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Sunday
Nov092014

Opinion: Churches Need to Step Up to Support AIM

Nearly 25 years ago, churches in Anderson County were faced with a problem: how did they separate those in need asking for assistance from those scamming the system by going church to church with the same story and receiving several hand outs.

The solution was to form an organization to serve as a central benevolence agency for all churches, one which could vet those who were asking for help, and would be supported by all the churches who wished to participate. Though records on the exact number of churches who initially signed on to participate WEREN’T KEPT, it’s safe to say that a large number of churches signed on. This meant they committed monthly support in their respective budgets, allowing for the birth of Anderson Interfaith Ministries (now known simply as AIM). 

In the years which followed, AIM has grown into a clearinghouse for our neighbors in need, providing assistance in areas ranging from food and housing assistance to financial planning and helping women with children break the cycle of poverty and addiction. Their goal of “offering a hand up, not a hand out,” has helped change the lives of hundreds of thousands of lives since 1990, as demands for their services grew exponentially.

But while the number of folks in need, and referrals from the churches has grown steadily, the level of support. The number of churches supporting AIM has declined every year for the past decade. Yet, many of the churches who have dropped financial support for AIM, continue to refer people in need to the ministry. It’s time for this to end. Others are giving at levels that fall far short of the demands they put on AIM resources.

Anderson County has historically been a spectacularly generous people. When disaster hits, even in other places, our citizens step up as volunteers and with financial support as part of the front lines of supporting our friends and neighbors who need help.

With Christmas only seven weeks away, AIM needs the community - and particularly the churches - to step up and meet the call of Christ to minister to “the least of these.”

You can do this in a number of ways, but I am suggesting two:

  1. Ask your pastor of your church is supporting AIM financially, and if so is the support generous.  The average cost of services to a person referred to AIM by a church is just over $200. Ask your church leadership if they are, at a minimun, funding the number of people they are sending to AIM for help.
  2. Give. AIM keeps open, accountable books, and their integrity in how they are able to use the funds they receive is phenomenal. A recent $10,000 gift was turned into more than $150,000 in services, thanks to grants and other program matching funds. Most of us cannot give $10,000, so I am borrowing an idea that has worked for other groups garnering support for local ministry. If every church member in Anderson would commit that their family will give $39.95 to AIM during the upcoming Thanksgiving/Christmas season, there would be almost no end to the service to the elderly, the working poor and the temporarily disadvantaged AIM could do.

Time to step up, Anderson, and give this community a gift this holiday season that will provide ministry to your friends a neighbors for months to come.

Sunday
Nov092014

Retooled Obamacare Website Launched Today

US officials planned to unveil an improved healthcare insurance website on Sunday, which they hope will allow the second enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s health reform plan to avoid the technical meltdown that plagued its launch last year.

The reconfigured healthcare.gov insurance marketplace was scheduled to go live on Sunday night, before a month-long open enrollment period that begins on 15 November, during which existing policyholders can change their coverage.

Administration officials said on Sunday they would get it right this time, with a website that will make it easier to shop for coverage and enough computing capacity, call-center help and other resources to handle re-enrollment of all current policyholders.

“We are strongly encouraging our customers to return to healthcare.gov ... Shop and compare. The majority will be able to save money,” said Kevin Counihan, chief executive officer of the federal health insurance marketplace, adding that particularly applied to those who may have overlooked available federal tax credits last year.

The new features will be available by Monday for people to look at, but the actual enrollment option will not be open until Saturday.

The president’s signature health reform law, formally known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act but better known as Obamacare, got off to a rocky start last fall because of technical problems with a web-based marketplace where people could shop for private policies.

Those glitches were smoothed out over time, and as of mid-August 7.3 million people had purchased insurance through the federal insurance marketplace or state-based systems.

Full Story Here

Sunday
Nov092014

Anderson Parade Honors Veterans

Anderson County stopped Sunday afternoon to honor our veterans with the annual parade downtown. Veterans who were not in the parade were given special seating.

