Mount Pleasant Recreation Depatment (MPRD) Summer Camp Registration Now Open

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MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (Feb. 18, 2019) – Registration for summer camps at the Mount Pleasant Recreation Department will open Monday, Feb. 25, at 8 a.m. Registration is first come, first served and will stay open until camps fill up. 

With over 100 camp offerings, and multiple dates and locations, there is something for everyone at the Mount Pleasant Recreation Department. 

“We have been working all year to provide our residents with a wide variety of summer camps for all interests,” says Tina Carter, MPRD program coordinator. “We have camps for aspiring athletes, scientists, pilots, dancers, artists, engineers and more. We even have a video game design camp where ages 8-12 will get to design and create their very own video game.”  

For a full list of summer camp offerings, residents are encouraged to view the Summer 2019 InMotion Magazine here.  

To ensure your registration process goes as smoothly as possible, MPRD has issued six quick tips to follow before, during, and after registration: 

  1. Check your online login information now. If you can’t remember your username or password, call the Mount Pleasant Recreation Department at (843) 884-2528. Phone lines will be busy on registration day, so make sure to check this ahead of time. Note: For those new to Mount Pleasant, you will need to stop by an MPRD facility to register your household and/or any new family members. 
  2. Pick your camps now. Camps will fill up quickly, so make sure to have your activity codes and backup camps picked out now and ready to go on registration day.  
  3. There are two ways to register for camps: online at https://webtrac.tompsc.com or in person at the R.L. Jones Center Monday through Saturday, or the G.M. Darby Building or Park West Programming Building Monday through Friday. 
  4. If you are registering in person, make sure to have your camps and backup camps with activity codes ready to go.  
  5. After registration, make sure to mark you camps and relevant information in your calendar. MPRD will not send out reminders prior to camps starting. 
  6. The week before camps start, make sure to check the location, time, and any required equipment, clothing, and/or materials. 

For more tips, updates, and camp highlights, follow the Mount Pleasant Recreation Department on Facebook and Instagram.

Mount Pleasant, SC Seeks Public Input for Shem Creek Area Management Plan

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MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (March 28, 2019) – The Town of Mount Pleasant Shem Creek Study Advisory Committee is seeking public input as it works to develop a special area management plan for Shem Creek.

Public input is collected through the use of comment cards available on the Town’s website. The comment cards feature three questions with space for additional comments and must be submitted to Community and Government Affairs Chief Lauren Sims no later than Wednesday, April 17.

The next Shem Creek Study Advisory Committee meeting will take place on April 17, followed by a final public input meeting on May 21. The committee expects to have a draft report of the Shem Creek Area Management Plan sent to Town Council by late summer for their consideration.

The Shem Creek Area Management Plan was borne out of the desire by the Shem Creek Study Advisory Committee to determine appropriate actions to preserve the future of Shem Creek, an iconic working creek that is a valuable cultural and economic resource to the Town and its citizens.

The group’s mission is to preserve, promote, and protect the unique history, nature, and economy of the Shem Creek Study Area and maintain the character of it as a working creek. 

More information about the Shem Creek Study Advisory Committee and the Shem Creek Area Inventory and Baseline Data Report may be found on the Town’s website here.

Urban Land Institute to Advise City of North Charleston on Economic Development and Maintaining Housing Affordability

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A group of nationally renowned land use and urban planning experts representing the Urban Land Institute (ULI) will be making recommendations next week to the City of North Charleston, South Carolina; Charleston County, and South Carolina Coastal Conservation League on improvements to Rivers Avenue and the former U.S. Naval Hospital site. ULI is a global, multidisciplinary real estate organization whose work is driven by more than 43,000 members dedicated to responsible land use and building thriving, sustainable communities.

