A new downtown hotel and student abuse at the College of Charleston – Headlines from the Top US City

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By Mark A. Leon

A new 18 room hotel was unanimously approved for the old Bob Ellis location on King Street and the fifth College of Charleston fraternity was shut down in a year with this recent one involving acts or misconduct allegedly including abuse of a student.

Meanwhile in Conde Nast land, Charleston continues its reign as the #1 city in the United States.

Let us for a moment overly simplify this.  I apologize for the lack of complexity, but sometimes you need to be transparent and simple.  These bullet points should illustrate a growing number of concerns that we cannot turn a blind eye to.

  • Charleston has not ranked in the top five tourist cities in the United States or world in any other annual survey other than Travel & Leisure.
  • The voters are tourists that spend an average of 1 to 4 days in Charleston annually or just one isolated visit.
  • A small group is “raising” awareness of a new rising of the South with peaceful demonstrations of flag waving and graffiti, but we claim to not have issues around race.
  • Have there been any investigations into the conditions the construction workers that are working in extreme heat putting up all these new developments in record time to capitalize on the overwhelming rise in demand and prices in Charleston County and surrounding areas?
  • In a recent article, we recommended subsidized parking for locals that work downtown. Thank you to the College of Charleston and their survey team by bringing attention to this issue and reinforcing that local livability is taking a back seat.
  • Why is our local city and county government, knowing that there is active construction on Upper King, Crosstown, Lockwood, Upper Meeting, Medical District and areas around The Battery, not doing a single thing to curtail the development? That is the million-dollar question that remains.

Is all this for the hard-working residents that commute long hours every day, suffer wear on their vehicles from a damaged road system, struggle to pay monthly rent and expenses and refusing to come to a city that preaches shop local, buy local?

In a city that can be crippled by an icy bridge, a netting falling from a bridge top or a single massive accident, it is time to ask some serious questions and more importantly, get answers.

When will historic Charleston return to the look and feel of a city that once was the shining star of the South?

Nascar Driver Kyle Larson Visits Meeting Street Academy in Charleston, SC

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LAS VEGAS, Aug. 4, 2017 —  On Wednesday, August 2, Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 42 Chevrolet SS, and Chip Ganassi Racing (CGR) team engineers made a pit stop at Meeting Street Academy in Charleston, S.C. to speak to the fourth and fifth grade science classes about the role STEM subjects play in racing. Team partner Credit One Bank was also in attendance and donated $25,000 to the school.

“I loved meeting with the students of Meeting Street Academy,” said Larson. “Getting the chance to talk with kids about what I do is always something I enjoy, and they seemed pretty excited to hear about racing and fast cars. It was also fun to have some of our engineers on hand to explain how they build our cars. Without them, I wouldn’t be able to run up front and compete for wins, so it was great for them to tell the kids about the importance of technology in racing,” said Larson.

In addition to having Larson and the team engineers on hand, the students got an up close view of the No. 42 Credit One Bank Chevrolet SS, complete with the school’s logo on the car.  Larson and CGR engineers spoke to the students about the technology associated with racing, how math and science play a role in building race cars, and the importance of STEM topics in motorsports. Credit One Bank also presented a donation of $25,000 to enhance the school’s science and robotics curriculum. Larson completed his visit by taking photos and having lunch with the students.

“This incredible donation from Credit One Bank will allow us to expand our STEM curriculum in amazing ways.  STEM is about so much more than learning science and computer programming—it really gives our scholars the opportunity to work together to solve complex problems,” said Dirk Bedford, principal of Meeting Street Academy, Charleston. “The expansion of the Lego Robotics team will allow for the kind of critical hands-on, minds-on experiential learning that teaches our scholars to think analytically and work logistically to find solutions.”

“Credit One Bank is proud to be associated with Meeting Street Academy. Our hope is that this donation will help instill a love of learning and technology in the students for years to come,” said Laura Faulkner, vice president of marketing communications, Credit One Bank. “By aligning our partnerships with Chip Ganassi Racing and NASCAR with Credit One Bank’s commitment to education and giving back, we created a special opportunity for all of us to come together and provide the kids of Meeting Street Academy a unique approach to learning.”