Sunday
Nov092014

Clemson-Ga. Tech Kickoff Set for Noon

GREENSBORO, N.C. —The Atlantic Coast Conference announced the following game time and TV network for the Clemson-Georgia Tech game, which will be played this Saturday, Nov. 15. The kickoff will be at noon at Bobby Dodd Stadium. The game will be broadcast on ESPN.

Friday
Nov072014

Anderson Area TD Club Honors Winners of Week

This week's Anderson Area Touchdown Club Winners

Co-Linemen:  Jacob Walrop, Powdersville 

Co-Defensive: Hank Martin, Pendleton

Alexander Poore, T.L. Hanna 

Coach:           Bruce Ollis, T.L. Hanna 

Offensive:       O'Ryan Warren, Belton-Honea Path 

Co-Linemen:      Drew Campbell, Wren

Friday
Nov072014

Billy Graham Celebrates 96th Birthday

Billy Graham is ringing in his 96th year with friends and family on Friday, and fellow faith leaders are sending an outpouring of well wishes to the famed evangelical preacher today.

In a far cry from last year's birthday celebration involving over 800 guests, Graham is marking his birthday this year with a quiet celebration at his Montreat, NC home, according to a press release issued on Nov. 7. Will Graham, the grandson of Billy Graham, was unavailable for comment to The Christian Post, but his father Franklin assured fans that the 96-year-old is doing well.

"Although his physical condition keeps him homebound, he remains interested in current events and the ongoing work of the ministry that he began more than 60 years ago," said Billy Graham's eldest son.

The president of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association also announced the debut of "Heaven," the latest "My Hope with Billy Graham" film, which features a never-before-seen message from Billy.

"Opportunities like 'My Hope' and the 'Heaven' film are ways that we can help my father to continue the work that God called us to do," Franklin added. "Please pray for my father, and for those who will watch this film, that they too may know the peace found in Jesus Christ."

Recorded last year, the message conveys a still-passionate Billy Graham who discussed his imminent death.

"I know I'm going to heaven. I'm looking forward to it with great anticipation," Graham says in the film before explaining how people can share that same faith.

Despite his struggle with deteriorating eyesight and hearing, Graham still enjoys daily devotions, Bible reading and prayer with his staff, as well as visits with family and close friends. On his 96th birthday, many of Graham's friends, including Saddleback Church's Rick Warren, posted special messages on social media.

"Happy #96th to my oldest mentor #BillyGraham. Thanks for guiding, defending and loving me for 35 yrs," the pastor wrote on Twitter.

Friday
Nov072014

S.C. DHHS Employee Sentenced in Data Breach

A former employee at South Carolina's Department of Health and Human Services has been sentenced to three years probation in connection with a breach of data from the agency.

Attorney General Alan Wilson says 39-year-old Christopher Lykes Jr. of Swansea was also ordered Wednesday to serve 300 hours of community service. He had faced a possible 25-year prison sentence.

Lykes pleaded guilty last year to four counts of willful examination of private records by a public employee and one count of criminal conspiracy.

Authorities say the agency project manager compiled more than 228,000 Medicaid patients' personal information on a spreadsheet and sent it to his private email.

Friday
Nov072014

Haley Traveling to India to Visit Parents' Homeland

Gov. Nikki Haley is traveling to her parents' native country next week in hopes of persuading Indian companies to bring jobs to South Carolina.

The newly re-elected daughter of Indian immigrants told reporters Thursday her immediate focus as the state's CEO includes the India trip. She called the trip's schedule brutally busy.

It marks Haley's first visit to India since she was 2 years old.

Commerce officials are expected to give details on the trip Friday.

They have said it will include meetings in the Indian state of Punjab, where Haley's parents were born. They immigrated in the 1960s.

Haley is the first woman of Indian heritage to become governor of a U.S. state.

Friday
Nov072014

Shifting White Vote Hurt Democratic Calendar

White voters of all ages were less likely to back Democrats this year than in elections past, helping Republicans nationwide but most acutely in the South - and overpowering Democratic efforts to turn out their core supporters among blacks and Hispanics.

