Three Sirens Restaurant (Park Circle) will be closing its doors – Last Day: September 17, 2023

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It is with sadness that local Park Circle area favorite, Three Sirens (1067 East Montague Avenue, North Charleston, 29405) will be permanently closing on Sunday, September 17, 2023. In a message left on their Instagram account, the owners expressed their regret saying:

It is with great sadness that we today announce the final day of service at Three Sirens will be Sunday, September 17th, 2023. Despite today’s announcement and the closing of this chapter, we are extremely proud of all that we have achieved. We wish to thank every member – past and present – of our incredible team for helping make Three Sirens a truly special place. We would not have come so far or achieved so much without you. We also wish to thank our guests and our friends, and we are forever grateful to you all. Thank you so much for your trust and support, and we will miss you all dearly.
We will remain open for business for the next two weeks, Wednesday through Sunday, 5-9pm.

We want to wish the owners and staff best of luck in all future endeavors.

South Carolina Ranks 2nd in the Nation For Medical Debt in Collections

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A new report revealed that residents in South Carolina are struggling to pay off medical debt. The study, authored by HelpAdvisor.com, analyzed 2022 data from the Urban Institute to determine which states and counties have the highest rates of medical debt in collections.

In South Carolina, 22.3% of residents have medical debt in collections, which is the 2nd highest in the U.S. 

Here are additional key findings from the report:

  • Among states, only West Virginia had a higher percentage of residents with medical debt in collections (24.0%).
  • South Carolina is home to three of the 50 U.S. counties with at least a 30% rate of residents with medical debt in collections (Marlboro, Laurens and Cherokee).
  • More than 20% of residents in South Carolina, West Virginia, North Carolina and Oklahoma have medical debt in collections.

Here are the South Carolina counties that ranked in the top 50 for residents with medical debt in collections:

  • Marlboro County – 37% of residents have medical debt in collections (16th highest among U.S. counties).
  • Laurens County – 36.9% of residents have medical debt in collections (20th highest among U.S. counties).
  • Cherokee County – 34.2% residents have medical debt in collections (36th highest among U.S. counties). 

Click for full report

Stars Restaurant Launches a new concept in the Charleston Rooftop Experience: Introducing the “Satellite Bar”

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Stars Restaurant, located at 495 King Street in the heart of beautiful Charleston, South Carolina re-imagined the adult rooftop bar experience with the launch of the Satellite Bar. This new concept experience officially opened to the public Tuesday, September 6 and promises to be an inviting, casual, upscale experience.

With a carefully designed drink and food menu, beautiful skyline views and decor consistent with the elegance of Charleston, the Satellite Bar should be on your list of downtown experiences.

The Satellite Bar “is surrounded by Brazilian Hardwood railings, fruit trees, and a reclaimed Tiger Wood Bar. Guests can also sit in comfortable banquette seating covered with awnings, and beautiful high-top tables. During the winter when the temperatures can get cool, the Satellite Bar is outfitted with heaters allowing guests to enjoy our gorgeous Charleston evenings in comfort. There’s plenty of room to mingle and enjoy a private conversation with a small group of friends.”

If you are looking for a beautiful sunset in a safe relaxing environment over a glass of fine wine, champagne or a cocktail, make plans to come to the Satellite Bar at Stars.

Stay connected to the Satellite Bar on Instagram.

Ribbon Cutting and Grand Opening for Rita’s Italian Ice & Frozen Custard in Mount Pleasant, SC

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“My family and I could not be more ecstatic about the reception from the community thus far,” Kevin said. “We are looking to keep that up for everyone!” – Owner Kevin Brooks with wife Jen, family, and staff, joined by Councilman John Iacofano and Councilman Howard Chapman, P.E., partnered with Mount Pleasant Chamber of Commerce Vice President Tammy Becker and Chamber Board Members, celebrated the grand opening of Rita’s Italian Ice & Frozen Custard with a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

The business is located at 401 Faison Road, Suite 102, Mount Pleasant, SC.

Read the full press release: https://lnkd.in/gyaC8S-X

Photo Credit: Town of Mount Pleasant, SC

Charlotte based real estate firm Corcoran HM Properties completes expansion into Charleston, South Carolina

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Corcoran HM Properties, an affiliate of the Corcoran Group LLC, has moved into the newly constructed 741 Meeting Street building located in the Upper Peninsula district of downtown Charleston.  They will celebrate the move on Thursday.

