Kids Teeth Donates Meals to ER Workers at Roper St. Francis Mount Pleasant

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MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. – Mount Pleasant pediatric dentist office Kids Teeth delivered lunch to front line workers at Roper St. Francis Mount Pleasant Hospital on Aug. 21. Kids Teeth partnered with local organization FLAG Charleston to fund the meals for ER workers.

FLAG (Front Line Appreciation Group) Charleston formed in April with a mission of supporting local restaurants while also feeding those on the front lines of fighting the coronavirus. Donations are used to purchase meals from local restaurant partners and then distributed to front line workers at local hospitals, express care centers and mobile testing sites.

As of late August, FLAG Charleston had received more than $22,000 in donations, providing 2,827 meals to front line workers.

Kids Teeth, with two offices in Mount Pleasant, supports several local charities and organizations. Earlier this year, Kids Teeth partnered with I Heart Hungry Kids, a local nonprofit organization that empowers kids to beat hunger through hands-on service, community outreach, and food advocacy. Kids Teeth also supports various local organizations with donations that help support the Lowcountry Buddy Walk, Walk for Autism, Lifeline Children’s Services, school PTA’s and community events. 

“Like everyone, we too have been in awe of the work hospital and medical teams have done to care for coronavirus patients,” said Dr. Will MacDonald and Dr. Mike Myers, board-certified pediatric dentists. “They have gone above and beyond to save lives. Providing lunch for ER workers at Roper St. Francis is just a small way we can express our gratitude. We would encourage other local businesses to donate to FLAG Charleston, which not only supports front line workers but also local restaurants that need our help too.”  

Learn more about FLAG Charleston at flagcharleston.org. Learn more about Kids Teeth at kidsteeth.com.

Photos provided

Pictured, from left, are Rachael Butler, RN admin supervisor at Roper, Kids Teeth’s Tiffany Warzynski, Danielle Andrews, Belinda Wierschem, a representative from Burton’s, and Lisa Geoffory, one of the founders of FLAG Charleston.

About Kids Teeth
Located in Mount Pleasant, S.C., Kids Teeth is dedicated to providing the highest quality care to infants, children and adolescents in a friendly and comfortable environment. Serving the Charleston area for more than 40 years, Kids Teeth believes that through the education and motivation of children and their parents, patients can maintain a lifetime of good oral health. Learn more at www.kidsteethsc.com.

BCDCOG ANNOUNCES $560K CARES ACT REVOLVING LOAN FUND RESOURCES TO ASSIST TRI-COUNTY REGION ECONOMIC RECOVERY

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NORTH CHARLESTON (Sept. 10, 2020) – The Berkeley-Charleston-Dorchester Council of Governments (BCDCOG) has been awarded $560,000 in Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding by the U.S. Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration (EDA). The federal money will be used to capitalize on the BCDCOG CARES Revolving Loan Fund (RLF), aimed at stimulating long-term, private-sector investment, and employment in the region.

Eligible businesses seeking assistance should operate in Berkeley, Charleston, or Dorchester counties and be able to provide evidence of revenue loss since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Business owners may apply for a one-year, interest-deferred and/or an interest-free loan ranging from $10,000-$100,000.

“This grant award will allow BCDCOG to effectively assist in the private-sector recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and help create and retain job opportunities in the region,” said BCDCOG Executive Director Ron Mitchum. “The capitalization of the RLF is fully in line with the BCDCOG’s regional economic recovery strategy and a much-needed lifeline for businesses affected by COVID-19.”

EDA is offering award flexibilities in response to the impact of COVID-19 and the need for RLFs to provide credit quickly and efficiently. These include:

  • No minimum interest rate
  • No requirement to leverage additional capital
  • No requirement to demonstrate credit is otherwise not available
  • Deferment of accrued interest
  • Reduced or eliminated collateral requirements

Loan considerations and reduced associated costs include:

LOAN CONSIDERATIONS

  • Evidence of loss in revenue (strongly suggested)
  • Years of business operation
  • Employee retention plan
  • Business sector

ASSOCIATED COSTS

  • $500 application fee (may be waived)
  • Up to 1.5% origination fee
  • 0.5% annual service fee

BCDCOG has also hired an administrator to manage and facilitate the loan process. Melanie Pasheluk can be reached at (843) 529-2573 or melaniep@bcdcog.com. To learn more about BCDCOG Cares Revolving Loan Fund or to begin the application process, visit www.bcdcog.com/bcdcogcares.