Public reception with experts
Urban Land Institute Public Findings Presentation

The ULI representatives, convened through ULI’s renowned Advisory Services Program, will be visiting the city from March 31 to April 5. Sponsored by South Carolina Coastal Conservation League, Charleston County, and the City of North Charleston, the Advisory Services panelists will consider:

  • The appropriate density/scale of development;
  • Tools and strategies to encourage investment while mitigating or minimizing the disruption to existing neighborhoods;
  • The role of private/public partnerships; and
  • Potential public investments to the area’s built environment.

As part of this visit, the panel will look at how to support the goals of the greater community while focusing on preserving the neighborhood’s quality of life and affordability.

Leading ULI member Andrew Irvine, a senior principal at Stantec in Denver, Colorado, will chair the panel. “It is both humbling and invigorating to be able to engage with North Charleston to explore meaningful solutions to the challenges and opportunities our panel is asked to consider,” said Irvine. “Our team comes to the city as a resource, with no preconceived ideas or biases. We believe that the residents are the experts within their own community, and our job is to listen, to understand their aspirations, and to apply our best professional expertise to create meaningful and realistic recommendations.”

Irvine will be joined by: Catherine Buell, vice president, policy and programs, Greater Washington Partnership, Washington, D.C.; Veronica O. Davis, cofounder, Nspiregreen, LLC, Washington, D.C.; Aletha Dunston, executive director, Fort Harrison Reuse Authority, Indianapolis, Indiana; Thomas Jansen, director, HR&A, Los Angeles, California; Emil Malizia, research professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Paul Peters, principal, Hood Design, Oakland, California; Lance Robins, chief executive officer,  Urban Smart Growth, Los Angeles, California; and Gayle Starr, managing director, Capital Markets, Prologis, San Francisco, California.

During the week, the panel will tour the former U.S. Naval Hospital and surrounding neighborhoods, and interview a variety of community stakeholders before developing a set of recommendations that will be shared at a public presentation at the conclusion of the panel’s visit on Friday.

Now in its 72nd year, the ULI advisory services program assembles experts in the fields of real estate and land use planning to participate on panels worldwide, offering recommendations for complex planning and development projects, programs and policies. Panels have developed more than 700 studies for a broad range of land uses, ranging from waterfront properties to inner-city retail.

According to Thomas Eitler, senior vice president of ULI’s advisory services program, the strength of the program lies in ULI’s unique ability to draw on the substantial knowledge of its 43,000-plus members, including land developers, engineers, public officials, academics, lenders, architects, planners and urban designers. “The independent views of the panelists bring a fresh perspective to the land use challenge,” Eitler said. “The advisory services program is all about offering creative, innovative approaches to community building.”

Past sponsors of ULI advisory service panels include federal, state and local government agencies; regional councils of government; chambers of commerce; redevelopment authorities; private developers and property owners; community development corporations; lenders; historic preservation groups; non-profit community groups; environmental organizations and economic development agencies.

Louis Waring, Jr. Senior Center Now Open in West Ashley

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Charleston, S.C.–The official ribbon cutting and grand opening for the Louis Waring, Jr. Senior Center took place today featuring Charleston Mayor John J. Tecklenburg, members of Charleston City Council, President and CEO of Roper St. Francis Healthcare Lorraine Lutton, Louis Waring, Jr. and the Waring family

In December, 2015, Charleston City Council named the senior center in honor of Louis Waring, Jr., a United States Navy World War II veteran who also served as the Charleston City Council member for District Seven from 1994 to 2012.

Designed by Liollio Architecture and built by Howell and Howell Contractors, Inc., the approximately 16,000 square foot facility on the campus of Bon Secours St. Francis Hospital features a fitness center, café, resource center with access to computers, exercise studio and outdoor pickleball courts. The center provides adults who are 50 years of age or older the opportunity to exercise, socialize and engage through a variety of activities and events focused on active lifestyles, well-being and growth.

Mayor Tecklenburg said, “The Louis Waring, Jr.Senior Center, named for one of our city’s finest public servants, will be a truly extraordinary resource for our city and its citizens. I’d like to thank everyone involved in making this day possible, including and especially our fine partners at Roper St. Francis Healthcare,who will be providing the high quality events, classes and services our residents need and deserve.”

