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ISSUE 13.19
May. 09, 2014

RECENT ISSUES:
12/04 | 11/27 | 11/20 | 11/13

Index

News :
Starving and carving state roads
Photo :
Throwback, near Bowman, S.C.
Legislative Agenda :
Busy meeting week ahead
Palmetto Politics :
Dollars and sense
Commentary :
Drop rough Hitler hype in favor of respectful debate
Spotlight :
United Way Association of South Carolina
My Turn :
Why does Butler Derrick mean so much?
Feedback :
Doesn’t like idea of constitutional convention
Scorecard :
Four up, three down, one in the middle
Megaphone :
Crossing the line
In our blog :
On representation, education
Tally Sheet :
One lonely bill
Encyclopedia :
Commercial fishing

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NUMBER OF THE WEEK

49

That’s the state’s ranking -- second to last in the country -- in the “growth” of tax revenues, according to a new report by the Tax Foundation. It found that between 2001 and 2011, South Carolina real dollars per capital in state tax collections dropped 18.1 percent, a rate only exceeded by Georgia. What’s happening? First, those who say taxes are going up are living in a dream world. Second, the state is feeling the lingering effects of the great recession, fiscal cliff negotiations and more. Learn more here.

MEGAPHONE

Crossing the line

“Senator, did you know there was a time in history when all of Germany thought Hitler was an acclaimed leader?”

-- State Sen. Tom Corbin, R-Greenville, using inflammatory rhetoric Wednesday during a floor debate on the book “Fun Home.” Listen.

IN OUR BLOG

On representation, education

5/5: Equal representation on boards and commission

“The state of South Carolina is divided into 16 judicial circuits, each consisting of two to five counties. Because they are not subject to reapportionment, they are very unequal in size. 

“The smallest, the 6th circuit, contains less than 3 percent of the state’s population, while the largest, Greenville and Pickens, has more than 12 percent. Judicial circuits of greatly uneven size can result in uneven caseloads, which affects access to a speedy trial and the quality of justice.” 

-- Holley Ulbrich, Clemson, S.C.

5/8: Dismal news from the nation’s report card

“These NAEP results for the nation’s seniors come just one week after the announcement that the U.S. has broken the educational sound barrier of an 80% graduation rate. This again raises the question of whether we should be tracking graduation rates or how well our schools prepare our students for college and career.”

-- Jon Butzon, Summerville, S.C.

TALLY SHEET

One lonely bill

Powdered alcohol. While lawmakers considered dozens of congratulatory and memorial resolutions this week, only one bill of substance was offered. S. 1283 (L. Martin) would make it unlawful to use, offer, purchase, sell or possess powdered alcohol, with several provisions.

ENCYCLOPEDIA

Commercial fishing

With extensive estuaries and barrier islands, the coastal areas of South Carolina are an important nursery for fisheries throughout the mid-Atlantic region. Though economically insignificant today when compared to recreational fisheries and tourism, state commercial fisheries are characterized by small-scale individual operators harvesting primarily shrimp, offshore finfish, blue crabs, and oysters.

With the arrival of Europeans, natives created the first commercial fisheries, trading seafood for firearms and clothing. Coastal slaves, after completing their tasks, were frequently allowed to create enterprises including fishing. As early as 1770 the Commons House of Assembly acknowledged, "The business of Fishing is principally carried on by Negroes, Mulattoes, and Mestizoes." Historically, the best-known South Carolina fishery was the "mosquito fleet," immortalized in the famous opera Porgy and Bess. The fleet sailed out of Charleston harbor and returned with blackfish, snapper, whiting, and, of course, porgy.

The shrimp industry, centered in Charleston and Beaufort, is the largest South Carolina fishery. In 2002, 3.3 million pounds (heads off) worth $9,029,693 were harvested. Commercial shrimping began in 1925, when a fleet of Florida trawlers moved to Beaufort County. Shrimp were packed with ice in barrels and loaded onto railroad cars destined for New York. During the 1940s Charleston fishermen converted a coastal freight boat, using a block and tackle system to haul shrimp nets out of the water. Harvests expanded until the 1970s but have remained more or less constant since then.