Middle Street Partners recently completed the 30,000-square-foot building for commercial use of office suites, retail and food/beverage businesses, according to a news release.

Corcoran HM Properties is headquartered in Charlotte and expanded its operation into Charleston in September 2022.

A private ribbon-cutting ceremony and celebration will be held for the agents and staff of Corcoran HM Properties’ Charleston office on Thursday, Aug. 31.

Corcoran HM Properties was founded by Valerie Mitchener in 2006, and the locally owned boutique firm grew to be a market leader in the Charlotte metro area, the news release said. The expansion to Charleston was Corcoran HM Properties’ first since affiliating with the Corcoran Group in June 2021.

It was a strategic step in the firm’s growth plan to broaden its reach throughout the Carolinas, the release said. In addition to the Charleston office, Corcoran HM Properties has three offices in the Charlotte region and is working to expand into other areas of the Carolinas.

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New Podcast: The 1955 Cannon Street (Charleston, SC) All-Stars – How a group of Charleston teens became Civil Rights pioneers

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Stolen Dreams: The Cannon Street All-Stars and Little League Baseball’s Civil War.
The Story Continues.
https://lnkd.in/gGwSxVm5

Please listen to Joseph Levin’s telling of the story of The Team Nobody Would Play on his Slate podcast One Year ….

Click to Listen

About the Podcast:

Interviews with the former players and Chris Lamb.

This is the subject of Chris Lamb’s book, Stolen Dreams: The 1955 Cannon Street All-Stars and Little League Baseball’s Civil War.

When the 11 -and 12-year-olds on the Cannon Street YMCA All-Star team registered for a baseball tournament in Charleston, South Carolina, in June 1955, it put the team and the forces of integration on a collision course with segregation, bigotry, and the southern way of life. White teams refused to take the field with the Cannon Street All-Stars, the first Black Little League team in South Carolina. The Cannon Street team won the tournament by forfeit and advanced to the state tournament. When all the white teams withdrew in protest, the Cannon Street team won the state tournament. If the team had won the regional tournament in Rome, Georgia, it would have advanced to the Little League World Series. But Little League officials ruled the team ineligible to play in the tournament because it had advanced by winning on forfeit and not on the field, denying the boys their dream of playing in the Little League World Series. Little League Baseball invited the Cannon Street All-Stars to be the organization’s guests at the World Series, where they heard spectators yell, “Let them play! Let them play!” when the ballplayers were introduced. This became a national story for a few weeks but then faded and disappeared as Americans read of other civil rights stories, including the torture and murder of fourteen-year-old Emmett Till.

Related link: Learn about the Cannon Street All-Stars

Southern Environmental Law Center partners with the South Carolina Aquarium to track Charleston’s high tides

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Tracking Charleston’s high tides with help from South Carolina Aquarium. New partnership will bolster resilience efforts statewide

Southern Environmental Law Center kicked off our partnership with South Carolina Aquarium with a little citizen science.

On July 30, the SELC team and aquarium staff spent the evening measuring high tidal waters in Charleston. This new partnership will support ongoing resilience work, from habitat restoration projects and citizen science data collection to training workshops and community outreach events, to help tackle some of the toughest environmental challenges facing South Carolina.

“We are dedicated to finding solutions to solve the climate emergency that are rooted in science and respond to local needs. That’s why SELC is so proud to partner with the South Carolina Aquarium on their critical, science-focused resilience work.” – Alyssondra Campaigne, SELC Climate Initiative Leader

Learn more about sea-level rise and how our partnership will bolster resilience efforts in South Carolina: https://lnkd.in/gWedzKAV

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JJR Development completes 6 affordable living houses on the East Side (Charleston, SC)

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Release from JJR (LinkedIn)

Charleston, SC- Peninsula- Historic Downtown (America St. and Father Grants Ct.- Eastside) JJR Development is proud to announce our completion of 6 affordable, fee simple houses for the City’s Homeownership Initiative Program by the Department of Housing and Community Development.

