South-Carolina
SC governor renews push for abortion ban in State of State
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster vowed Wednesday to press ahead with efforts to additional prohibit abortion within the state.
The Republican governor introduced he would file a petition subsequent week for a rehearing in his State of the State speech delivered lower than three weeks after the South Carolina Supreme Courtroom struck down the state’s ban as a violation of privateness.
“I stay optimistic that we are going to prevail in our historic battle to guard and defend the correct to, and the sanctity of, life,” McMaster mentioned.
McMaster additionally used the tackle to endorse an overhaul to the state’s system of choosing judges that might give him extra management over the method. South Carolina is one in all two states the place the Legislature selects members of the judiciary — all the best way as much as Supreme Courtroom justices. McMaster referred to as for gubernatorial appointments “with the recommendation and consent of the state Senate” in a way that might resemble the federal authorities’s mannequin.
A pending state Supreme Courtroom determination additionally obtained consideration. As justices weigh whether or not the electrical chair or a firing squad are authorized execution strategies, McMaster tasked the Basic Meeting with passing a protect regulation to guard the identities of corporations that present deadly injection medication. McMaster mentioned doing so would free the businesses to restock the state’s depleted provide with out concern of public strain from activists towards capital punishment.
Different developments gave the governor trigger to rejoice. McMaster touted the state’s file funds surplus of greater than $3.5 billion and historic ranges of capital funding amounting to over $10 billion.
The governor additionally took time in his speech to acknowledge friends current within the crowd, together with enterprise executives with RedWood Supplies and BMW. The businesses’ respective bulletins of recent electrical automobile and battery crops each broke the earlier file for the state’s largest capital funding mission.
Nonetheless, McMaster criticized President Joe Biden’s administration for “run-away federal spending” he mentioned has threatened states with a possible recession within the coming 12 months.
The governor delivered the annual remarks earlier than a joint session of the Basic Meeting. With state lawmakers current, McMaster pushed viewers members to cross a number of coverage targets.
The speech featured assist for schooling scholarship accounts. The Senate has spent the primary weeks of session debating this system, which would supply public tax {dollars} for lower-income college students to extra simply pay for personal colleges with $6,000 vouchers. McMaster famous his funds proposal would put aside $25 million for this system.
Democrats — the minority celebration in each legislative chambers — mentioned to provide credit score the place it’s due. Whereas excited by McMaster’s initiatives increasing broadband and bettering state infrastructure, state Sen. Ronnie Sabb of Williamsburg mentioned these investments have been made doable by the federal bipartisan infrastructure invoice signed by Biden.
Delivering the Democratic response to the State of the State, Sabb laid out his celebration’s agenda. Because the state’s financial system booms amid file investments, Sabb mentioned the minimal wage — at present $7.25 per hour — ought to enhance. He additionally pushed for hate crime laws after an try to make South Carolina the forty ninth state with such a regulation stalled final 12 months.
Sabb criticized the Republican priorities talked about by McMaster. Within the wake of renewed requires an abortion ban, Sabb referred to as for a poll referendum permitting South Carolinians to determine the matter. He mentioned the proposed schooling scholarship accounts quantity to an unconstitutional plan to provide taxpayer cash to non-public, for revenue colleges.
“Each of those points problem how we at present view private rights in our state,” Sabb mentioned. “However but once more, we see a renewed effort by factions of Republican legislators to truly strip your liberties away.”
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James Pollard is a corps member for the Related Press/Report for America Statehouse Information Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit nationwide service program that locations journalists in native newsrooms to report on undercovered points
South-Carolina
South Carolina announces signing of Ball State DB transfer Myles Norwood
South Carolina got a boost to its secondary for the 2025 season from the MAC of all conferences, as the Gamecocks announced the signing of defensive back Myles Norwood on Thursday.
The 6-foot-1, 183-pounder from St. Louis transferred from Ball State, so next fall he’ll be taking a significant step up in competition after deciding to test his talents in the SEC.
According to On3, Norwood’s final 2 choices came down to South Carolina and Kentucky, and Norwood chose Columbia over Lexington.
The junior had 38 tackles, 22 of them solo, with 2 tackles-for-loss, 10 pass breakups and a fumble recovery for the Cardinals in 2024. According to Pro Football Focus, Norwood earned a solid coverage grade of 71.8 across 456 snaps in 12 games for Ball State. The majority of his snaps were at outside cornerback, with 48 snaps coming at the nickel position — 35 of which came in 1 game.
Kentucky has several defensive backs leaving for the NFL Draft or the transfer portal, so the Wildcats really could’ve used Norwood but instead saw him go to an SEC rival school.