About Credit One Bank
Credit One Bank, N.A. is a U.S. based national bank that specializes in credit cards. Credit One Bank is one of the largest and fastest growing issuers of credit cards in the industry and provides a broad spectrum of credit card products. Credit One Bank offers card members cash back rewards on eligible purchases, credit education tools, and free online access to their credit score each month.

For more information, please visit www.CreditOneBank.com.

About Chip Ganassi Racing
Chip Ganassi has been a fixture in the auto racing industry for over 30 years and is considered one of the most successful as well as innovative owners the sport has anywhere in the world. Today his teams include four cars in the Verizon IndyCar Series, two cars in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, two cars in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, two factory Ford GT’s in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, and two factory Ford GT’s in the FIA World Endurance Championship. Overall his teams have 18 championships and more than 190 victories, including four Indianapolis 500s, a Daytona 500, a Brickyard 400, seven Rolex 24 At Daytonas, the 12 Hours of Sebring and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Ganassi boasts state-of-the-art race shop facilities in Indianapolis and Concord, N.C., with a corporate office in Pittsburgh, Pa.

For more information log onto www.chipganassiracing.com

About Meeting Street Academy
Meeting Street Academy is the flagship school of Meeting Street Schools (MSS) – a network of public and private schools that was founded upon the belief that all children deserve an excellent education regardless of their geographic or socioeconomic circumstances, and that all children have the ability to excel in the classroom.  Where access to quality public education or affordable private alternatives is severely limited, MSS is providing children with transformational educational opportunities.  Opened in 2008, Meeting Street Academy is a private school serving students in grades PK3 – 5th who would otherwise attend schools that were below average.

For more information: www.meetingstreetschools.org

 

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nascar-driver-kyle-larson-visits-meeting-street-academy-300499713.html

SOURCE Credit One Bank

9 Facts You Should Know About the Total Solar Eclipse Coming to Charleston, SC

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By Mark A. Leon

If you haven’t heard, you should lift the rock you are living under, because August 21st will be a once in a century event culminating with a completion point of Charleston, SC.  Clearly, the area is buzzing.  Here are a few facts and information points you should know for this big event coming to Charleston.

Facts and Information about the Total Solar Eclipse in Charleston

  • Many Lowcountry area libraries are offering viewing glasses free of charge.  The Charleston Visitors Bureau are proving hotels with viewing glasses to present to all incoming visitors staying at area hotels.  Remember to wear your protective lenses.  We cannot emphasis that enough.
  • Charleston, South Carolina is expecting an estimated 1.2 million visitors for this event.
  • The event will last 2 Minutes and 40 Seconds and will end in Charleston at 2:48 PM EST.
  • The next total solar eclipse visible from the continental U.S. will be on April 8, 2024
  • The path of the totality will pass through 5 state capitals:  Salem, OR.; Lincoln, NE.; Jefferson City, MO.; Nashville, TN and Columbia, SC
  • Totality:  Day will turn to night only in what’s called “the path of totality.” That path will be approximately 70 miles wide and stretch from Oregon to South Carolina.
  • This is the first time since 1979 that a total eclipse has crossed the United States and the first time since 1918 that one will travel from coast to coast.
  • List of the best cities to see the totality of the eclipse – Source ABC News
  • The longest total solar eclipse on record lasted for 7 minutes and 30 seconds.

Note:  You can look at the sun during the eclipse, but ONLY when the moon has fully blocked its light, according to NASA. More from NASA: “When the bright photosphere of the sun is completely covered, only the faint light from the corona is visible, and this radiation is too weak to have any harmful effects on the human retina.”

 

 

A Dark Cloud Over Charleston: Cultural Ideology of a City I Once Loved

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By Mark A. Leon

We live and breathe under a cultural ideology and it is this ecosystem that surrounds us all that shapes who we are and how we live.  Shortly after completion of my graduate studies on the East Coast, where I was born and raised, I begin my formal employment career in Minnesota.  Battling the elements of culture shock was my biggest challenge.  After an awkward Hoedown on my first day of employment, I found myself questioning my ability to “fit in”.  Then it happened on a Tuesday afternoon on a warm Summer day.

