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Tuesday
Apr122016

Paul Ryan Says He'll Not Accept Nomination

House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said on Tuesday he would reject any attempt to draft him as a presidential candidate, trying to silence speculation that he could surface as a unity choice should Donald Trump or Ted Cruz falter.

"Let me be clear: I do not want nor will I accept the nomination of our party," Ryan said in remarks at the Republican National Committee.

Ryan, the top elected Republican in Washington and the party's 2012 vice presidential candidate, has been the subject of persistent speculation that he could emerge as the nominee if an impasse over the party's pick develops at the July 18-21 Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

In an interview with Milwaukee's WISN radio earlier on Tuesday, Ryan said: "I am going to try again today to put this bed. The answer is 'No' and my strong opinion is, if it goes to an open convention ... my answer is the delegates should pick among the people who actually ran for president this year ...

"I made a really clear choice not to run for president. Therefore, I will not be nominated. I will not allow my name to be placed in nomination and it will not be me. ...I just want to be really crystal clear," he said.

Ryan has repeatedly said he is not interested in entering the presidential race, but advocates for such a scenario have pointed out that he was cool to becoming House speaker until he was finally persuaded to take over from John Boehner last year.

Tuesday
Apr122016

Air Quality Awareness Event April 26 at Library

As part of Anderson’s Air Quality Awareness Week is April 25-29, Breathe Clean Anderson, will sponsor an event focusing on how air quality impacts the state's health and economy will be held April 26 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at teh Anderson County Library.

Speakers for the event are Brian Barnes of the South Carolina Department of Health and Evironmental Control, and Mike Shoemaker, manager of respiratory care service at AnMed.\For more information, please contact: 

For more information contact Celia Boyd Myers at 864-260-4720 or cboyd@andersoncountysc.org

Tuesday
Apr122016

Bible Makes List of Most Challenged Library Books

mericans have objected to titles as diverse as the Bible and Fifty Shades of Grey over the last year, according to a list of the most challenged books which has just been released by the American Library Association.

The Bible made the line-up for 2015 in sixth place, the ALA said, with users objecting to its presence in libraries and schools over its “religious viewpoint”. The text has not previously appeared in the ALA’s annual citation of challenged titles.

James La Rue, director of the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, speculated to Associated Press that its inclusion was down to “people who feel that if a school library buys a copy of the Bible, it’s a violation of church and state”.

“And sometimes there’s a retaliatory action, where a religious group has objected to a book and a parent might respond by objecting to the Bible,” said LaRue.

The book to receive the greatest numbers of challenges in 2015 was John Green’s young adult novel Looking for Alaska, said the ALA, with objections raised over its “offensive language”, “sexually explicit” scenes and suitability for the age group. The novel is the bestselling author of The Fault in Our Stars’ debut, and tells of Miles Halter and how he falls for Alaska Young. “If people were rain, I was drizzle and she was a hurricane,” he writes.

EL James’ erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey came in second, drawing criticism for being “sexually explicit”, “poorly written” and even over “concerns that a group of teenagers will want to try it”.

Transgender picture book I Am Jazz was in third, with a collection of interviews with transgender teenagers, Beyond Magenta, in fourth. The ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom defines a challenge as “a formal, written complaint, filed with a library or school requesting that materials be removed because of content or appropriateness”.

Mark Haddon’s novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time was in fifth place; last summer, the title was pulled from a Florida school’s summer reading list after parents objected to the swearing contained in the text. Haddon said at the time that the book was “not just a novel which contains swearing but a novel about swearing”. Its main character, Christopher, a 15-year-old with Asperger syndrome, “is completely unaware of the offence that swearing is intended to cause and therefore it simply washes over him,” said Haddon, adding that “no-one has ever complained that the book is about a mother abandoning her son or that it contains a scene in which a father hits his son … But many people have complained that it contains the word ‘cunt’.”

Other titles on the list include Alison Bechdel’s acclaimed graphic memoir Fun Home, and David Levithan’s novel Two Boys Kissing. In total, 275 challenges were recorded by the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, down from 311 last year, and 464 in 2012. But the library body estimates that for every reported challenge, four or five remain unreported, and that “censorship is still a very serious problem”.

Over the last decade, it said it received reports of over 5,000 challenges to books, with “sexually explicit” material cited the most often (1,577 times) as a reason for an objection. The “vast majority” of challenges were initiated by parents (2,535), said the ALA.

Top 10 most challenged books of 2015:

1. Looking for Alaska by John Green

2. Fifty Shades of Grey by EL James

3. I Am Jazz by Jessica Herthel and Jazz Jennings

4. Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out by Susan Kuklin

5. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon

6. The Holy Bible

7. Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

8. Habibi by Craig Thompson

9. Nasreen’s Secret School: A True Story from Afghanistan by Jeanette Winter

10. Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan

Tuesday
Apr122016

School Dist. 5 to Host Career Expo an Job Fair

The Anderson 5 Career Campus will be hosting its first Career Expo and Job Fair on April 19 from 2-6 p.m. Approximately 25 companies are expected to be represented at this event.