“With the Louis Waring, Jr. Senior Center, Roper St. Francis Healthcare is replicating the success we’ve had at the Lowcountry Senior Center in keeping older adults engaged and active,” said Lutton. “It is our honor to join forces with the City of Charleston to ensure our residents can access this beautiful space to stay active, stay young, and stay connected.”

The Louis Waring, Jr. Senior Center is open Monday through Thursday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Friday from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Current class offerings for March include Enhance Fitness, a group exercise class for a range of fitness levels, line dancing, art, Tai Chi, yoga, knitting, book club, calligraphy, water colors, and more.

Membership is available to anyone 50 years of age or older and provides access to a wide range of programs including annual special events, travel opportunities, health and wellness educational programs and self-management classes.Basic Membership is $70 per year for Charleston County residents ($80 for out-of-county residents). This membership does not include access to the fitness center and pickleball courts.

Gold Membership, which includes access to the fitness center and pickleball courts, is $125 per year for Charleston County residents ($135 for out-of-county residents).

More information about registration and memberships can be found online at www.waringseniorcenter.comor in person by visiting the center.

Location:

2001 Henry Tecklenburg Drive
Charleston, SC 29414
Located on the campus of Bon Secours St. Francis Hospital

Official Website

MEDIA CONTACTS:

  • Jack O’Toole, City of Charleston Director of Communications
  • 843-518-3228
  • otoolej@charleston-sc.gov
  • Andy Lyons, Roper St. Francis Healthcare Director of Corporate Communications
  • 843-513-3791
  • andy.lyons@rsfh.com

Mount Pleasant, S.C. Accepting Applications for Neighborhood Recreation Facilities Grant (Until September 1)

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MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (Feb. 28, 2019) – The Town of Mount Pleasant is proud to announce the establishment of the Neighborhood Recreation Facilities grant, which aims to improve recreational opportunities for unincorporated neighborhoods within town limits, while providing access to these facilities for Mount Pleasant Recreation Department activities.
 
The NRF grant will be awarded on a project by project basis with a maximum grant allowance of $8,000. Up to 80 percent of eligible project costs may be covered by this grant with an approved application. Applications are now being accepted from eligible unincorporated neighborhood associations through Sept. 1.

“Through this grant, we can support facilities improvements, providing key access to recreation that these neighborhoods may not have had in the past, ” said Councilman Gary Santos, recreation committee chairman. “With increased access to recreational facilities townwide, we can promote improved health, which improves quality of life for our residents.”

The NRF grant was borne out of the desire by the Town to create a granting program for areas that are not in the Town of Mount Pleasant, where joint-use facility agreements could be made to promote community and MPRD recreational activities. 

To be considered eligible for the NRF grant, applicants must be established, financially stable homeowners’ associations or similar entities of the unincorporated neighborhoods within the town limits of Mount Pleasant. Facilities must be open to the public, owned by the neighborhood and under the direct control of a neighborhood association for maintenance and control of use.

The NRF application must be submitted to the Town by Sept. 1 of each year.  Priority will be given to those projects that display a benefit to town residents and an ability to maintain the facilities in good condition. Award of grant recipients will be determined at the October Recreation Committee meeting.

“Building partnerships is a key element in how we operate at the Town,” said Santos. “With this grant, we will develop and explore ties to our local community neighborhoods that we haven’t had in the past.”

Complete information about the NRF grant may be found in the NRF grant application here. Questions and inquiries about the NRF grant may be directed to Recreation Deputy Director Jimmy Millar by email at recreation@tompsc.com.

Mount Pleasant, SC Turns to New Business Model as Single-Use Plastic Ban Comes into Effect April 16, 2019

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MOUNT PLEASANT, SC (March 8, 2019) – Town businesses are reminded that the single-use plastic ban ordinance passed last April will come into effect next month, on April 16. The new ordinance addresses environmentally acceptable packaging and products, like carry-out bags and plastic straws.