Just outside my office I saw our Communications Director, Affirmative Action Manager and Health and Safety Manager gazing outside the front window of the facility.  This was my opportunity to bond with my new Midwest co-workers.  As I quietly joined in on their conversation, I walked over and listened closely.  The conversation was centered around a beautiful deer in the parking lot.  I looked and found no deer.  They raved and referred to it with intimate detail.  Still, no deer.

Finally, I resisted my fear of being embarrassed, and finally spoke up asking, ‘what deer?”.  All three looked to their left at me and pointed straight ahead.  Still, no sign of a deer, but within seconds I came to the realization, that beautiful fawn was none other than a large green John Deere tracker.

I was a stranger in a strange land.

Having moved often within the states and abroad, I found a home in Charleston and once again had to adjust to a new culture.  Now nine years in and I am still learning the culture.  Most often enlightened, but still very concerned.

After only spending one weekend in Charleston, escaping the crowds of my temporary Myrtle Beach home, I fell in love.  First, with the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge.  Then as I penetrated deeper, the Colonial architecture and cobble stone roads of historic downtown, embracing the kindness of strangers, the seamless transition of city and residential living and the embrace of local business.  Finally, I absorbed the celebratory nature of the festival and events and the selfless support of human interest efforts on land and water.  This was truly a place I could call home.

It was a place where I could walk the streets in jeans, t-shirt and flip flops, go into my local bar on King Street and be greeted by my favorite bar tender as live trivia roared the crowds all around.  On a cool winter evening, I could put on a light jacket and head to a local theatre where some of the most talented actors in the South resided.

Charleston was a place where Jimmy Buffett or Warren Buffett could feel at home.  Celebrities were just like you and I and the taste of Southern cuisine made you want to come back over and over.

Elegant, yet unassuming, warm and inviting, but still personal in its connection to nature.  This was Charleston.

There was something so truly magical that all the Instagram’s in the world could not capture the cinematic beauty of a Charleston sunset over the harbor.  Every morning was a gift and every evening a blessing.

Church bells rang reminding us that faith is as strong as blood.

Going to a high-end steakhouse for a burger and a glass of Pinot Noir was just as acceptable as dressing to the nines.

Charleston’s idea of Tinder, was sitting outside a downtown restaurant, exchanging a smile with passing stranger and then spending the next few hours learning about each other’s dreams.

Charleston “was” a magical place.  A place historians, dreamers and visionaries could co-exist as one. 

Times have changed.  A cloud has stricken this city paralyzed.  Instead of a wheelchair or crutches, we are restricted by cranes, bulldozers and detours.

Our enemies are not the northerners as so many claim, but expansion and the greed hungry mongers in government and institutional investment.

Housing/apartment/condo prices and dining and hospitality costs all have hit record highs, but at what cost?

What is the new Charleston Experience?

  • Potholes and broken up uneven sidewalks
  • Constant construction that shows no signs of ending with the approval of two new hotels and continued development throughout the city
  • Traffic clusters throughout the metro and beyond
  • A rotating door of store and restaurant closures
  • Growth of common chain brands and reduction of local business owners
  • Rise of the homeless on the streets once again
  • Infrastructure on the East Side and West Side ignored
  • Rise in highway fatalities, home fires and violent crime
  • More restrictive parking laws and increased cost of parking
  • Urban and residential flooding still without resolution
  • Rumors of political greed and corruption
  • A separatist movement between the left and right, north and south
  • Disrespecting the beaches

This is not the Charleston I fell in love with nine years ago.   The look, the attitude, the culture and the warmth are hiding somewhere, hoping this dark cloud moves offshore.

Female Owned Long Island Based Frozen Beverage Company Expands to the Lowcountry

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For Immediate Release

Long Island Based Frozen Beverage Company expands to the Low Country in 2017.

Daiquiri Daddy, a Frozen Beverage & Machine Rental Company is expanding its operations to the Charleston, South Carolina area in 2017. This female owned and operated business has received major success on Long Island, servicing both corporate and private clients from New York City to Montauk since 2014.