The event will feature a special session called “Industry Signing Day” where students will be signing internship and other work-based learning contracts with industry (similar to college signing day). Students will have an opportunity to get a first look at industry to learn more about career opportunities and pathways. The event will open to the public at 3:15 p.m. and the community can also come to learn more about vacant jobs in Anderson and potentially apply for these positions. 

For more information, contact David Pressley, Anderson 5 Director of School-to-Work programs, at 864-260-5160.

Monday
Apr112016

Study: Wage Gap Costs S.C. Women $5.5 Billion

A new study suggests South Carolina’s Gender Wage Gap Costs the State’s Women More Than $5.5 billion a year.

The survey was put together by the National Partnership for Women and Families. 

It found that on average, South Carolina women employed full-time are paid just 80 cents for every dollar paid to men. That means women are getting paid $8,200 a year less to do the same job.

For every dollar paid to white men in South Carolina, African-American women who work full time, year-round are paid 57 cents. 

South Carolina is not the only state with a wage gap. The study found Oklahoma, Montana and Michigan have the worst disparity. 

The Paycheck Fairness Act in Congress would close loopholes in the Equal Pay Act, break patterns of pay discrimination, and establish stronger workplace protections for women.

Monday
Apr112016

No Students Injured in Morning School Bus Accident

No students were hurt when a school was struck by another vehicle while stopped at a railroad crossing on Whitehall Road Monday morning, according to Anderson County District Five Schools spokesman Kyle Newton.

31 students from Westside area schools were on the bus.

The crash happened around 8 a.m. near Powell Road, according to the SC Highway Patrol.

The students were transferred to a second bus which will complete the route.

Troopers are investigating the crash.

Sunday
Apr102016

Road at Civic Center to Close April 14-17 for Repaving

Jim Ed Rice Parkway at the Anderson County Sports and Enterntainment Comples, will be closed for repaving April 14-17.  The parkway from Camson Road  to the Sports Center entrance will also be closed during this time. 

Access to KidVenture and Chris Taylor Park will be limited, since it is the primary road accessing these areas.

Sunday
Apr102016

Wooten Named to S.C. District Export Council

Anderson County Council Candidate Craig Wooten of Tactical Medical Solutions Inc., is one of the five newest members on the South Carolina District Export Council recently named by U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker.

Wooten said he was honored to join the DEC and to help other Anderson and South Carolina businesses. 

The South Carolina District Export Council, coupled with its 59 counterparts nationwide, is a volunteer organization drawn from local businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits. DECs are composed of seasoned exporters whose companies have been positively impacted by international sales and exporting. Its members help ensure U.S. companies remain globally competitive through professional mentoring and advocacy. 

DEC members serve two-year terms and are appointed directly by the U.S. Secretary of Commerce. 

The new DEC members will work with statewide businesses, and have the ability to leverage the knowledge of their own industries and exporting for the betterment of other companies. Through their community relationships, DEC members also work to identify key issues affecting industry competitiveness in the global marketplace as well as enhance the efforts of U.S. Commercial Service located in Greenville, Columbia, and Charleston, the export assistance centers serving all of South Carolina. 

“Tactical Medical Solutions Inc. has over 35 international distributors and exports to over 65 countries across the globe, this level of success is a testament to our employees in Anderson and the cooperation we get at the local, state, and national levels,” said Ross Johnson, who is CEO and President. 

Tactical Medical Solutions Inc. is a global developer and manufacturer of medical supplies for combat and tactical medicine.

Saturday
Apr092016

Postage Prices to Drop Sunday

The cost to mail a letter will drop by two cents starting this weekend, a change the U.S. Postal Service opposes, saying will cost about $2 billion in revenue.

The new cost of a first-class stamp will be 47 cents. It had stood at 49 cents for the last two years, after the postal service said it needed to raise prices after a decline in revenue during the 2008 recession.

The postal service is governed by the Postal Regulatory Commission and is a financially independent federal agency, meaning it must raise its own money to operate and does not receive tax dollars.

The commission approved a temporary two-year increase in the price of stamps to help the USPS make back some of its losses after the recession. Postmaster General Megan Brennan said the agency applied to make the price increase permanent, but commissioners declined.

"Given our precarious financial condition and ongoing business needs, the price reduction required by the PRC exacerbates our losses," Brennan said in a statement Friday.

She said the agency has worked to reduce costs in the wake of years of operating deficits. She said the postal service has reduced expenses by $15 billion since the recession began in 2008.

The U.S. Postal Service has suffered with more people turning to email and electronic payment methods, while also encountering stiff competition for parcel shipping in the private sector from UPS and FedEx.

