank

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

January's Striped Bass Fishing Challenge raised $21,325 for the Second Harvest Food Bank, as well as garnering 1,311 pounds of donated food. 

"We can't thank you enough for your mission-driven efforts to help fight food insecurity throughout the Upstate of South Carolina and beyond," said Donal Dickens, Regional Branch Director for Second Harvest. "It is obvious that you and your organization function withserving hearts and are truly compassionate about meeting the needs of others." 

Donal said the funds would be used for families in need battling food insecurity on a daily basis including seniors and veterans. The funds and food will allow Second Harvest to provide over 150,300 meals to the region.

The annual event launched from Green Pond Landing and Events Center.

"We all should be proud of the part we play in this event," said Neil Paul, executive director for Visit Anderson. "We are looking forward to the 2023 event."

Tuesday
Feb082022

S.C. House Pushes Private School Voucher Plan

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Leaders in the South Carolina House appear to be pushing their own bill to give poorer parents money to pay tuition at private schools.

A House subcommittee approved a bill Tuesday that would create a three-year program to give $5,000 in tuition assistance to 5,000 students whose families are eligible for Medicaid or who have parents in the military. The money can only be spent for tuition fees or books.

Unlike some other voucher programs, the money wouldn't come out of the state budget for public schools, instead being pulled from a contingency fund, House Ways and Means Chairman Murrell Smith said.

The pandemic has both increased support for school choice and made people who already backed the idea more passionate, Smith said.

“Parents want a voice in their children’s education and they want a choice in their children’s education,” the Sumter Republican said.

Smith said representatives are still working on the language of the bill, acknowledging the suggestions of teacher and school board groups. They have said the proposal needs to add that schools getting the money can't discriminate against religion or gender as well as a number of other categories already in the bill such as race.

They also will consider a request that all students getting the tuition assistance take the same standardized tests so parents can more easily compare schools.

The full House Ways and Means Committee will consider the proposal Wednesday.

Rep. Wendy Brawley said she thinks parents should be able to send their children to the school of their choice, but the state should fully fund public schools before paying private school tuition.

“We are willing to set aside $75 million for this program but we are not wiling to pay the amount per student that we are required to pay under the constitution,” said Brawley, a Democrat from Hopkins.

A Senate subcommittee plans another hearing Wednesday on its own voucher bill, which would allow parents to spend up to about $7,000 of public school money on private schools as well as tutoring, equipment or other needs.

Eligibility is different too. Any student whose family makes less than twice the federal poverty limit — about $53,000 for a family of four — or is eligible for Medicaid could enroll .

Sunday
Feb062022

McCuen Marks Start of Fourth Year as City Manager by Accelerating Progress in Anderson

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Urgency is not often associated with government, where planning and paperwork can take priority over action.

But Anderson City Manager David McCuen brought a firefighter’s mentality when he took his position in Feb. 2019. McCuen is intense and amiable, finding satisfaction in both the big and small details of getting things done.

“It’s a characteristic we share,” said Anderson County Administrator Rusty Burns. “We like to get things done as quickly as possible and move on to the next challenge.”

McCuen already had a running start when he took over at city manager, having served as the Electric City’s assistant city manager for more than three years, arriving with a background that suggested he has never been one to travel in the slow lane. 

While attending Presbyterian College, where he majored in Business Administration Management, McCuen worked for Emergency Services for the City of Clinton and Laurens County, answering calls at all hours and building experiences he would find useful in the years ahead. During his student years, he graduated from PC in 2006, McCuen also got his first taste of city management, participating in city government in Clinton just as they were planning and eventually building a downtown hotel.  

While at PC, he met and married Elizabeth Anne McLean, the granddaughter of the school’s legendary Football Coach Cally Gault. Elizabeth’s father, Bob McClean, no stranger to city government, is mayor of Clinton.  

Graduate school was another a blur of academics and public service for McCuen. 

While earning his Master’s Degree in Public Administration at Clemson University, he was working as full-time firefighter and EMT in Greer, where he “developed some fantastic relationships,” including getting to know and work with the city manager. During this time, he also worked in city manager’s office in Woodruff. 