In a nation growing ever more diverse, political forecasters repeatedly warn Republicans they must improve their appeal among minorities in order to remain competitive in the long term.

But for the Democrats, dominating the vote among minorities isn't enough to win elections today - and it won't be in the future if the GOP is able to run up similar margins among whites, who still make up a majority of voters in every state.

"The rule of thumb was Democrats could win with 90 percent of the African-American vote and 40 percent of the white vote," said Merle Black, a political science professor at Emory University in Atlanta.

"But now very few Democrats could think about getting 40 percent of the white vote. They're trying to get 30 percent. In the Deep South states, from South Carolina to Louisiana, it's very hard for the Democratic candidate to get 25 percent of the white vote."

Nationally, Republicans running for seats in the U.S. House won 60 percent of the white vote, while Democrats won the backing of 89 percent of African-Americans and 62 percent of Hispanics.

Those are nearly identical margins to the 2010 midterm elections. But Democrats won more of the white and Hispanic vote in 2006, the last midterm elections in which the party won control of the House. White voters last tilted in Democrats' favor in a midterm in 1990, and were a swing group in the 1980s.

The data on voters come from exit polls of voters nationally and in 27 states that were conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks by Edison Research. Most interviews were conducted among randomly selected voters at precincts nationwide and in each state.

Outside of the South, whites broke for Republicans by an average of 8 points on Tuesday. But in 10 Southern states with an election for Senate on the ballot, Republicans won the white vote by an average of 42 points. Democrats garnered so little support among whites in Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas that a majority of those voting for the Democratic candidate were non-white.

In North Carolina, though incumbent Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan was widely credited with running a solid campaign, she carried just 33 percent of the white vote - down from 39 percent in 2008 - and lost. White voters under age 30 backed Hagan by close to a 2-to-1 margin six years ago as they helped to sweep President Barack Obama into office.

This time, in a midterm election, the younger white voters who cast ballots in North Carolina broke just as decisively for Hagan's Republican opponent, state House Speaker Thom Tillis.

Steve Rosenthal, president of the Organizing Group, a Democratic-leaning consulting firm, said he's been jokingly calling this election the Seinfeld election for Democrats - they had no national message that resonated with their voters.

"It was an election about nothing. Republicans made it an election about President Obama. That was their goal," he said. "Their mission was to turn out people who were angry, people who were displeased with the job the president has done."

It was a mistake for Democrats to distance themselves from the president, said Erik Smith, a former Obama campaign adviser and Democratic strategist. Democratic voters are not motivated to help candidates who were happy to be with Obama two years ago, but tried to avoid his presence this year, he said.

"I'm sure (it) led a lot of these voters to say, 'How is this candidate going to treat me in two years?'" he said.

The only states in which Democratic Senate candidates improved their overall support among whites were Minnesota, Oregon and Mississippi, a Southern state where Travis Childers managed to grow the Democratic share of the white vote from 8 percent in 2008 to 16 percent.

Democratic voters were especially less engaged in states where there were not supposed to be competitive elections, said Michael McDonald, an associate professor of political science at the University of Florida who tracks voter turnout.

Democratic voters are traditionally more likely to stay home if the midterm races are uninspiring, while Republican voters - who tend to be older, wealthier and more educated and also are more likely to be white - generally come to the polls anyway, he said.

"The poster child for this would be Virginia. It's an uncompetitive race according to all the polls. In that environment, who sits out the election? It's predominantly Democrats," McDonald said.

Two days after the election, while heavily favored incumbent Democratic Virginia Sen. Mark Warner had a lead of a few thousand votes out of more than 2 million cast, the race remained too close to call.

Thursday
Nov062014

Why Were the National Polls so Wrong Tuesday?

Tuesday's midterm elections were supposed to be a night of nail-biters, from Sen. Mitch McConnell's re-election race in Kentucky to veteran Sen. Pat Roberts' battle in Kansas. The too-close-to-call refrain was expected to be heard throughout the night. 

Instead, when the dust settled, Republicans rumbled to one of their biggest victories in decades. 

How could so many polls get so many races so wrong? 