ABOUT BCDCOG:
The BCDCOG is a voluntary association of, by and for local governments, and was established to assist Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester county leaders in planning for common needs, cooperating for mutual benefit and coordinating for sound regional development. BCDCOG’s purpose is to strengthen the individual and collective power of local governments and to help them recognize regional opportunities, eliminate unnecessary duplication, and make joint decisions. For the latest on BCDCOG, visit www.bcdcog.com, like us on Facebook, or follow on Twitter at @BDCCoG.

Bottles Beverage Superstore Announces New Summerville Location

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The 12,000 square foot wine, beer, and spirits store provides expanded selection, same low prices.

SUMMERVILLE, SC (September 10, 2020) –Bottles Beverage Superstore announces the opening of its third and newest locally-owned and operated location at 1110 N. Main St. in the heart of Summerville.


The 12,000 square foot location is Summerville’s first true beverage superstore. The new Bottles store, located in the former location of Bill’s Liquors & Fine Wines, has been completely renovated and includes an original mural paying homage to local breweries. With an expanded focus on local products, the store features a greatly increased wine and beer section to compliment the already extensive liquor selection.

The renovated store now has additional parking and new access to Berkeley Circle, making it even more convenient to stop by and shop in-store or pick up curbside. 

“We look forward to being a part of the local Summerville community and welcoming our new neighbors to Bottles,” said George McLaughlin, Bottles’ Managing Partner. “We are excited to provide a new one-stop-shop for Summerville residents for their shopping and entertaining needs.”

Bottles offers the area’s largest selection of highly rated wine, beer, and spirits at the best prices in town. As a result of the renovations, the store now features a tap station with 12 rotating growler selections, a rapid wine chiller, a unique assortment of local, domestic, and international products, a cigar humidor, mixers, accessories, and more

“We are committed to providing an amazing customer service experience by offering expert advice on a wide selection for Summerville shoppers combined with the high level of service for which Bottles is known,” said Abe Versprille, the Bottles store manager, and a Summerville resident himself.

The original Bottles Beverage Superstore was opened in Mt. Pleasant in 2011 by five Lowcountry residents who thought there was a need for a locally owned beverage store.  Bottles has often been voted as the Best Beverage, Wine and Spirits store in Mt. Pleasant while Bill’s has been frequently voted the Best Spirits store in Summerville.  

Bottles Beverage Superstore is located at 1110 N. Main St. in Summerville and is open Monday through Saturday from 9 am to 7 pm for spirits with extended hours until 9 pm for beer and wine.  The store is also now open on Sunday for wine and beer from 11 am to 6 pm.

To celebrate the grand opening, Bottles will host a week-long celebration in October with specials and promotions. Details will be posted at www.shopbottles.com and on social media. 

About Bottles:

Bottles, LLC (“Bottles”) is the one-stop wine, beer, and spirits beverage superstore carrying an array of affordable to highly-rated wines grown around the world; a comprehensive spirits selection, and an assortment of microbrews, imports, and domestic beers always-in-stock. The Bottles sales associates are knowledgeable and on-hand to provide an enjoyable and customer-centric shopping experience. Bottles is located at 610 Coleman Boulevard in Mount Pleasant, SC in Moultrie Plaza, 4410 Fort Jackson Boulevard in Columbia, SC in the Rosewood Crossing Plaza, and 1110 N. Main St. in Summerville, SC. For more information, visit www.shopbottles.com or call 843-875-6666. 

Charleston, South Carolina Sues Big Oil Over Climate ‘Campaign of Deception’ (Case Details Included)

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  • COURT: S.C. Ct. Com. Pl.
  • TRACK DOCKET: 2020CP1003975

Charleston, S.C., is the latest city to sue the oil industry over allegedly misleading the public about the impacts of fossil fuels on climate change.

Mayor John Tecklenburg (D) announced Wednesday that he’s taking Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc, and others to court for a “multidecade campaign of deception” that has promoted fossil fuels despite their role as the primary driver of global temperature rise.

He said in a news conference that “it’s not fair to the citizens of Charleston to have to bear the burden” of local infrastructure improvements and repairs to respond to rising seas and more powerful storms.

The case, filed in the South Carolina Court of Common Pleas, accuses companies of public and private nuisance and violations of the state’s Unfair Trade Practices Act, among other claims.

Charleston’s lawsuit joins a growing collection of similar climate cases from state and local governments. Hoboken, N.J., filed a similar suit last week. Sher Edling LLP, the California-based law firm behind several of the cases, is representing Charleston.

Oil and gas companies quickly criticized the new lawsuit, raising the same points they made in response to Hoboken’s filing last week. Chevron said the claims “are not a serious solution to a serious problem,” Exxon called the litigation a waste of money, and Shell said courts aren’t the right venue to address climate change.