“The momentum to minimize single-use plastic in our business community is strong,” said Business Development Manager John Holladay. “With our local economy and recreation being so dependent on our environment and waterways, we urge our businesses to Be the Solution, Stop the Pollution

Holladay highlighted the resources the Town has expanded to facilitate the transition. To review the ordinance, visit the municipal website at www.tompsc.com. There you will also find a FAQs page and a video with information and tips to help businesses make this eco-friendly transition. You can also contact the Business Development Office at (843) 884-8517 for more information. 

Youth Volunteer Corps of Charleston Receives Top Honor

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Charleston, S.C.—Youth Volunteer Corps (YVC) of Charleston was recently named a Gold Level program, one of only 14 YVC programs throughout the U.S. and Canada awarded this honor. Created in Fall 2015 as part of the Mayor’s Office for Children, Youth and Families, the YVC Charleston program offers volunteer opportunities for more than 250 youth volunteers who serve more than 1,500 volunteer hours each year.

“YVC is paving the way for YVC programs all over the U.S. and Canada,” said David Battey, founder and president of YVC’s headquarters, located in Kansas City. “The program has had such a profound impact on both youth volunteers and the community they’re serving.

”YVC Headquarters works with each YVC Affiliate to ensure that they are serving the youth and their community in the best way possible. The Gold Level rating goes only to the very top YVC programs that serve as stand-out examples for how the program can serve its community.

Mindy Sturm, director of the Mayor’s Office for Children, Youth and Families, said, “We are honored to receive this distinction for our YVC program and all of our hardworking youth volunteers. YVC Charleston has already done great work throughout our community, and we look forward to seeing everything that our youth volunteers will accomplish in the years ahead.

”Last year 150 youth served a total of 1,280 volunteer hours with YVC in Charleston, helping out at places like retirement homes, soup kitchens, animal shelters, parks and more.

For more information on YVC Charleston and how to get involved, visit: http://yvccharleston.wixsite.com/yvccharleston

Bulldog Tours Offering Walking Tours of Magnolia Cemetery for First Time Ever – Beginning April 5, 2019

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The Spirits of Magnolia Cemetery

The Spirits of Magnolia Cemetery Tour gives you exclusive access to Charleston’s most hauntingly beautiful Victorian burial grounds.

Originally a 1790’s rice plantation, Magnolia Cemetery was founded in 1849 on the banks of the Cooper River in Downtown Charleston. Home to 35,000 permanent residents, including authors and poets, artists, Confederate generals and soldiers, prominent politicians, bootleggers, prostitutes, and socialites. Magnolia Cemetery served as a Confederate encampment to defend the city from the Union bombardment during the Civil War. Many Confederate soldiers lay at rest in Magnolia, including the eight-man Hunley crew, 2,200 soldiers who fought in the battle at Gettysburg, and six confederate generals.

This nighttime tour is the first official walking tour of the historic site, previously off limits to commercial tour companies. The 90-minute walking tours promise the best of Magnolia’s history, mystery, and spirits. You’ll hear startling stories such as an unsolved murdered socialite, an outraged politician that ordered his butler’s execution and scandalous tragedies that are never told in history books.

Don’t forget your flash cameras! You never know what phantom images you can capture.

Space is limited – Book online today!

Mount Pleasant Mayor Will Haynie to Deliver Meals on Wheels This Tuesday

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East Cooper Meals on Wheels is excited to have Mayor Haynie participate with delivering meals on Tuesday. Visuals include, Mayor Haynie, assisting with delivery preparations as well as while out on the route with recipients also, George Roberts, CEO of East Cooper Meals on Wheels will be available. Please let me know if you plan to send someone. Thank you!