In addition to the reduction in price for first-class stamps, international letters will drop from $1.20 to $1.15 and postcards will drop from 35 cents to 34 cents. The reduction affects commercial shipping rates, as well.

The changes go into effect Sunday.

Saturday
Apr092016

United Way, Subway Partnership to Help Young Children

Seven United Ways serving 10 Upstate counties launched a new partnership with Upstate SUBWAY® Sandwich Shops today to help maximize the early learning potential of young children and expand efforts to provide quality learning activities for parents and children.

The partnership with SUBWAY® is a significant addition to Born Learning Upstate SC, a public engagement campaign that aims to help parents, caregivers and communities provide young children with quality learning opportunities. The campaign is built around research that shows children are “born learning,” with the first three years of a child’s life proven to be an especially critical time. 

“This is when that brain is truly a sponge,” said Lisa Williams, board member of United Way of Oconee County and Lieutenant with the Seneca Police Department. “We as parents, grandparents, educators, police officers—all of us—must do what we can to ensure they’re soaking up the right things.”

One of the components of the campaign has been the installation of Born Learning Trails across the Upstate. These trails include fun, engaging activities designed to boost language and literacy skills, and encourage children and their families to be active physically and mentally. Trail locations can be found on the Born Learning Website, BornLearningUpstateSC.org, or by calling 2-1-1, United Way’s statewide, 24-hour resource line. 

“When we started this regional partnership in 2013, we launched with 15 trails across the region,” said Paige Stephenson, CEO of the United Way of the Piedmont. “I am excited to be able to announce today that we now have 40 trails throughout our communities in the Upstate of South Carolina. These trails are an important United Way strategy to foster quality parent-child interaction and help children along the path to school readiness.” 

In celebrating the 40 Born Learning Trails, the United Ways of the Upstate are launching a unique partnership with local SUBWAY® Sandwich Shops. Participating SUBWAY® locations will be offering Fresh Fit for Kids meal coupons to users of the trail.  There will be a SUBWAY® sign with a QR code somewhere along each of the 40 trails. When trail users find the sign, they can simply scan the QR code, answer a very brief survey and receive a SUBWAY® coupon.  This effort not only helps promote early learning and trail usage, it will also help local United Ways track the number of trail users. This will be used in planning for future trails. 

The announcement comes as a precursor to the 2016 Week of the Young Child (April 10– April 16), where child-friendly, educational activities are being held by United Ways and partner organizations throughout the Upstate throughout the week. A list of events can be found on the Born Learning Upstate website, BornLearningUpstateSC.org.

Born Learning Trails are located in the following locations in Anderson County:

Watson Park - 2005 Brookview Drive, Anderson, SC 29621 

South Main Chapel and Mercy Center - 2408 South Main, Anderson, SC 29624 

Anderson Civic Center - 3027 MLK Jr. Blvd., Anderson, SC 29625 

Mineral Springs Park - 121 West Main Street, Williamston, SC 29697

Friday
Apr082016

Trump S.C. Delegates Considering Other Candidates

Billionaire businessman Donald Trump handily won all 50 delegates in South Carolina's first-in-the-South Republican primary in January but that doesn't mean he will keep all that support at the party's national convention.

Establishment dissatisfaction with Trump and the possibility he won't have the 1,237 delegates needed to secure the nomination on a first vote means the nominee won't be set until after the convention in Cleveland.

After the first convention vote delegates are free to support someone else.

Intense lobbying to sway delegates to another candidate if Trump doesn't win initially has been taking place in South Carolina which begins selecting national delegates this weekend. 

Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP . Read more of her work at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/meg-kinnard/

 

Friday
Apr082016

April 8 Podcast: Politics, Pollen and Protecting the Innocent

Friday
Apr082016

S.C. SNAP Changes Could Cut Benefit from 60,000 

South Carolina leaders are promising more help to get people on food stamps back to work.

Some people who receive the benefits from SNAP will now have to meet new requirements. Gov. Nikki Haley announced those changes that will affect more than 60,000 individuals in South Carolina who currently receive the benefits.

Haley says the changes come as South Carolina's unemployment rates continue to fall.

Under the new standards, any able-bodied adult without dependents will be limited to three months of SNAP benefits unless they meet a work requirement or exemption -- that being at least 20 hours of work during the week or at least 20 hours of a job training.

Haley says the state was able to request a waiver like they have in previous years but believes this decision will move the state forward and put more of those individuals to work.

"We are in a position where we don't want that waiver anymore. We want to be able to increase job requirements. We want to be able to give more opportunities to these adults and allow us to do that," Haley said. "So through that, we are not going to ask for another waiver, we are going to say no we are going to increase the work requirements. We are not taking these benefits away but we see this as an opportunity to give more people work."

Right now there is more than 770,000 people in South Carolina receive the SNAP benefits. These new changes will not affect those who are disabled, elderly or who have dependents.