"I want an investigation of the polls in Virginia," University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato told Fox News. "They were completely wrong, just as they were in Georgia. They were also way off in Illinois. And I could go on and on." 

Virginia played host to one of the biggest surprises of the night, for anyone who had been basing their election predictions on the polls. In the same state where pollsters failed to predict then-House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's loss to economics professor Dave Brat in the primaries, they also misjudged the race between incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Warner and Republican Ed Gillespie. 

Many polls had Warner with a double-digit lead over Gillespie. Warner is currently clinging to a 1-point lead, with the ballot count ongoing. 

Full Story Here

Thursday
Nov062014

S.C. Continues Quest to be "Reddest" State

When asked to characterize the November 4th South Carolina political races, I wrote in an earlier piece, “It ain’t pretty.” It wasn’t pretty! Some view South Carolina as the reddest state in the nation. After November 4th, it just might be. Money, issue ignorance and, in general, incumbency, virtually assured Republican candidates easy victories, most of them by embarrassing margins.

The one (and only) state race that captured national attention was the Governor’s race. State Democratic officials kept up a brave front, knowing a slaughter was on the way. The final count was incumbent Governor Nikki Haley, 57%, two-time challenger, State Senator, Vincent Sheheen, 40%.

As exhaustively repeated on this site, Haley is a terrible governor. You can go to the archives and re-familiarize yourselves with why that’s the case. But she touted increasing job numbers at every campaign stop to rubes working for minimum wages that the state legislature refuses to increase, at anti-union companies that take all their tax money overseas and couldn’t care less how employees are treated. The Rube vote went to Haley, and that’s a lot of votes.

For the record, the ever gracious Sheheen, who couldn’t bring himself to be a really tough campaigner, included these words in thanking his volunteers, “To those who stood by me, and fought with me, to those who knocked doors, made calls, and talked to their neighbors, thank you. You mean the world to Amy and me. You’ll always be part of our family.”

All other state offices were won by Republicans as well, by margins varying from 17 to 22 percent in races where both major parties were represented. There’s possibly a little ray of light here. One of those Republicans is Superintendent of Education, Molly Spearman. She possesses a powerful CV and was once a Democrat. Her opportunistic disloyalty notwithstanding, she does make the Republican power structure highly uncomfortable in fearing that she might possibly back the strengthening of public schools without throwing tax money at private education.

In my local races for the State House, massacres were the order of the day. If you consider 79% to 21% a massacre.

Full Story Here

Wednesday
Nov052014

County Hires Michael Foreman as Planning, Community Manager

Anderson County has hired Michael Forman, AICP as the new Planning & Community Development Manager. Mr. Forman received his Bachelor and Master of Science Degrees from the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida.

Michael is a certified planner through the American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP).  As an AICP, Mr. Forman earned distinction among his colleagues by enduring rigorous standards, enhanced his expertise through professional development, planning education, and ethics. 

Michael’s career includes work in Naples, Florida, and previously with Anderson County, as its deputy director of planning prior to accepting the position of zoning administrator for Greenville County, South Carolina. Mr. Forman has successfully managed planning and environmental projects totaling over $1 million combined with federal/state funding, he served as the project leader and author for multiple overlay corridor studies, oversaw land use special purpose districts, managed long range planning and zoning, prepared the current Comprehensive Plan for Anderson County’s land use and development. 

“We are very happy to welcome Michael back to Anderson County; he brings a high level of professionalism to the position,” said Anderson County Council Chairman Tommy Dunn. “I am confident that his experience in planning and development, his academic background, and professional associations will give momentum to the County’s growth while enhancing our position for future economic development in the Upstate.”

Wednesday
Nov052014

Scott Top Vote Getter in Anderson County

Anderson County Election Quick Facts

19,237 voted straight ticket, 12,642 of those votes were for Republicans

Gov. Nikki Haley received 70 percent of Anderson County votes, or 31,776

Sen. Lindsey Graham got 29,977 votes in Anderson, or 67 percent of the vote

Sen. Tim Scott received 34,075 votes in Anderson, or 76 percent