Christine and Andrea’s mission was to provide amazing frozen beverages for backyard parties and corporate events.

As lovers of Frozen Margaritas, Strawberry Daiquiri’s and of course who could resist a Pina Colada, we found ourselves constantly filling blender after blender at our personal events.

Enough was Enough!

We researched the best machines to produce our favorite beverages, purchased a bunch, added a truck and we were in business.

Since 2014, we have serviced thousands of private events, weddings and corporate events for companies like Gulbrandsen Technologies, Phillips Art Gallery, & many more.

Since we are completely mobile, we are able to accommodate any event, any size and time

We are thrilled and excited to bring our concept to the Charleston area where Christine will head up operations while Andrea manages Long Island – together with family and friends we aim to be a crowd pleaser.

Interested in becoming a Daiquiri Daddy in your area, give us call.

Daiquiri Daddy Charleston (daiquiridaddycharleston.com) will begin taking reservations for September 2017 for weddings, bbq, or as we like to say, any day that ends in “Y”

We can also be reached at 1.877.DADDY.07 (1.877.323.3907) to answer any of your questions.

GALLERY: Signs of Spring Street (Charleston, SC)

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One area of downtown Charleston, SC that has seen tremendous change and personality is Spring Street.  With the recent confirmed decision to make this a two way street and a number of small businesses laying claim to Spring Street as their home, we thought it would be a great time to pay homage to the eclectic personality that is Spring Street.

From the floral beauty of Tiger Lily to the robust smells of Eclectic Coffee and Bearded Cafe, Spring Street is a trendy residential hot spot.

This bustling street, populated by students, locals and business owners is always ready to provide you with an international experience with a Southern smile.

To the yoga studios, salons, restaurants, veggie markets, grocers, Asian cuisine owners and barber shops, we thank you for making Spring Street an experience for all.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Make Spring Street part of your next downtown adventure.

 

 

Study: Charleston Hospitality Workers Have Parking Needs

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CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — A study shows most of Charleston’s hospitality workers drive to their jobs and must take parking costs from their paychecks.

The Post and Courier of Charleston reports the study by the College of Charleston’s Office of Tourism Analysis shows that about 60 percent of downtown Charleston’s restaurant and hotel workers live outside the peninsula. About 80 percent of workers drive to their jobs alone, regardless of where they live.

About 70 percent of the 503 workers the College of Charleston surveyed said they spend at least $25 a month on parking, with about a third paying $100 or more monthly.

Buses aren’t convenient because those working in hospitality tend to work later shifts.

The city council now requires new hotels to provide parking or shuttle plans for employees.

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Information from: The Post and Courier, http://www.postandcourier.com

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

A Baby Sea Turtle Rescue Story: With a Little Help From My Friends

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By Mark A. Leon

When a sea turtle egg hatches, the baby sea turtles make a migration from the protected nesting area to their ocean home.  This natural phenomenon happens in the middle of the night as the moon lights the pathway.  By morning, there is no sign of the migration.  Yes on this morning, one got left behind.  Whether born with a limp limb or a predatory attack, this baby sea turtle saw the light of day trying desperately to get to the ocean with three working fins.

As we stumbled on this brave young thing trying to enter safely into the ocean and meet his family, we felt nothing but sympathy and quickly became fans of his plight.  As he tried using his three strong limbs and one limp one, he kept getting pushed back ashore by the incoming waves.  It was at this moment, we put our heads together and called the Folly Beach patrol for guidance.  After two phone calls and several discussions, it was deemed best, we go as deep as we could into the ocean and place him in.  They felt this was his best chance of survival.

As each of us said goodbye to Nelson (Yes, we named him Nelson.  He looked like a Nelson), we felt a bond and a very special moment shared.

Thus, our morning was highlighted by our own sea turtle release, reinforcing that there is never a dull moment on the beaches of Charleston.

We wish you well Nelson and hope you are with your family now.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nelson, the Sea Turtle from Mark A. Leon on Vimeo.

Who is Hiring in Charleston, South Carolina – Career Pages

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Here is a one stop shop to all the major companies hiring in the Lowcountry

Top Employers in Charleston, SC