The two major shrimp crops are brown shrimp, caught in early summer, and white shrimp, harvested in late summer and throughout the fall. Beginning in the 1990s expanded imports depressed market prices and reduced profits in the industry. The industry peaked in 1995 when 6.9 million pounds (heads off) worth $21,692,665 were harvested. The number of commercial boats declined from a high of 1,016 during fiscal year 1991-1992 to 573 in fiscal year 2002-2003.

The second most important South Carolina fishery is offshore finfish. The offshore industry, fishing for swordfish, mahi-mahi, grouper, snapper, and other deepwater fish, is limited in South Carolina because of the distance between local ports and the Gulf Stream. The industry is concentrated in Murrells Inlet and Charleston. In 2002, 3.1 million pounds worth $5,374,498 dockside were landed in South Carolina. Stock reductions and conservation regulations have decreased landings of some species in recent years.

Like the other fisheries, the blue crab industry in South Carolina has seen better days. The industry grew in the 1930s and 1940s with the advent of canning and pasteurization technology. In Beaufort, Sterling Harris is credited with creating the first crab-picking machine and starting Blue Channel Corporation. Crabmeat and she-crab soup (made with crab roe) became well known as regional delicacies. Crab factories in Port Royal, Beaufort, and McClellanville employed hundreds of pickers to carefully extract the eight to fourteen percent of each crab that is marketable meat.

Like the shrimp industry, by the 1990s imported crabmeat had undercut the domestic market. In 2002, 4.4 million pounds of live crabs worth $3,712,428 were harvested. The peak year for blue crabs landed was 1978-1979, at 9.4 million pounds with a value of $1,840,060, and the peak value year was 2001 with 5.4 million pounds worth $5,226,079. The last crab-picking plant closed in 2001. "Basket trade," the sale of live hard-shell blue crabs, still exists. Local crabbers sell to wholesalers, who ship crabs up the coast to Baltimore and New York. Each spring dozens of small-time operators set up "peeler" tanks, harvesting blue crabs when they molt and creating, for a brief time, soft-shell crabs.

In 1893 Maggoni & Company established the first oyster factory in South Carolina on Daufuskie Island. By 1905 sixteen factories operated in the state. Oystering in the state peaked in volume in 1983 when 570,220 bushels worth $1,067,192 were harvested. The greatest value for oysters was in 1981 when 461,401 bushels worth $1,378,227 were landed. The 2002 harvest was 82,510 bushels worth $1,025,346. In Beaufort the last oyster-canning plant in the United States closed in the 1980s. Increased competition from abroad and alternative employment opportunities in the Lowcountry contributed to the decline in the industry.

In 2003 there was only one full-time fresh-oyster-shucking operation and no canning operation in the state. During the last forty years, numerous mariculture enterprises have come and gone in the state. Catfish, clams, crawfish, and shrimp farming have been attempted, but high labor and land costs (relative to those in Central America and Southeast Asia) and a shorter growing season have contributed to their failure.

-- Excerpted from the entry by Davis Folsom and David C. Smith. To read more about this or 2,000 other entries about South Carolina, check out The South Carolina Encyclopedia by USC Press. (Information used by permission.)

PALMETTO PRIORITIES

Palmetto Priorities Statehouse Report encourages state leaders to develop and implement Palmetto Priorities involving several issues to make the state better a better place. Click the link to learn more about our suggestions for bipartisan policy objectives.

Here is a summary of our Palmetto Priorities:

CORRECTIONS: Reduce the prison population by 25 percent by 2020.

EDUCATION: Cut the state's dropout rate in half by 2020.

ELECTIONS: Increase voter registration to 75 percent by 2015.

ENVIRONMENT: Adopt a state energy policy that requires energy producers to generate 20 percent of energy from renewable sources by 2020.

ETHICS: Overhaul state ethics laws.

HEALTH CARE: Ensure affordable and accessible health care.

JOBS: Develop a Cabinet-level post to add, retain 10,000 small business jobs per year.

POLITICS: Have a vigorous two- or multi-party political system of governance.

ROADS: Strengthen all bridges and upgrade state roads by 2015.

SAFETY: Cut the state's violent crime rate by one-third by 2016.

TAX REFORM: Remove outdated special interest sales tax exemptions as part of an overall reform of the state's tax structure to be completed by 2014.

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News

Starving and carving state roads

Legislature struggles with billions in infrastructure funding

By Bill Davis, senior editor

MAY 9, 2014 -- The state Senate soon will have the opportunity to vote on a bill by House Speaker Bobby Harrell that could result in an increase to the state’s lowly gas tax.

