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Tuesday
Sep282021

Federal Judge Suspends S.C. from Banning School Masks

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A federal judge Tuesday suspended South Carolina from enforcing a rule that banned school districts from requiring masks for students.

Parents of disabled children, helped by the American Civil Liberties Union, sued the state saying the ban discriminated against medically vulnerable students by keeping them out of public schools as the COVID-19 pandemic continues.

The mask ban has been forcefully backed by Republican Gov. Henry McMaster and GOP lawmakers who said parents should decide whether students wear masks, not school officials.

The ruling wasn't even a close call, U.S. District Judge Mary Geiger Lewis wrote, stopping the state from enforcing a one-year ban placed in the budget.

“It is noncontroversial that children need to go to school. And, they are entitled to any reasonable accommodation that allows them to do so. No one can reasonably argue that it is an undue burden to wear a mask to accommodate a child with disabilities,” Lewis wrote.

Lewis compared the General Assembly preventing mask requirements to telling schools they can no longer install wheelchair ramps.

“Masks must, at a minimum, be an option for school districts to employ to accommodate those with disabilities so they, too, can access a free public education,” the judge wrote.

McMaster's spokesman Brian Symmes said Tuesday's ruling isn't the last word in the case.

“The governor strongly disagrees with the court’s decision and will defend a parent’s right to decide what’s best for their children up to the United States Supreme Court, if necessary,” Symmes said in a statement,

The Republican-dominated South Carolina House put the provision into the budget in June when the state was seeing an average of about 150 new COVID-19 cases a day.

 

Tuesday
Sep282021

Downtown Ministry Brings Hope to Neighbors in Need

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer
It's been a challenging time for those who serve our friends, family and neighbors in need, but Hope Missions of the Upstate, is doing its part.
The ministry, located on South Tower Street in Anderson, offers not only food and spiritual guidance for those who might could use a little extra compassion, the group also works to provide a sense of community with spaces designed to encourage those who to take part to hang out and get to know each other.
Leaders, voluteers and those who have benefited from the work talked about the effort in this interview with the Anderson Observer.
Tuesday
Sep282021

Anderson County Jobless Rate Down Slightly in August

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Anderson County's jobless rate dropped to 3.9 percent in August, down from 4 percent in July.

Statewide the unemployment rate, which is calculated differntly from the county rates, fell to 4.2 percent, down from 4.3 percent in July.

“The activity is what we generally expect based on trends observed over the past decade” said Steve Newton, Director of Governmental Affairs for Anderson County.  “Though we still have some catching up to do for us to be where would’ve been without the disruption, it is encouraging that we continue to move in a positive direction.“

Total employment in the county increased by more than 1,500 from this time last year, and is up by almost 1,000 from August 2019, an indicator that Anderson County is gaining back ground ceded during the height of pandemic-related economic stress.

Tuesday
Sep282021

YMCA to Take Food Donations for Good Neighbor Cupboard

Observer Reports

The Anderson Area YMCA will collect non-perishable food donations during October.

The donations will help the Good Neighbor Cupboard stock their pantries for the months leading up to the holidays, which are typically the times of most demand.

Donations can be dropped off at the front desk at the YMCA beginning in October.

Monday
Sep272021

Downtown Iva Business District Growing

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Iva Town Clerk Tim Taylor offers updates on economic development in the town as well as upcoming fall events in this interview with the Anderson Observer.

Monday
Sep272021

Update: Anderson County to Expand Ride Share to Work Program

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

UPDATE From Aug. 1 Observer story

The Rides to Work ride sharing program, run by the South Main Chapel and Mercy Center and funded by a grant through Anderson County, has been up and running for several months and is based on another local program and provides Uber rides to work, especially for those who work swing shifts or night shifts.

The program provides temporary help those workers get established in employment as they save to purchase their own vehicle for transportation.

Anderson County Adminstrator Rusty Burns, said transportation is the central issue in filling many of the manufacturing jobs in the county, said he seeking other grants and partnerships with local companies to fund the program.

The other challenge to the program is the availability of Uber drivers in Anderson, due at least in part to the size of the county. 