Causes of Action: Public nuisance, private nuisance, failure to warn, trespass, South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices Act.

Relief: Compensatory damages, nuisance abatement, punitive damages, disgorgement of profits.

Attorneys: The Office of Corporation Council, Sher Edling LLP, and Joe Griffith Law Firm LLC represent the city.

The case is Charleston v. Brabham Oil Co., S.C. Ct. Com. Pl., No. 2020CP1003975, 9/9/20. (Adds company reactions in the sixth paragraph.)

To contact the reporter on this story: Ellen M. Gilmer in Washington at egilmer@bloombergindustry.com

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anna Yukhananov at ayukhananov@bloombergindustry.com; Rebecca Baker at rbaker@bloombergindustry.com

Gene Budig, academic who ran American League and former Charleston RiverDogs co-owner, dies at 81

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NEW YORK (AP) — Gene Budig, the self-effacing educator and baseball fan from small-town Nebraska who became the head of three major universities and the last president of the American League, died Tuesday. He was 81.

His death was announced by the commissioner’s office and the Charleston RiverDogs, a minor league team he co-owned. No cause was given. He had been in hospice in South Carolina.

Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement that Budig was a “friend to many” in baseball and praised his “lifelong connection” to the game. Former Commissioner Bud Selig said Tuesday he “appreciated his work and his support,” calling him a ”wonderful person.”

Budig succeeded Bobby Brown as AL president in 1994 and augmented his staff with Larry Doby, the first Black player in the AL. Budig held the job until baseball owners abolished league presidents under a reorganization urged by Selig in 2000. Advertisement

By then, with interleague play already a part of the game and umpires being put under the control of the commissioner’s office, it was clear those longtime positions were being phased out.

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New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner was among those skeptical of Budig’s credentials. To the bombastic Boss, the outsider — small in stature, owlish in appearance, exceedingly soft-spoken — belonged more in school than in sports.

Incensed by a suspension imposed on pitcher Mike Stanton following a brawl between the Yankees and Baltimore Orioles in 1998, Steinbrenner thundered about Budig: “I’m not sure when the last time he wore a jockstrap was.”

Budig, whose childhood dream was to play second base for the Yankees, didn’t publicly respond. Rather, he brandished his razor wit. He contacted old pals at the Kansas University athletic department, had them ship him the largest jockstrap they had in stock, signed it, and sent the undergarment to Steinbrenner.

In 2007, when Budig moved to South Carolina, he became a part-owner of the Charleston RiverDogs, a Yankees affiliate in the Class A South Atlantic League. By then, Budig and Steinbrenner were on much friendlier terms.

Budig also helped oversee Yankee Stadium becoming home to the Pinstripe Bowl football game.

“Dr. Budig was a cherished friend of our family and someone my father respected immensely for his character, intellect and profound career accomplishments in higher education,” Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner said.

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A chancellor at Kansas and president at West Virginia and Illinois State, Budig also was a newspaper reporter, a governor’s assistant, a major general in the Nebraska Air National Guard, and a teacher at Princeton.

Mixing his passion for academics and athletics at Kansas, Budig oversaw a smart move in 1988. With many prominent alumni clamoring for the program to hire a big name to succeed Larry Brown as men’s basketball coach, Budig instead backed someone who had never been more than an assistant in college: Roy Williams, a future Hall of Famer.

“Ol’ Budig knew a little something,” the professor liked to say about many subjects, with a wry smile.

Budig remained close to Williams and they were part of a breakfast gathering every other week in the Charleston area that featured up to two dozen present and past coaches from college and high school basketball and football.

“I always tried to sit next to him,” longtime Maryland football coach Ralph Friedgen said. “He liked to try to instigate things, to turn it up. I did, too. He’ll be missed at our breakfasts.”

Born on May 25, 1939, Budig was adopted from an orphanage shortly after birth. He grew up in McCook, Nebraska. He earned three degrees at the University of Nebraska — a bachelor’s in journalism in 1962, a master’s in English in 1963, and a Ph.D. in education in 1967.

Budig was a reporter and editorial writer for The Lincoln Star and Lincoln Journal while attending school, then worked as an administrative assistant to Nebraska’s governor. He also served in the Nebraska Air National Guard, retiring in 1992.

Budig became an assistant professor of educational administration at Nebraska in 1967 and rose to full professor, assistant vice chancellor, and assistant vice president and director of public affairs.

He moved to Illinois State in 1972 as a vice president, dean, and professor of educational administration and its youngest full professor. He became acting president in 1973 and president later that year.

Budig was appointed president of West Virginia in 1977 and was hired as Kansas’ chancellor in 1981. He visited all 105 counties in the state during his first year and presided over a campus expansion. He helped lobby the state for money to rebuild an auditorium following a fire, and the building was renamed Budig Hall in 1997.