Upon graduation, McCuen served as assistant city manager Abbeville for just under three years before being appointed city manager, where he continued his participation in EMS work.

“Abbeville is unique,” said McCuen, adding the work, which included running a municipality that produced and made wholesale purchases of electricity, along with water and sewer as the management of Lake Succession offered invaluable experience for a city manager.= 

Across his career, said networking led McCuen to working relationships with other city managers and leaders, and to his interest in the City of Anderson. 

“Coming out of the gates David helped us usher in the hotel and parking garage,” said Anderson Mayor Terence Roberts. “His connections with the developers and economic development experience were valuable, especially during the pandemic. The good thing about youth is energy, and sometimes that is a plus.” 

A Greenville native, who grew up when downtown was in disrepair, McCuen said witnessing that city’s rebirth and transformation inspired what he thought could be a similar path for the City of Anderson. 

“Though not there yet, I saw things already in place that indicated Anderson was going to experience a transformation,” said McCuen. “There were already so many making investments in downtown, it made it easy to bet on the success of downtown Anderson.” 

McCuen said individuals such as Steve Kay, John Glenn, Ron Haskell and Jeff Waters kick started what has continued to be a series of years of unbroken growth. 

Arriving as assistant city manager in 2015, McCuen almost immediately went to work to pave the way for a new downtown hotel. Working with council and private investors, the Home2 Suites by Hilton opened in 2021. 

The hotel, complete with ground level retail opportunities, also sparked the construction of a new downtown parking garage, which was built with growth in mind. The new structure will feature a top deck, complete with a restaurant, that will serve as a place for events.  

“You can see the mountains from up there, plus all of downtown,” said McCuen, adding city council recognized the special opportunity of such a venue.  He expects to make an announcement soon with more details on the facility, including a targeted completion date.

“The hotel created a new hospitality market downtown. Anderson serves the region economically, and having a downtown hotel for visitors is important.”

He said such venues as Bleckley Station, which hosts weddings, conferences and other special events needed a hotel within walking distance that could house large numbers of visitors.  

With the nationwide movement of revitalizing downtowns, walkability has become a key ingredient to the success of cities. This goal is driving much of the planning for downtown Anderson. 

Clemson University’s two home football games in November, each of which almost filled the new hotel, offer encouraging signs for the future site. 

“Fans came early (there was a two-night minimum stay), stayed in downtown and experienced downtown, and we hope will return,” said McCuen.

Anderson University, the largest private university in South Carolina and considered part of the greater downtown area, is adding a football program in 2024 to the rest of its NCAA sports, which should create demand for lodging. 

“Such continued growth across the board in our area will eventually lead to another franchise hotel downtown,” said McCuen. 

Permanent housing in short supply in Anderson, especially in or near downtown, is also on the city administrator’s radar.  Downtown housing is currently at 100 percent occupancy. The renovation of the Palmetto Building for condominiums, is nearing completion, but McCuen said the new project by the same developers is more exciting.

The $29 million revitalization of the Chem-Tex site, will bring 126 new apartment units and more commercial space downtown. 

The city is also working with the county and with others in a number of other projects, including the potential revitalization of the Anderson Mill site. Both the city and county are keen to work with private developers to clean up such old mill sites, since it typically costs government agencies up to four times as much to revitalize do to federal regulatory burdens.

“We are working on hundreds of millions of dollars in projects right now,” said. McCuen. “And we need places for people to live who are coming to fill the thousands of jobs coming online in the county.” 

McCuen said working with Burns, Anderson County Economic Director Burris Nelson, and others have played a major role in the success of the area. 

Meanwhile, the City of Anderson, a council-management style of government, day-to-day operations are McCuen’s responsibility.  

“He’s been aggressive leading the city staff through a very interesting time, especially during the pandemic,” said Anderson City Councilman Kyle Newton. “We’re a growing city he’s done a great job leading. It’s extremely important that we are all working together, and David’s done a good job in our relationships with the county and the legislative delegation. We all work closely together.” 