Sunday
Sep262021

Sept 26 Podcast: Updates from County, Belton, Iva, AU

Interviews:

Rusty Burns :54 seconds

Pendleton Mayor Frank Crenshaw 35:46

Belton Mayor Eleanor Dorn 44:08

Belton Police Chief Ross Richer 54:27

West Pelzer Police Chief Scott Stoller 1:08:49

Iva Town Manager Tim Taylor 1:34:29

Anderson County Council Vice Chairman Brett Sanders 1:56:27

Anderson County Director of Governmental Affairs Steve Newton 2:07:57

Dr. Anthony Guiseppi-Elie 2:30:14

Sunday
Sep262021

Opinion: Don't Take Medical Advice from Pastors

Opinion/Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Going to your church’s pastor for medical advice is like going to the dentist to get your car fixed. You might find a dentist who can ably repair your car, but don’t count on it.  

Some pastors have been and continue to be cautious about the surge in the virus, worrying about the health of those in their congregations (they have already preached COVID funerals), and those with whom I have had discussions are doing all they can in the current climate, even though some in their congregations push back.

But I have also heard other pastors who are spreading misinformation, misrepresenting data and ridiculing the best efforts of the scientific community to deal with the pandemic (the accomplishments have been phenomenal given the short period of time), and sadly attaching religious significance or personal spin in ways which do not reflect truth.

Trusting God does not mean hunkering down on messaging which questions the efficacy of proven steps, such as the vaccine and masks, in stemming the tide of the virus and of the new variant(s). Imagine the toll without the vaccine or without the radical steps taken last year to slow this pandemic down. More people have died in the U.S. of COVID than from the Spanish Flu of 1918, making it the deadliest pandemic (in raw numbers) in our country's history. Arguments of deaths being due to other factors are moot. When someone dies of heart disease and many other ailments, there are contributing factors, so to suggest only already sick people are dying from COVID is disingenuous and crafted to fit a narrative that is, even when unintentional, harmful.  

It plays into our culture. There exists an addiction to certainty that craves an absolute black and white views on issues, and the virus is evidence that such lust for a worldview that makes us comfortable and/or gains the approval of our friends or the faces in the crowd. Addiction to certainty is taking a journey to a place you have never been, yet give others minute details and descriptions of things one has yet seen. Presumptive vision is not the same and understanding. 

People struggle with uncertainty, assuming that certainty will chase away fear, but it does not. Prematurely gasping for answers, especially those others might want to hear, without fully understanding events as they unfold, can provide marginal and temporary relief to some. When the outcome turns out differently that which they are so certain of, they regroup and recast what we said before with yet another set of certainties that may or may not hold up as time passes. 

Such meandering can be harmless. But in the case of a worldwide pandemic which has already killed 4.4 million people and is killing roughly 2,000 more daily in the United States, it is dangerous to suggest what is happening is come political-created or media-created reality.  

To suggest the scientific community has been weak on this pandemic is to expose a fundamental misunderstanding of science, which is not based on dogma, but is constantly updating information based on the most up-to-date evidence. 

Sadly, dogma is often the hallmark of pastors in some churches, something which might find a legitimate place setting orthodoxy, but has little place for evaluating such things as medical issues. Unfortunately, many among these church leaders who should reframe from suggesting they are qualified to research such issues with authority, charge on with their opinions and observervations.

Anecdotal taunts of “I had COVID and barely felt anything” or “I don’t know anyone personally who died of COVID” ring hollow. Just because one doesn’t know any of the 38,000 people who died on the highways in the U.S. last year or barks out “I had a car accident and it didn’t kill me” does not diminish facts, no matter how one might seek to twist them.

To suggest that people are still dying and being hospitalized at alarming rates in spite of the vaccine is their creation of a new straw man, one that is as easily blown away as a goose feather.  

There is no way of knowing how many more worldwide would have died without the rapid release and deployment of the vaccine. But after the vaccination became widely available, both cases of the virus and deaths related to it plummeted. It is evident now that nearly all those who are currently contracting the virus and those dying from it , are mostly unvaccinated and those in ICU are almost all unvaccinated.  

Locally, this trend reflects that of the rest of the world.

AnMed reported 147 COVID-19 patients on Friday. 129 of those were either unvaccinated or partially vaccinated and 38 were in the ICU. Of the 18 fully vaccinated, only one was listed in the ICU. 

Talk to doctors and nurses who have been treating such patients since last March to get a bigger picture of how serious this virus is and has been.  