It may come as a shock to some that Harrell (R-Charleston) is championing increasing the state’s gas tax. And that’s because Harrell is diametrically opposed to raising the tax.
 
Harrell’s actual bill, H. 3412, calls for dedicating the remaining half of car sales taxes to roads and infrastructure improvement. Last year, a similar bill made it into law, dedicating the first half of the car sales taxes, roughly $41 million, to infrastructure.
 
Currently, the state is facing close to $27 billion in identified infrastructure maintenance and building needs for its roads, highways and bridges, according to the Department of Transportation.
 
Last year’s car sales tax bill, combined with $50 million in additional bonding, resulted in the fiscal equivalent of a 3-percent gas tax increase without taking in more money, and just shifting allocations, according to Harrell’s office.  
 
Currently, South Carolina’s per-gallon gas tax is 35.2 cents, which includes 18.4 cents per gallon in federal taxes.  Nationally, the per gallon average is nearly 50 cents nationally with California leading the country at over 70 cents.
 
Harrell’s most recent bill is popular in the Senate, where 16 different amendments have been tacked onto it. By amending the bill, senators can pass the bill back to the House and skirt the May 1 deadline that forces new bills to get a two-thirds majority vote for “cross over”

State Sen. Raymond Cleary (R-Murrells Inlet) attached an amendment to Harrell’s bill that would automatically increase the tax by 2 cents every year for 10 years. Even then, according Cleary, “it would still be less than what North Carolina’s is today.”

Once in the House, an amended bill simply has to survive an up-or-down vote. But this bill’s path to law is far from simple.

A “fee,” not a “tax”

Cleary tacked on the gas tax-increase amendment because he says there is no other way to raise money for needed roads projects.

Of the roughly $6.4 billion in the state’s 2013-14 General Fund budget, which the legislature has the most discretion in spending, Cleary said there was only about $1.5 billion left after education and health care programs took their cuts.

Cleary said there was not enough money in the proposed 2014-15 budget to make needed infrastructure improvements and not “starve” all the other worthwhile state agencies and programs. Additionally, he said that the state’s roadways continued to deteriorate with each passing day and each passing legislative session.

Last year, led by Senate Minority Leader Nikki Seltzer (D-W. Columbia), the legislature dedicated an additional $50 million for roads projects, which the state Infrastructure Bank used to seed $500 million in bonded borrowing.

Cleary said he wished everyone would stop making the mistake of calling his amendment a gas “tax” increase. His point was that a tax goes into the General Fund and could be directed toward any project or line item in the state budget.  He said his amendment would increase the “user fee,” which would generate revenues to be placed in a “lockbox” for roads.

“If you say ‘tax,’ people don’t get it. But if you say ‘fee,’ then people get it,” said Cleary. “And wouldn’t it be fairer if people driving 100,000 miles a year in South Carolina had to pay more for roads than someone driving only 10,000 miles?”

Echoing one of the arguments that brought the state Act 388, Cleary pointed out that roughly one-third off all gas purchases come from out-of-state travelers, be they vacationers or truckers.

Little appetite

Greg Foster, Harrell’s spokesman, said there is little appetite in the House for anything that even looks like a tax increase, especially in an election year – even though the S.C. Chamber of Commerce has been calling for roads improvements for years.

Foster said Harrell has already identified another dedicated source for roads funding in his bill and that Cleary is missing the point of the budgeting process.

“That’s what a budget is - - a list prioritizing spending,” said Foster in response to Cleary’s point on starvation.

But one House Republican insider said there was an appetite for doing something about roads spending, and that if the vote wasn’t a recorded one, it would likely pass. That being said, the insider added that Democrats in the House facing reelection this year would likely be loathe to go on the record for a tax increase of any kind, too.

Even if the bill makes it back to the House with Cleary’s amendment untouched and even if the House takes a shine to fiscal needs over political expediency, the bill still would have to be signed into law by Gov. Nikki Haley.

And that is highly unlikely, as she has already said repeatedly that, like Obamacare, she is steadfastly against a gas tax increase.
Bill Davis is a senior editor of Statehouse Report.  He can be reached at: billdavis@statehousereport.com.

RECENT NEWS STORIES
Photo

Throwback, near Bowman, S.C.