What: Mayor Haynie to be an East Cooper Meals on Wheels “Community Champion” for a day

When: Tuesday, March 26 at 9:30 a.m.

Where: 2304 N Hwy 17, Mt Pleasant, SC 29466

Background:

Mayor Haynie will join the team at East Cooper Meals on Wheels as they prepare to deliver meals to homebound recipients East of the Cooper. He will accompany a volunteer driver on a delivery route and will deliver meals and brief conversations.


During the Month of March, East Cooper Meals on Wheels is celebrating “March for Meals.” March for Meals is an opportunity for East Cooper Meals on Wheels to share its story with friends both old and new. Meals on Wheels programs have come together, nationally, each March since 2002 to celebrate this effort to ensure that our homebound neighbors are not forgotten. This month, East Cooper Meals on Wheels is offering an opportunity for those not familiar to be a “Community Champion” for a day and ride along with one of our volunteers as they deliver meals.

Great Southern Quotes by folks born and raised under Southern skies or inspired by the South

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“Gimme soaky bread with grits and gravy for breakfast, pinto beans with ham hocks for dinner and cracklin’ cornbread in buttermilk for supper and you’ll have yourself a happy man. – Gene Owens, Columnist – talking about Southern treats.

“They still think differently. And the place keeps producing well beyond its share of great writers.”Lisa Alther, Southern novelist, on why there are so many great Southern writers.

“In the South, the breeze blows softer… neighbors are friendlier, and more talkative. (By contrast with the Yankee, the Southerner never uses one word when ten or twenty will do)… This is a different place. Our way of thinking is different, as are our ways of seeing, laughing, singing, eating, meeting and parting. Our walk is different, as the old song goes, our talk and our names.”Charles Kuralt in Southerners: Portrait of a People

“What is there to see in Europe? I’ll bet those foreigners can’t show us a thing we haven’t got right here in Georgia.” –Margaret Mitchell 

“If you like cornbread n beans, black-eyed peas n grits, too. Catfish n turnip greens, and Southern barbecue Love sweet, sweet tea and, of course, coke. In the spring n fall, eat salet made from poke, add peach cobbler n buttermilk pie. Love okra, green tomatoes and chicken to fry. Gumbo, biscuits n gravy, blackberry jam and a big old slab of country ham. Made by the hands of a Southern cook, then you must be Southern in my book!”J. Yeager 

“Southerners know you can’t be considered a serious Southern cook if you don’t know how to make peach cobbler.”  – Trisha Yearwood

“Southerners equate food with love, so if you love what they cook, they’re sure to love you back.”Kim Holloway

“It was not a Southern watermelon that Eve took: we know it because she repented.”Mark Twain

“You might be from the South if – you learned how to make noise with a blade of grass between your thumbs”Jeanette H. Whitfield

“The most beautiful voice in the world is that of an educated Southern woman” Winston Churchill

“The perfect speech would consist of the diction of the east, the vigor of the midwest and the melody of the South”Winston Churchill

“In the South, as in no other American region, people use language as it was surely meant to be employed; a lush, personal, emphatic, treasure of coins to be spent slowly and for value”Time Magazine, September 1976

“We Southerners live at a leisurely pace and sharing our hospitality with our family, friends, and the stranger within our gate is one of our greatest joys.”Winifred G. Cheney

“From the mountains of Virginia to the Texas Plains there is a Southern way of life and it begins with hospitality and a proper emphasis on good cooking.”Winifred G. Cheney

“The Southern drawl has many variations, but all are authentic Dixie. Stretch out words, add pauses, drop a “g” from “ing” and sprinkle your speech with Southern phrases like, “looks like somethin the cat drug in” or “like a chicken with it’s head cut off” or “like a duck on a June bug.”The Politically Incorrect Guide to the South.

