South-Carolina
New court filing could put pause on coastal waterway development
MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (WCSC) – The South Carolina Environmental Regulation Challenge has filed a preliminary injunction towards the South Carolina Division of Well being and Environmental Management to place a pause on developments with septic tanks close to coastal waterways.
The injunction seeks a listening to on a lawsuit filed just a few months in the past by the South Carolina Environmental Regulation Challenge on behalf of the Charleston Waterkeeper and the South Carolina Coastal Conservation League, two Lowcountry environmental organizations. They filed the go well with towards DHEC claiming the group has not been monitoring a whole lot of septic tanks and their influence on water high quality.
If a decide grants this preliminary injunction, all proposed developments inside 200 toes of coastal waterways can be put to a halt. That’s, in the event that they use a septic system for his or her water and sewage.
An instance of that is two giant residential subdivisions of greater than 400 septic tanks coming subsequent to the Cape Romain Nationwide Wildlife Refuge in Awendaw. Andrew Wunderley, government director of Charleston Waterkeeper, says if that improvement strikes ahead, water high quality and wildlife will endure.
He says different waterways like James Island Creek and Shem Creek have had excessive ranges of micro organism from septic tanks up to now and hundreds of thousands of {dollars} in state and federal funds had for use to repair it. He says this injunction is essential.
“We imagine that’s needed due to the irreparable hurt that occurs right here,” Wunderley stated. “If these permits are allowed to go ahead and these developments are allowed to go ahead and the septic tanks go in, it’s going to injure our coastal zone pure sources irreparably.”
If this injunction is granted, the unique lawsuit would have a listening to. Wunderley says it might take years, however they’re hopeful that this may occur as quickly as potential.
DHEC says it doesn’t touch upon pending litigation.
Copyright 2023 WCSC. All rights reserved.
South-Carolina
South Carolina takes commanding lead in Palmetto Series thus far
Every South Carolina native knows the impact and weight of the South Carolina-Clemson rivalry. As a well-known rivalry nationwide, it just means more around here.
The Gamecocks currently hold a commanding 4-0-2 lead in this year’s Palmetto Series. To put it into perspective, they went undefeated in the fall semester against their in-state rival.
Here’s how South Carolina has gotten its wins over Clemson so far.
Volleyball
After both soccer teams — men’s and women’s — tied in their two matchups with the Tigers, the volleyball team got the winning going in the Palmetto Series with a 3-0 shutout on Sept. 20.
Riley Whitesides led the team with 18 kills, including big swings in sets one and three to lock in the win, 34-32, 25-16, 25-23. The Gamecocks were able to move to 9-2 on the year with that win and finished their season 16-12 with a trip to the NCAA Tournament.
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Women’s basketball
Women’s basketball earned a big win in the series on Nov 20. Head coach Dawn Staley had hoped to set the winning tone for other sports to follow.
“I mean it’s always great. When I first came here, I said we’ll take a UConn win over a Clemson win any way and then people started going crazy,” Staley said. “I’ll take a win against Clemson, obviously for the rivalry, for the Palmetto point, for hopefully opening the winning ways for men’s basketball as well as football.”
Previously ranked No. 1 South Carolina did just that. Handling the Tigers on their home court in dominant fashion to win 77-45, South Carolina’s defense held Clemson to just six points in the second quarter.
Just 10 days later, the Gamecocks defeated Clemson as the underdog on the Tigers home field. The Palmetto Bowl was a highly anticipated game with Clemson ranked No. 12 and South Carolina at No. 15. There were also possible playoff hopes for both teams on the line.
South Carolina’s 17-14 comeback win held a lot of weight for head coach Shane Beamer and the Gamecocks.
“What about our team, to overcome some of the stuff that we had to overcome,” Beamer said. “So much of it self-inflicted and to just find a way to win at the end is really, really special.”
Men’s Basketball
South Carolina men’s basketball overcame adversity and found a way to win over No. 25 Clemson. The Gamecocks beat the Tigers 91-88 in overtime at Colonial Life Arena on Tuesday.
For head coach Lamont Paris, beating Clemson meant more for the large crowd of fans in attendance.
“I was really happy with the crowd and really there’s a part of you that wants to really win the game, it’s a small part. The rest of it’s for all these other reasons, but you also want to win for your fans — you do,” Paris said. “They made the effort, there’s plenty of things they could have been doing. They came, they cheered, they’re exhausted, they rode the highs and the lows with you for 45 minutes. You want to win badly for that fan base.”
Sophomore forward Collin Murray-Boyles led the Gamecocks with 22 points on the night. Murry-Boyles said his fuel for this game came from passionate fans in the crowd.
“Shoutout to all the fans that were here supporting us,” Murray-Boyles said. “They really kept my energy high, and I feel like they kept the team’s energy high.”
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Upcoming matchups
Women’s golf: February 2-4; February 16-18
Men’s tennis: Feb. 7 (@ Clemson)
Women’s tennis: Feb. 11 (@ Clemson)
Baseball: February 28 (@ Clemson); March 1 (Greenville); March 2 (Columbia)
Softball: March 25 (Columbia); April 15 (@ Clemson)
South-Carolina
Vandrevius Jacobs Signs New NIL Deal to Stay in Columbia
South Carolina wide receiver Vandrevius Jacobs signs NIL deal with the Garnet Trust to remain in Columbia next season.
The Garnet Trust is the official NIL partner of Gamecocks Athletics. On Thursday, the Collective announced Jacobs’ return to the Gamecocks with a new NIL deal.
The 6-foot-0 and 190 pound reciever our of Fort Pierce, Florida joined South Carolina after transferring from Florida State last offseason. The redhisrt freshman caught 12 passes for 181 yards in 2024.
Jacobs’ announcement comes two days after senior Jared Brown decided to return to Columbia as well.
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South-Carolina
SWAC Co-Defensive Player of the Year commits to South Carolina
Grambling transfer linebacker Andrew Jones emerged as one of South Carolina’s top targets from the moment he entered the portal — today the Gamecocks got their guy.
Jones — the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) Co-Defensive Player of the Year — has committed to South Carolina out of the portal and will step into a major role in the Gamecocks’ defense in 2025.
Jones, ranked the No. 9 linebacker in the portal, reported offers from Ole Miss, Oklahoma State, USF, and Georgia State, while he heard from over 20 schools.
South Carolina Transfer Portal Resources:
The 6-foot-2, 220-pounder tallied 122.0 total tackles (57 solo), 20.5 tackles of loss, 3.0 sacks, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and one defensive touchdown this season.
Jones will be expected to bring that productivity to a linebacker room that loses its top three contributors, Debo Williams, Demetrius Knight Jr., and Bam Martin-Scott, from this year’s squad.
Jones, who has one year of eligibility left, previously spent time at Memphis.
The Marrero, La. native is South Carolina’s fifth transfer portal pledge, joining OL Nick Sharpe (Wake Forest), EDGE Jaylen Brown (Missouri), TE Jordan Dingle (Kentucky), and DL Gabriel Brownlow-Dindy (Texas A&M).
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