Budig later taught at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Associated Press sports writer Noah Trister was among Budig’s students at Princeton.

“The class was about the business side of baseball. Dr. Budig would bring in all these big-name guests — people like Jerry Reinsdorf, Bob Costas, and Brian Cashman — and just let us bounce questions off them. I still marvel at how Dr. Budig got all these people to come in and speak so candidly to a bunch of college kids. I think that said a lot about how the baseball community felt about him,” Trister said.

Budig equally respected those in the game.

Longtime pitcher CJ Nitkowski recalled how Budig suspended him for two games and fined him $500 for a knockdown pitch to Kenny Lofton in 1998. Nitkowski took the suspension, but sent a long letter with his check to Budig, explaining why he thought the punishment was unfair.

“He replied to me with a well thought out letter of his own and returned my uncashed check because he ‘appreciated the spirit in which I accepted his discipline,’” Nitkowski posted on Twitter.

Budig is survived by his wife, Gretchen Van Bloom Budig, and three children: Christopher Budig, Mary Frances Budig, and Kathryn Budig; sister Mary Ann Myers; brother Richard Budig; and five grandchildren.

___

AP Sports Writer Pete Iacobelli in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this report.

Grand Opening: Tolli’s Trattoria – Johns Island

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Tolli’s Trattoria made an official open today after a successful soft opening on Saturday.

About Tolli’s

At Tolli’s Apizza, classic and modern Italian a pizza and pasta. Over 80 years and four generations of our family’s dedication to serving you the best.

Fine Italian cuisine is really about two things, getting the freshest ingredients, and using a masterful technique to bring out the best flavors.

At Tolli’s Apizza, we’ve had decades of experience serving the best of Italian cuisine. From pizzas to pasta to our famous Escarole and Bean Pie, we owe it to our customers to have the highest standards of quality.

In our kitchen, pasta and sauces are made from scratch. We source ingredients from fresh supplies and then use traditional recipes handed down through generations to bring out the best. For dine-in or delivery, no one does Italian cuisine like Tolli’s Apizza

They are also hiring

An Online Petition to Reinstate the Mask Ordinance in Mt. Pleasant, SC (Signers include Mayor Haynie)

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An online petition, via Change.org was started after the Town of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina voted 5-4 to remove the face covering ordinance. The ask is for 15,000 signatures.

Signers of the over 12,0000 include Mayor Haynie.

Click Here for petition details and/or to sign

There is also a special council meeting scheduled for September 8th at 6:00 PM to discuss the decision.

Click Here for Meeting Details

2020-2021 James Island Community Assistance Grant Program

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The Town of James Island invites local non-profits to apply for Community Assistance funding. The Town seeks to support organizations that provides beneficial services for education, health and human services, community development, environment, or public safety for the James Island community as a whole. 

Applications are now available for fiscal year 2020-2021. The deadline to apply is Friday, October 2.

Applicants are invited to the Town Council October 15 meeting to present their requests. Awards will be made at the November 19 Town Council meeting.

Grant awards range between $500 and $2,000. The 2020-2021 application can be found here.

For further information, please contact Frances Simmons, Town Clerk, (843) 795-4141 fsimmons@jamesislandsc.us 

Help Save the Gullah Geechee Communities of Phillips and 7 Mile

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Many people saw the documentary, Binya: There’s No Place Like Home which was named by Queen Quet, Chieftess of the Gullah/Geechee Nation (www.QueenQuet.com).

The film documented the plans that the Town of Mount Pleasant in Charleston County, SC in the Gullah/Geechee Nation had to continue massive destructionment which would bring in more people and more traffic. The more traffic that comes to that area, the more they begin to widen roads. Numerous Gullah/Geechees lost their sweetgrass basket stands which contributed to their economic stability and some also lost their homes due to this. Fortunately, during the planning for the last widening, the Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition was asked to be a part of a cadre of organizations and individuals that helped to keep the project from destroying a historic burial area and church on Highway 17.

Once again, the Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition is partnering with the South Carolina Coastal Conservation League and also with Charleston Moves to protect the Gullah/Geechees of Mt. Pleasant, SC. Unfortunately, the roadway plans depicted in the documentary are now slated to take place. If they are to go forward, Highway 41 would run straight through Phillips and there wouldn’t be any sound barriers to stop the further disruption of the quality of life for the native Gullah/Geechees on family compounds in Phillips and Seven Mile. This would further lower the quality of life for the folks that are able to continue to stay on the property that would remain after the highway is directed through it. The others will have to figure out where they will live since they will be displaced.