AnMed Internist Dr. Wilson Sofley posted this on Facebook late last week: 

“Your local health care workers are trying to help you, our neighbors. We are not part of a vast conspiracy. We do not get paid more if we diagnose a patient with COVID-19 or say they died from COVID-19. We just want our patients and our community to be healthy.” 

No religious notations, no political grandstanding, just a medical professional who wants his friends and neighbors to know: “Multiple well controlled studies have shown that the best way to prevent a COVID-19 infection is to get vaccinated.” 

His message is simply and comes from a place of compassion and concern. So should ours. My hope is more will spread this message, and speak the truth in love to our community, ignoring the loud voices who reject truth. 

Sunday
Sep262021

Pendleton Growing, Oil Mill Coming Down, Fall Events Planned

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

Pendleton is growing, with new new housing, economic development said Mayor Frank Crenshaw in this interview with the Anderson Observer.

Sunday
Sep262021

S.C. Senate Cancels October Special Session

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina Senate won’t meet in special session next month after all.

Senate President Harvey Peeler sent a letter Friday to senators canceling the special session set to begin Oct. 12. They were supposed to debate how to spend billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 relief money and redistricting.

But a subcommittee working on new state Senate districts as well as U.S. House and South Carolina House districts said it won’t be finished with the new maps by mid-October, Peeler wrote.

Leaders of the South Carolina House also said this week that they would not come back to take up the relief spending bills, so Peeler wrote it was unnecessary to spend the money on a special session and “have these bills languish in the House until January.”

One thing not mentioned in Peeler’s letter or House leadership comments after a closed-door meeting this week were masks in schools.

The House put a provision in the budget passed in June that prevented school districts from requiring masks and the Senate did not remove it. Back then, the state was seeing about 150 new COVID-19 cases a day. South Carolina has been seeing several thousand new cases daily for nearly the past two months.

Democrats in the House and Senate called for a special session on Aug. 17 to do something about the rapid spread of COVID-19, especially in schools. They noted in a statement this week that in the 36 days since, 1,500 people have died in the pandemic and 163,000 new COVID-19 cases were reported.

“It’s unfortunate that the House Republican Caucus has the time to meet in Columbia for lunch, but not to convene to address the ongoing and prolonged coronavirus pandemic,” Democratic Rep. Russell Ott wrote. “Children in South Carolina continue to be put in harm’s way while our Governor and legislative leadership sit on the sidelines and do nothing.”

Masks were not an item mentioned for a possible special session in the June resolution ending the Legislature’s regular meetings. It would require a two-thirds vote to add masks which would likely be a hard hurdle to get over in the Republican-dominated House and Senate.

House Republicans held a closed-door meeting Wednesday and afterward, Speaker Jay Lucas called the discussions “productive and spirited,” but said he has no plans to call a special session because of the limitations of the session-ending resolution.

House Majority Leader Gary Simrill said there may be a special session in December for redistricting, which would leave about four months to handle legal challenges to the new maps before filing is scheduled to begin for the 2022 elections.

Friday
Sep242021

High School Football Scores

TL Hanna         45        F

Westside         14        

 

Abbeville         45        F

Belton-Honea Path     21        

 

Hillcrest           48        F

Wren   35        

 

Palmetto         33        F

Pendleton        6          

 

Walhalla          38        F

Crescent          33        

Friday
Sep242021

Trails, Parks, EMS, Economic Development Highlight County Update

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer

In his monthly update with the Observer, Anderson County Administrator Rusty Burns, offers updates on a number of projects including:

The possibility of a new trail that connects Anderson to Pendleton to Clemson

PAWS Dog Park construction

The downtown courthouse square property

Saturday's opening of the new airport terminal

The new basketball/soccer development at Welliington Park

The completion of Homeland Park Fire Department upgrades, and preparations for a new water department in Homeland Park

The countywide EMS progress 

Cleanup at the Viva Tire site 

Kid Venture

The Anderson Civic Center

And upcoming Law Enforcement Appreciation event county/city

 

Friday
Sep242021

Busy Summer Gives Way to Event-Filled Fall in Belton

Greg Wilson/Anderson Observer
New Belton Mayor Eleanor Dorn has been busy since officially taking office this summer.
Economic development, including new businesses and housing, along with recreation fall events and other updates are part of this interview with the Anderson Observer.