One such project that involves all three of those bodies of government is the trails system in Anderson County. Currently Anderson County is building a trail that will connect the AnMed Health Campus on S.C. 81 N with the Anderson Sports and Entertainment Complex. The city’s Greenway, or trail system, begins with a gateway at the Anderson Recreation Center and connects to Linley Park. Plans call for that trail to connect all the way down Whitner Creek and to downtown just under the bridge at Earl Street. The hope is eventually to connect all trails to the civic center, and the county hopes to extend walking trails as far as Pendleton or Clemson. 

“This walkability is very important for the future of downtown,” said McCuen.

Another key to the future of downtown are the funds provided by accommodations and hospitality taxes, along with fees for business licenses, which bring in close to $16 million annually.  

“I like seeing these funds, without using taxpayer dollars, reinvested into parks, such as Carolina Wren Park, along with what we are building at many of our other facilities,” said McCuen.  

The “Shock This Block” campaign progress, which garnered suggestion from more than 2,500 citiznes, is also under way.  Some of these proposals, including the Chem-Tex revitalization, are in the works. New entrances to downtown are also complete and under construction.    

And like Burns, McCuen, once consensus is reached, is ready to take action. 

“I want to see faster momentum on the economic front and new businesses downtown. 2022 is project after project after project.”

He said private partnerships are the key, with public agencies providing the opportunity and private industry stepping in to make investments from which the public will benefit a reality.

“Multi-family housing brings other restaurants and businesses, then maybe a grocery store, as downtown becomes a neighborhood,” said McCuen. 

He does not, however, want to do things which diminish the community, such tearing down historic buildings or not protecting important local resources. McCuen said lessons learned from other cities such as Greenville or Charlotte will help raise red flags when needed.

Looking ahead, McCuen said the city is in the process of a comprehensive plan for the future. The plan will involve citizens suggestions/ideas, and a consultant who will help lay out a roadmap for the years ahead.  

“We want to execute plans, not just make plans,” said McCuen, a graduate of the University of Oklahoma Economic Development Institute. 

McCuen said it’s going to be a team effort, and is confident the partnerships are solid and city council and his staff are ready for the challenge.

Meanwhile, McCuen, not yet 40, continues to thrive on the broad opportunities for him in his position as city manager. 

“I really like the variety of the job - the fire service, EMS, and the business side and economic development side,” said McCuen, who still occasionally goes on EMS calls. “I like all aspects of city government and how it impacts the communityI like managing a city, the outside part, and a big organization inside with 500 employees to manage. My job is to make sure all going in the same direction, and we’ve done a good job of that.” 

Sunday
Feb062022

"Moon" Shines Bright Over Buffalo in CLT Production 

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

The Clemson Little Theatre at the Pendleton Playhouse opened a fire hose of fun with their most recent production: “Moon Over Buffalo.”

The cast takes a deep dive in the playful misdirection of this play, which features a pair of road-worn stage actors who, in 1953, fear they are at the final stages of the sunset of their careers as they tour with their own company in Buffalo, N.Y.

George (Paul Hyde) and Charlotte Hay (Paula Doolittle) who have somehow decided that their small, failing touring company should tackle both “Cyrano de Bergerac” and “Private Lives” on the same stage on alternate days in Buffalo, when a unexpected phone call offers one last shot at the Hollywood dream that has eluded the aging couple.

Hyde shines as George, from the embedded play-within-a-play scenes where he berates his cast for lack of enthusiasm, to the last act’s drunken antics that fuel action and laughs. Doolitte as the stagey Charlotte whose ambition always seems to override common sense is also just right. Charlotte finds that moving between acting and real life a bit challenging at times, and Doolittle is spot on. These actors are long-time veterans of the local theatre scene, and it shows, as their strong timing sets the pace for the play.

George is a philanderer, who got his much young cast member, Eileen (Caitlyn Herrington), pregnant, while Charlotte and the couple’s lawyer Richard (Paul Cappola) are repeatedly ready to leave together to start a new life.  

As the couple watches their personal lives erode along with their careers, their daughter Rosalind (Raine Riley) drops in for an unexpected visit to introduce her local weatherman fiancé Howard (Andrew Bishop), who is in awe of the celebrity of George and Charlotte.  

Rosalind, a former actress torn between her love for her parents and the harsh reality of where the theatre life has taken them, has one of the most hilarious moments of the play as an actress left waiting, alone, on stage for George who is more than a little late. 