You’ve got to love this flowery, 70s, hippy throwback sign outside an abandoned store near Bowman, S.C. to see another view, click herePhoto by Andy Brack.
Legislative Agenda

Busy meeting week ahead

It's going to be a busy week of meetings next week as the House and Senate tumble towards the end of the legislative session.

  • House Education and Public Works. The full committee will meet 1.5 hours after the House adjourns May 13 in 433 Blatt to discuss bills related to texting by minor drivers, CPR training in high school and the Read to Succeed proposal. Agenda.

  • House MMM. The full committee will meet in 427 Blatt at 2:30 p.m. May 13 or 1.5 hours after the House adjourns to discuss bills related to dental sedation, tuberculosis testing in schools, cultural districts and hearing aid licenses. Agenda.

  • House LCI. A subcommittee meet in 403 Blatt at 2:30 p.m. May 13 or 1.5 hours after the House adjourns to discuss bills related to wind energy and net metering involving solar energy. Agenda.  Another subcommittee will meet at the same time in 511 Blatt to discuss drug testing and other measures. Agenda.  The full committee will meet 9 a.m. May 14 in 403 Blatt to discuss an array of business bills, including those impacting the insurance market, unemployment, licensing, solar net metering and others considered the previous day. Agenda.

  • Senate Ethics. The full committee will meet 9 a.m., May 14 in 308 Gressette to consider ethics charges of former Sen. Robert Ford, who resigned last year. The meeting will be broadcast online here.

  • Senate Judiciary. A subcommittee will meet 10 a.m. on May 14 in 407 Gressette to consider H. 4732, a bill dealing with party conventions or party primary elections.  Another Judiciary subcommittee will meet 11 a.m. May 14 to discuss various House proposals involving child abuse and more. Agenda.  Another Judiciary subcommittee will meet 9:30 a.m. May 15 to discuss four bills related to alcohol and entertainment. Agenda.  A fourth subcommittee will meet 10 a.m. May 15 to consider two Senate bills dealing with tort reform. Agenda.

  • Senate Banking and Insurance. The full committee will meet 11 a.m. May 14 in 308 Gressette to discuss bills dealing with mortgage satisfaction, small employer health insurance, insurer notice requirements and ultrasound requirements. Agenda.
Palmetto Politics

Dollars and sense

One of the main sticking points that may rear its head again in the Senate budget debate centers on funding levels for 4-K expansion and local government.

Kindergarten for disadvantaged 4-year-olds has been a hot-button topic since a judge ruled its creation was a partial remedy for public educational opportunities for poor kids in South Carolina. Already in place in many counties, some legislators in the House and the Senate want to see it available statewide.

But at what cost? A budget fight has emerged in the Senate that would trade permanent recurring funding for the expanded program at the expense of what the state has traditionally passed along to local governments like counties and cities.

Sen. Larry Martin (R-Pickens), who is married to a public school teacher, said it doesn’t have to be a trade off, and that the original intention was to expand 4-K “when there was enough money” in the budget. Martin’s critics point out that there is no language in the budget bill that defines what “enough” is. An amendment by Martin to favor local government failed earlier this week.

Commentary

Drop rough Hitler hype in favor of respectful debate

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher

MAY 9, 2014 -- There’s too much talk about Adolf Hitler at the Statehouse. It needs to stop.

In April, state Sen. Mike Fair, R-Greenville, spouted off about the murderous German leader in a reaction to a Planned Parenthood poll surrounding a controversial bill to ban abortions in the state at 20 weeks or more.

Fair reacted, “I have no more confidence in Planned Parenthood than I do in Adolf Hitler, if he were around, to ask about whether his signature is binding.”

Then this month during the Senate budget debate, state Sen. Tom Corbin, another Greenville Republican, spewed Hitler’s name during a floor argument over whether the state should withhold college funding over an award-winning gay-themed book students were asked to read. Here’s the back and forth between Corbin and Democratic Sen. Brad Hutto of Orangeburg, who accused some who want to withhold funding of being homophobic (Listen via link from S.C. Radio Network):

HUTTO: I’m glad you gave me this book. Actually it says, Time magazine’s number one book of the year, National Book Critics’ Circle Award finalist. This is a critically-acclaimed book.

CORBIN: Senator, did you know there was a time in history when all of Germany thought Hitler was an acclaimed leader? Did that make it so? Did that make it right?