Norwood should be an important piece of South Carolina’s secondary in 2025 after working his way into Ball State’s rotation quickly.
Cory Nightingale, a former sportswriter and sports editor at the Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, is a South Florida-based freelance writer who covers Alabama for SaturdayDownSouth.com.
South-Carolina
South Carolina Lands Ball State Transfer Cornerback
The Gamecocks return to the transfer portal this time landing a commitment from Ball State transfer cornerback Myles Norwood, On3’s Pete Nakos reports.
Norwood is a former JUCO product that began his collegiate career at Iowa State before landing at Ball State and ultimately South Carolina. His addition to the room is needed after the Gamecocks are expected to lose players due to eligibility reasons. The 6-foot-1 and 183 pounder out of St. Louis, Missouri had five passes defensed in 2024 to go along with two forced fumbles and 38 total tackles.
Norwood is the seventh transfer addition to South Carolina following the Christmas Eve addition of Western Kentucky offensive lineman Rodney Newsom.
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South-Carolina
SC archaeologists searching for former slave quarters in public dig • SC Daily Gazette
HILTON HEAD — Researchers believe Green’s Shell Enclosure Heritage Preserve was once a ceremonial spot for Native American tribes that inhabited the state’s Sea Islands. Centuries later, it was also part of a large plantation, according to South Carolina archaeologists.
As archaeologists dig, seeking to uncover the foundations of former slave quarters, along with more artifacts from the land’s Native American history, they’re opening the property up next month for members of the public to tour and observe their work.
From Jan. 7-16, archaeologists will lead three free tours daily to show interested visitors how they discover information about a piece of land. Each tour is limited to 15 people, so the Department of Natural Resources encourages registering for the event.
One advantage of public tours is people can see all the work archaeologists do and not just the pottery or other items displayed in museums, project manager Meg Gaillard told the SC Daily Gazette.
The tours have to remain small because the excavation will involve digging holes throughout the 3-acre property. To start, they will create a grid of 100 holes about 30 centimeters wide and 100 centimeters deep, which Gaillard calls “windows into the ground.”
SC considers buying land for 2 new nature preserves
The archaeologists will then use what they find to decide where to expand their dig, looking for artifacts that could date back as far as 1335 A.D., around the same time as the Renaissance in Europe.
“I would encourage people to come and visit us a couple times during the field season, because they’re going to see a little bit of a different take on archaeology in the different weeks,” Gaillard said.
Green’s Shell Enclosure is named for an enclosure made of oyster and other shells that snakes through part of the property. The ridge, which measures from 20 to 30 feet wide at the base and 4 feet tall at its highest points, was built by Native Americans during a period known as the Irene phase, according to DNR. The period is named after an excavation at Irene Plantation near Savannah, Georgia.
The inhabitants of Green’s Shell were farmers who lived in large villages. They used shells to make pendants, called gorgets, as well as masks and beads.
Archaeologists believe the enclosure could have been a ceremonial site, according to DNR. Artifacts, including remnants of pottery, could give researchers a better picture of what people did there, Gaillard said.
Researchers are hoping to uncover some more recent history as well.
The enclosure at one point was located on the western section of the 1,000-acre Fairfield Plantation, also known as Stoney’s Place. About 150 enslaved people were thought to have lived on the plantation in the 1800s, according to DNR.
An excavation in the 1980s found the remains of a chimney on the preserve, in the same place where historical documents indicated slave quarters existed. Archaeologists hope to uncover foundations for the quarters, whether that includes relics or simply changes in the soil that indicate a building once stood there.
The state took over the site in 1991.
Researchers frequently study the state’s 18 cultural preserves, which are meant to preserve culturally significant places, but major excavations like this happen less often.
Archaeologists try to strike a balance between what they dig up and what they leave for future researchers with more advanced technology to uncover, Gaillard said.
Because the archaeologists studying the property in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s left parts of it untouched, current researchers were able to use newer ground-penetrating radar to discover the potential remnants of the slave quarters on the old plantation, Gaillard said.
Newest SC preserve opens, protecting 10,570 acres so far
Archaeologists will do the same thing this time around, excavating about 17% of the property to leave some mysteries for future researchers to solve, she said.
“In 20 years, there might be another excavation there for the next generation that’s going to disclose a whole bunch more about the past, so it’s very exciting,” Gaillard said.
While artifacts are often what people picture when thinking about excavations, other details in the land that are not as easily displayed can offer just as much, and sometimes more, information, Gaillard said.
“To an archaeologist, there’s so much more to that research than just the things and the objects that we bring out of the ground,” Gaillard said. “Sometimes, the dirt itself tells an amazing story that we can analyze for people that come and visit us.”
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