Two families already closed and moved in, with the remaining ones in rapid succession. Affordable housing; a prime initiative of the Administration of Charleston’s Mayor John Tecklenburg, these workforce houses, with downpayment subsidy from the City are indistinguishable from their “market based” counterparts. JJR is honored and proud to have developed these for the City on a site that languished for 15 years prior; now done in 8 months, with new owners taking possession.

While just a micro-solution, it is a prime example of the Public Sector joining up with an efficient Private Sector development team that can leverage economies of scale and expertise to produce impactful and expedient results. This was a real team effort by a core nucleus of participants.

Special thanks to JJR’s long time COO Sherry Brown, Patrick Head, our Director of Development, Lindsay Flynn, CPA our CFO, in addition to internal JJR attorney Rebecca Fisher, Esq. Extra shout outs to Trey Linton, Civil Engineer, julia martin project architect and Erin Lanier from Julia’s office, Carrie Newbern GC, Matthew Mullins from Builders FirstSourceSteve Humphreys at ServisFirst BankAndy Gowder, CRE, Project Attorney, and Charleston Public Works – all of whom showed extraordinary commitment to this wonderful project. 

Related stories:

Workforce housing project breaks ground on east side of Charleston peninsula

City of Charleston, JJR Development LLC announce creation of six new affordable homes under homeownership initiative

The College of Charleston Receives NSF Grant to Study Mass Extinction

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Sept. 1, 2023, will be a momentous day for the College – and, perhaps, the future of our planet. That’s when geology professor Teddy Them will begin using the College’s share of a prestigious $3 million collaborative research grant, which amounts to close to $290,000, to study mass extinction. He will start by mentoring two undergraduate students, junior Rachel Webster and sophomore Kami Beats, as they analyze geologic samples. He’ll then continue to work with students over the next five years as they do fieldwork in Colorado and North Dakota, generate geochemical data at a lab at Virginia Tech, present their research at international conferences and receive financial support.

The purpose of the grant from the National Science Foundation Frontier Research in Earth Sciences program is to make important contributions to understanding how life on Earth recovered after the end-Cretaceous mass extinction 66 million years ago, when about 75% of species on the planet went extinct. The event completely changed the trajectory of the evolutionary tree of life, leading ultimately to the formation of today’s extraordinary mammal diversity, including humans.

But the project isn’t just to learn about the evolution of many modern plants and animals; it should also provide valuable insights into the current biodiversity crisis facing the planet, as ancient extinctions can teach about the extinctions happening today.

And it will also show once again how the College punches above its weight.

“For the geology department, I hope that we can highlight the reality that smaller colleges have the necessary resources and ability to perform cutting-edge research in a predominantly undergraduate student setting,” Them says. “The experiences that our CofC students will have are commonly only for graduate students at larger research institutions, so I am extremely grateful to be able to provide these types of world-class opportunities.”

Tyler Larson, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, is leading the ambitious, five-year research project and the multidisciplinary team of 12 scientists at eight collaborating institutions: City University of New York Brooklyn College, the College of Charleston, Colorado College, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, University of British Columbia, University of Colorado Boulder, University of Oregon and University of Wyoming.

The two CofC geology students’ first task is to analyze geologic samples previously collected for this project for mercury concentrations, which may allow them to track the timing of the eruption of the Deccan Traps, a large volcanic province that was erupting during the mass extinction, as well as the moment an asteroid struck the planet, which is traditionally thought to have caused the extinction event.

“Over the last 15 years, there has been a contentious debate over which mechanism caused the mass extinction event, so our work should give insight into this,” Them says. “The fieldwork expeditions will take place in May–June over the next four years, so there will be multiple opportunities for our students to take part in the research.”

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Mount Pleasant based Tobias & West Structural Engineers celebrates 20 years in the Lowcountry

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Tobias & West Structural Engineers is proud to announce the celebration of their 20-year anniversary. Founded in 2003 by Eric Tobias and Stephen West, they have been committed to excellence and innovation for structural engineering projects in the commercial, residential, industrial, multi-family, telecommunications, healthcare and historic renovation sectors in South Carolina and across the country.

“It fills us with immense joy and gratitude to mark two decades of excellence and growth, and we are incredibly appreciative of our loyal clients, dedicated employees and supportive partners who have all been integral to our success throughout this remarkable journey – we look forward to another 20 years” said Founders, Eric Tobias and Stephen West.