HUTTO: No that did not, but this is totally different.

CORBIN: Time magazine made him Man of the Year (in 1938).

HUTTO: Made who?

CORBIN: Hitler.

HUTTO: They may have. They may have.

CORBIN: I rest my case.

HUTTO: What is your case? That’s what I’d like to know.

Why are people invoking the name of Hitler to make their rhetorical points -- because they’re lazy or because they want a guaranteed way to get in the news, or both? One thing is for sure -- both Fair and Corbin crossed the line. Invoking the name of a man who spawned the genocide of millions is not parallel to funding of a book.

Greenville communications strategist Chip Felkel said stepping over rhetorical lines with inflammatory, hyperbolic language makes it more difficult for public officials to discuss issues reasonably.

“I think it would be very nice if our elected officials could make their case without all of the hyperbole,” he said. “I think the public would like to hear more substance and less hyperbole. For both sides to be talking about issues with extreme comparisons is no better than CNN’s over-coverage of this tragic plane crash. It’s hype and helium as opposed to serious prudent leadership.”

College of Charleston Department of Political Science chair Gibbs Knotts said the ultimate jury for officials who make extreme comments is voters, but their verdict is sometimes far removed in time from a politicians’ rhetoric.

“Cranking it up to level 10 out of 10 is not necessarily the way to make the best public policy,” he said, adding that Hitler comments chill compromise and debate from multiple perspectives.

House Democratic operative Tyler Jones of Charleston said he found comparisons to Hitler to be “the epitome of brainless sensationalism.”

This man authorized the killing of 11 million people. If you compare a modern day politician to Hitler, you're either grossly ignorant or unbelievably insensitive,” Jones said. “Hitler references in politics should be treated by the media the same way punches are treated by referees in professional sports -- automatic disqualification.”

Warren Gress, executive director of the Alliance for Full Acceptance in Charleston, found Corbin’s comments ironic because Hitler suppressed expression by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people and sent them to death camps. And Corbin, in trying to suppress a book expressing views about LGBT issues, invoked Hitler’s name to make his point. 

“It’s nonsensical stuff when people take two completely divergent things that Time (magazine) may have highlighted and say that these two things are the same,” Gress said.

There’s nothing wrong with robust debate. In fact, more of it is needed. But it needs to be respectful and not cross the line. Chill out, Fair. Cool it, Corbin.

Andy Brack is editor and publisher of Statehouse ReportYou can reach Brack at: brack@statehousereport.com.

Spotlight

United Way Association of South Carolina

The public spiritedness of our underwriters allows us to bring Statehouse Report to you at no cost. This week, we shine a spotlight on the United Way Association of South Carolina. It is the common voice of the 29 independent, locally-government United Ways in the Palmetto State that work together to create long-lasting opportunities for everyone to have the good life. The organizations focus on education to help children and youths achieve their potential so they can get a stable job; income to promote financial stability and independence; and improving people’s health. 

Advancing the common good is about helping one person at a time and about changing systems to help all of us.  The associations believes we all win when a child succeeds in school, when families are financially stable, and when people are healthy. The organization’s goal is to create long-lasting changes by addressing the underlying causes of these problems. “Living United” means being a part of the change. It takes everyone in the community working together to create a brighter future. Give. Advocate. Volunteer. LIVE UNITED.

My Turn

Why does Butler Derrick mean so much?

Because it was 1974

By Ginny Deerin
Special to Statehouse Report

MAY 9, 2014 -- Some folks are surprised that the passing this week of Butler Derrick means so much to me.  I wondered myself -- after all -- I haven’t seen him in more than 25 years.  But it’s because he was elected to Congress in 1974, a year that was so important to many young people, including me at age 23.

It was the year that Pug Ravenel – age 36 – ran for Governor of South Carolina.  I was on his staff and that experience has been one of the most important – if not the most important – experiences in my life.  People Magazine on Aug. 19, 1974, captured the relevance. “Ravenel pulled the political equivalent of a quarterback sneak last month in South Carolina when, in his first pass at politics, he out-feinted two favored opponents to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. He is now the odds-on choice to be South Carolina's next governor and the latest addition to the Democratic party's coterie of young, progressive chief executives in the South.”