The Highway 41 “Improvement Plan” that has been presented includes a number of options. The best option would be NO ACTION. However, instead of that, Option 1 is to proceed with widening Highway 41 through these historic Gullah/Geechee areas that are “freedmen’s villages.” The rationale for this is that if they take the highway through Dunes West which is a suburbanized residential area, it will cost $30 Million more than displacing the native Gullah/Geechees who are largely on heirs property. There is no mitigation plan that will prevent permanent harm to the Gullah/Geechee Nation and our citizens of Mt. Pleasant. There is no dollar amount that can measure the heartache and stress that comes to our people collectively when any family is displaced much less to have entire communities displaced.

Apparently, the Highway 41 plan is being pushed due to projected growth from destructionment projects heading to Cainhoy. Cainhoy is currently said to be listed as one of the most impoverished tracts on the last census for Charleston County. So, if that is the case, it is obvious that there are additional plans to build in that area which will cause more negative impacts on the native Gullah/Geechees that are in Cainhoy because many of them that currently own homes will be taxed out. So, it appears that this is all a continuing plan to not simply gentrify the entirety of Mt. Pleasant and the surrounding area, but to ensure the removal of the Gullah/Geechees that are located there.

The Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition is calling on people around the world to contact the Charleston County Council and tell them that you stand with the Gullah/Geechee Nation in OPPOSITION to Alternative 1 on the Highway 41 Project. You can write directly to:

You can also attend the Tuesday, September 8th Charleston County Council in person to present your statement of opposition during the public comment time if you would like.

In addition to doing that, please sign and share this petition:

You can obtain more details on the project and also add comments on it until September 11th at http://www.hwy41sc.com/#popup1. That date is one that already brings to mind tragedy and we do not want to add another tragedy and travesty to the historical record of that date. Instead, we need that to be the day that causes a reversal of the current decision to choose an alternative for this highway project that will rob the Gullah/Geechee Nation of additional communities.

E tru ain no place likka home, so we hafa hep de binya wha dey dey een Phillips and Seven Mile fa stay pun e land! Hep we tek disya stand!


More details on how to become an active member of the Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition can be found at www.GullahGeechee.net. You can also donate to the Gullah/Geechee Land & Legacy Fund via CashApp to $GullahGeecheeNation and GoFundMe at https://www.gofundme.com/f/gullahgeechee-land-legacy-fund. The funds are used to continue to fight to keep native Gullah/Geechees on their land and to assist with sustaining our cultural heritage.

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Charleston Non-Profit Spotlight: The Green Heart Project

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Mission

The Green Heart Project builds garden-based experiential learning projects and school garden programs to educate students to connect people and cultivate community through growing, eating, and celebrating food. 

History

The Green Heart Project was founded in 2009 as a small school garden at Mitchell Elementary School in downtown Charleston with the intention of reconnecting their students with fresh, locally-grown produce. As a Title-1 public school in a labeled food desert, the majority of Mitchell Elementary students come from low-income households that lack access to the whole, fresh fruits and vegetables that we all need to lead a healthy lifestyle. With this knowledge, local neighborhood residents Karalee Nielsen and Chauncey Jordan founded the Project with the hopes of changing those facts. Together with a group of friends, and an open-minded principal looking for alternative ways to teach and inspire, they devised a plan to build an urban garden with a group of 3rd-grade students, utilizing the experience as a service-learning project to teach students the value of growing your own food.

In the first year, the Project quickly became more than an experiment in urban gardening. With students and volunteers working in the garden together, a mentorship was fostered. It was soon realized that the students were growing personally and socially, just as the vegetables were growing big in the garden. The urban farm became an organic example of an important life lesson — through hard work, teamwork, and respect for the process, you can literally bear the fruits of your labor. The volunteers became “Green Heart Buddies” – mentors students could count on and learn with as they worked together in the garden. And it is from this model in volunteer-assisted service-learning that the Green Heart Project’s mission and educational program was founded.

Garden Locations

  • Mitchell Elementary School – 2 Perry Street, Charleston, SC 29403
  • Sanders Clyde Creative Arts School – 805 Morrison Dr, Charleston, SC 29403
  • Sullivan’s Island Elementary School – 2015 I’on Avenue, Sullivan’s Island, SC 29482
  • Meeting Street Academy @ GrowFood Carolina – 990 Morrison Dr, Charleston, SC 29403
  • Meeting Street Elementary @ Brentwood – 2685 Leeds Ave, North Charleston, SC 29405
  • Memminger Elementary School – 20 Beaufain St, Charleston, SC 29401

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Official Website

Events and Volunteer Opportunities

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