Beaufort County This Week
STORY 1 From the Island Packet A critical decision on restoring Beaufort’s unstable boardwalk and the relieving platform supporting it was made Monday when the Waterfront Park Advisory Committee voted unanimously to endorse one of three options on the table. Committee members voted 6-0 to recommend that the city pursue Option 2, where the failing structure under the promenade known as the relieving platform would be replaced and modernized. The option is most like the current promenade in terms of looks and layout, so it won’t bring major changes to the feel of the park. However, the city’s engineering consultant says it would use contemporary materials and raise the platform 18 inches to add more flood control. It would have a lifespan of 75 years. The committee’s recommendation will be forwarded to the City Council, which will make the final decision and may discuss the issue at a May 26 meeting, said City Councilman Josh Scallate, who serves on the Waterfront Advisory Committee. If the City Council approves it, city staff will begin work on developing an engineering and design proposal that would be advertised. “This gets it moving to the next step,” Scallate said of the committee’s vote. The decision to pick Option 2 comes a week-and-a-half after the city unveiled three options at a meeting at Waterfront Park attended by some 150 people. Story 2 From WCSC The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources reported that the first two loggerhead sea turtle nests of 2026 were logged on Wednesday morning at Edisto Beach State Park and the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. The two nests were left in situ, meaning they remain undisturbed, so the number of eggs remains unclear. Loggerhead sea turtles, which comprise the majority of South Carolina nests, are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. Female loggerheads do not nest each year and may lay several nests two weeks apart while consuming little to no food at all, the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources says. The year 2019 was the highest on record for loggerhead nest numbers in South Carolina, with 8,775 counted. Last year, 3,901 were reported. Four species of sea turtles may nest on South Carolina beaches, and all are protected under federal and state law. Those species are: loggerheads, green turtles, Kemp’s ridleys, and leatherbacks. Sea turtle nesting season in South Carolina runs from May 1 through October 31. Story 3 From the Post & Courier Social media posts coming out of Jasper County during the afternoon of May 6 look like they belong back in 2020 or 2021. One post from Keith Horton, the county’s clerk of court, stated that the Jasper County Courthouse is closed until further notice due to a “significant number of employees testing positive for COVID-19.” Reached by phone, Laura Malphrus, the county’s chief deputy clerk of court, confirmed the closure and its cause, stating that several employees tested positive for the virus earlier in the day May 6. She did not disclose the exact number of employees who tested positive. The courthouse is scheduled to be disinfected on May 7 and due to the chemicals used in that process employees were advised that the courthouse would not reopen until May 11, Malphrus added.
2 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Beaufort County This Week!