Butler Derrick became one of the “coterie.” Pug did not. The congressional seat Derrick ran for that year opened up because then-Congressman Bryan Dorn gave up his seat to run for governor of South Carolina against the upstart, Pug Ravenel.

Derrick won his race.  Pug was disqualified on a residency requirement. Many, including me, questioned that disqualification. For the greatly disappointed young people who worked on Pug's campaign, Butler Derrick took on exaggerated importance.  And he did not disappoint.

Congressman Derrick was a fresh new face in Congress. And he was there to serve the people in his district -- not himself.  Pug’s campaign slogan was “A governor for the people, not the politicians.”  That’s what Butler Derrick exemplified -- he was a congressman who served for the people instead of being self-serving. He was an extraordinary person who was a beacon of hope to many.

Ginny Deerin of Sullivan’s Island is the Democratic candidate for S.C. Secretary of State.

Feedback

Doesn’t like idea of constitutional convention

To the editor:

I appreciated your referencing Justice Stevens' recent publication which discusses the U S constitution and matters which need to be revisited.    From all reports, Justice Stevens has been a thoughtful and insightful jurist.

But calling a constitutional convention for South Carolina?    Our constitution could certainly stand revisions   (thank goodness, public officials do not have to swear to have never fought a duel!). But to trust that job to citizens similar to those currently running our state is too, too much.

Constitution-writing requires, among other things, both enlightened self-interest and the spirit of compromise.  One can spot the self-interest easily. Where is the spirit of compromise?

-- Joseph T. Stukes, Florence, S.C.

Angry about Haley ad

To the editor:

I get angry every time that I see Gov. [Nikki] Haley's ad concerning children being able to read by third grade.  Every child should be able to read at a third grade level by third grade.

Why can't children be given a summer reading list to help to at least help them improve their reading?

-- Irene Smith, Charleston, S.C.

Don't keep your opinions to yourself. We love hearing from our readers and encourage you to share your opinions.  But you've got to provide us with contact information so we can verify your letters. Letters to the editor are published weekly. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.We generally publish all comments about South Carolina politics or policy issues, unless they are libelous or unnecessarily inflammatory. One submission is allowed per month. Submission of a comment grants permission to us to reprint. Comments are limited to 250 words or less.  Please include your name and contact information.  Send your letters to:

Scorecard

Four up, three down, one in the middle

One ticket. After the 2014 election, candidates for governor and lieutenant governor will run on one ticket as a team. More.

4K funding. Hats off to a majority of state senators for backing additional 4-year-old kindergarten funding. While local government funding is important too, kids don’t have a tax base to draw from. More.

Ervin. “Independent Republican” gubernatorial candidate Tom Ervin might have gotten the last laugh when the state GOP tried to keep him from speaking to a Lexington Republican club. Why? Look at all of the free press he got making the GOP look bad. And he still made the speech. More.

Charges. A sigh of relief for 37 “Truthful Tuesday” protesters who saw charges dropped by a state judge this week. More.

Patrick. It wasn’t terribly hard for a process server on Tuesday to figure out where Rep. Andy Patrick was this week so he could serve divorce papers, which were accepted by his lawyer, Rep. Doug Brannon. More.

Seawalls. Members of a House committee made a bad mistake this week in approving a seawall to protect some homes from the ocean because they essentially trashed the state’s coastal management law. More.

Koch Brothers. Oh boy. The conservative funders of negative politicking have opened a chapter in South Carolina. This isn’t going to throw gas on any fires, surely. More

Derrick. We’re saddened to hear of the death of former Congressman Butler Derrick, who represented the Aiken-Anderson area for 20 years. Rest in peace.

credits

Statehouse Report

Editor and Publisher: Andy Brack
Senior Editor: Bill Davis
Contributing Photographer: Michael Kaynard

Phone: 843.670.3996

© 2002 - 2024 , Statehouse Report LLC. Statehouse Report is published every Friday by Statehouse Report LLC, PO Box 22261, Charleston, SC 29413.
Excerpts from The South Carolina Encyclopedia are published with permission and copyrighted 2006 by the Humanities Council SC. Excerpts were edited by Walter Edgar and published by the University of South Carolina Press. Statehouse Report has partnered with USC Press to provide readers with this interesting weekly historical excerpt about the state. Republication is not allowed. For additional information about Statehouse Report, including information on underwriting, go to http://www.statehousereport.com/.