“Southerners love to sweeten their foods-from sweet tea to sugar on grits, everything is better when it is sweeter. Southern favorites include fried chicken, sweet corn bread, potato salad & collard greens. The more the food sticks to your ribs, the better. Large picnics, family get togethers and after church meals are all highly popular. If you attend those on a regular basis, you might be Southern.”
Jessica Bold

“Made by the hands of a Southern cook, then you must be Southern in my book!”J. Yeager

“Cause Dixie is a part of me. My Dixieland.”
J. Yeager

“Johnnie! Susie! Come to supper! The music of iron skillets, the flitting of lighting bugs, are in that antique invocation. Supper, in the South, was the light meal: cereal or sandwiches, sometimes bacon and eggs. No culinary folderol, anyway. All of that belonged to the midday repast known as dinner, when the whole family turned up, from office or school, to feast in solidarity on meatloaf and turnip greens.”by William Murchison, The Dallas Morning News Columnist 3/13/96

“O magnet-South! O glistening perfumed South! my South! O quick mettle, rich blood, impulse and love! Good and evil! O all dear to me!”Walt Whitman

“Our Southern homeland, beautiful and so grand. Your laid-back Southern ways, Your long, hot, humid days, Your traditions from long ago and your speech that flows so slow. Your native sons and daughters, too My Dixieland! I love you.~~J. Yeager   In the South, we “sip” sweet tea, mimosas, and mint juleps while “swayin” in the porch swing or “rockin” on the veranda. These things are all guaranteed stress relievers!”J.Yeager

“I’m a Southern girl. I like when they open the door and pull out a chair. I’m really into a man’s man.”Brooke Burns

“It’s hi ya’ll did ya eat well. Come on in child. I’m sure glad to know ya.”Southern Voice Lyrics

“Well it’s way, way down where the cain grows tall. Down where they say, “Y’all” Walk on in with that Southern drawl. ‘Cause that’s what I like about the South. She’s got backbone and turnip greens. Ham hocks and butter beans You, me and New Orleans. An’ that’s what I like about the South”
Bob Wills


“She was so Southern that she cried tears that came straight from the Mississippi, and she always smelled faintly of cottonwood and peaches.”Sara Addison Allen

“It is so hot in the South tonight, the mosquitoes are carrying canteens. There’s a Southern accent, where I come from. The young’uns call it country, The Yankees call it dumb. I got my own way of talkin but everything is done, with a Southern accent where I come from”Tom Petty

“A Georgia peach, a real Georgia peach, a backyard great-grandmother’s orchard peach, is as thickly furred as a sweater, and so fluent and sweet that once you bite through the flannel, it brings tears to your eyes.”Melissa Fay Greene, ‘Praying for Sheetrock’

“Tough girls come from New York. Sweet girls, they’re from Georgia. But us Kentucky girls, we have fire and ice in our blood. We can ride horses, be a debutante, throw left hooks, and drink with the boys, all the while making sweet tea, darlin’. And if we have an opinion, you know you’re gonna hear it.”Ashley Judd, Actress

“All I can say is that there’s a sweetness here, a Southern sweetness, that makes sweet music. If I had to tell somebody who had never been to the South, who had never heard of soul music, what it was, I’d just have to tell him that it’s music from the heart, from the pulse, from the innermost feeling. That’s my soul; that’s how I sing. And that’s the South.”Al Green

“True grits, more grits, fish, grits, and collards. Life is good where grits are swallered.”Roy Blount, Jr.

“About fifteen miles above New Orleans the river goes very slowly. It has broadened out there until it is almost a sea and the water is yellow with the mud of half a continent. Where the sun strikes it, it is golden.”Frank Yerby, Author

“I was a typical farm boy. I liked the farm. I enjoyed the things that you do on a farm, go down to the drainage ditch and fish, and look at the crawfish and pick a little cotton.”Sam Donaldson, Reporter and News Anchor from Texas

“About fifteen miles above New Orleans the river goes very slowly. It has broadened out there until it is almost a sea and the water is yellow with the mud of half a continent. Where the sun strikes it, it is golden.”Frank Yerby, Author