Rosalind generated sustained laughter as her desperation grew. When George finally takes the stage in the wrong costume and reciting dialog from another play, she delivers one of the funniest moments of the play as the chaos that follows unravels the rest of the story, which centered around a promised visit from legendary movie director Frank Capra, who just might have dream roles for George and Charlotte. 

As Howard, Bishop finds the right groove in a more slapstick, over-the-top, role, by taking a low-key approach as a kind of sleepy version of Ted Baxter.

Meanwhile Charlotte’s near-deaf mother Ethel (Lynn Campbell), the costume manager for the troupe, has little use for George. Campbell, another stage veteran, brings life to the alternately bored-angry Ethel, rising above the occasionally dated jokes with a fine subdued energy.

As Eileen, Herrington finds the sweet spot as the clueless, crying ingénue who baffled George, infuriates Charlotte, and ultimately wins over Howard. Her weeping is a track which sends the male characters into chaos.

Paul Coppola is just right as the confused/lovestruck Richard who keeps Charlotte packing and unpacking to leave with him, much to the hysteric distress of George, to whom “Moon Over Buffalo” ultimately belongs.

Hyde’s George is asked to do just about everything but sing and dance, and he moves easily between dramatic, pompous confusion, scene stealing madness as Cyrano, to a Foster Brooks-like stumbling drunken rants and stumbles. 

I am uncertain how Will Nash Broyles pulled off the direction of this play, which is a series of fast-moving changes in action and storyline, but whatever he did it worked.

The final scene, which leaves open the hope of something better for George and Charlotte while conceding the possibility is probably another long shot, leaves the audience with a little hope for this crew of theatre misfits and their family. Perhaps they wished on the moon and found in each other what they really wanted. 

The Pendleton Playhouse remains one of the most comfortable venues for those attending local theatre productions, with excellent viewing angles throughout the theatre. “Moon Over Buffalo” ended Sunday, but their season is just beginning. For more information on future productions, visit here.

Friday
Feb042022

Challengers Join Incumbents for April 5 Anderson Municipal Elections

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Filing for Anderson Mayor and City Council seats 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 At-Large closed Thursday, with a few challengers to incumbents and two candidates seeking to fill the Seat 2 left vacant by Don Chapman who resigned in December to seek the S.C. House Dist. 8 seat.

Incubents Kyle Newton, Seat 1, Jeff Roberts, Seat 3, Beatrice Thompson, Seat 5, and Mayor Terence Roberts will face no opposition in the April 5 municipal elections.

Incumbent Matt Harbin, Seat 7 At-Large, will face challengers Monica Rockwell and Bill Thompson III.

Luis Martinez and Bobby Johnson are vying to fill the vacated Seat 2.

Run-off Election, if necessary, are scheduled for April 19.

Thursday
Feb032022

"Art Slam" to Challenge Creativity of Local Artist March 4

Observer Reports

The Anderson Arts Center is hosting an "Art Slam" creative competition on March 4, from 5-9 p.m.

The event will feature a live competition among 12 artists. Each artists will be given a “mystery box” of supplies and must create a piece of art on the spot.

“Much like the television show ‘Chopped,’ which is a cooking competition, Art Slam will follow a similar concept," said April Cameron, executive director of the Arts Center. "The artists won’t know what materials they have to work with until they open their box. They may also have an opportunity to grab some ‘wild card’ items to use, if they get lucky.”

The artists will be given a two-hour time frame to complete their work, from 6-8 p.m. The creations will be judged, and the winner will be awarded with the opportunity to have a solo exhibit in a community location.

In addition to the live art competition, performing artists will help entertain guests. Poetry readings, musicians, singers and other entertainers will perform during the event. 

As part of the event, an artisan vendor market will be open to the public from 5-9 p.m., and there will be youth art activities for children.

A food truck and cash bar will provide food and beverages.

The Arts Center is now accepting applications for both visual artists and vendors. The applications can be found on the Arts Center’s Facebook page under Events.  Visit www.AndersonArts.org for more information.

The Anderson Arts Center is celebrating its 50th year of providing cultural experiences to the community.