South-Carolina
South Carolina poised to enforce Fetal Heartbeat Bill, possibly stricter abortion laws
YORK COUNTY, S.C. (WBTV) – South Carolina is taken into account one of many many states that can doubtless have close to total-ban abortion legal guidelines, if not banning it utterly.
Friday, in a 6-3 vote, the U.S. Supreme Courtroom put down its Dobbs resolution, thus overturning Roe v. Wade. The landmark case had been enacted for greater than 50 years.
This landmark resolution will change when ladies can get an abortion in South Carolina. A invoice signed simply months in the past, dubbed the ‘The Fetal Heartbeat Invoice,’ makes it unlawful to get an abortion after six weeks, or when the heartbeat is detected.
Polar reverse reactions to the Supreme Courtroom overturning Roe v. Wade within the Dobbs resolution got here in from throughout the state.
”All of us stood up and applauded extensively,” Govt Director of SC Residents for Life Holly Gatling stated.
”We’re simply disgusted. We’re appalled,” Ann Warner, CEO of Ladies’s Rights and Empowerment Community (WREN), stated.
Warner says the long run appears bleak for 1000’s of individuals’s entry to reproductive healthcare.
It won’t solely put a pressure on ladies’s rights, she says, but in addition on healthcare. She says medical doctors will be unable to make one of the best selections for his or her sufferers. She additionally says it’s going to put restrictions on essentially the most susceptible populations.
”We’re going to see a right away have an effect on on our healthcare system the place people who find themselves pregnant or may very well be pregnant are going to be terrified,” Warner stated.
Then again, Gatling says right this moment is an opportunity at a chance. That is one step nearer to engaging in their objectives. Nonetheless, she says in addition they need to make the abortion trade unlawful and likewise make it so that ladies should not prosecuted in the event that they do get an abortion.
She says in addition they need enforcement in opposition to abortionist that violate any abortion legal guidelines.
”At this time has eliminated an enormous roadblock that has been stopping us all these years from outlawing abortion right here in South Carolina,” Gatling stated.
With the street to outlawing trying clear, S.C. lawmakers may go even stricter legal guidelines than the state has now.
”Realizing the membership, the physique…I might be shocked if we don’t have additional laws,” Speaker Professional Temp Tommy Pope stated.
South Carolina’s Fetal Heartbeat Invoice may begin being enforced very quickly. The invoice was signed Feb. 21, 2021 by Gov. Henry McMaster.
It limits abortions to the six-week mark after a heartbeat is detected and requires an individual giving an abortion to have the guardian hearken to the heartbeat, get an ultrasound and be given childhood improvement data.
The Fetal Heartbeat Invoice has been caught within the courts ever because it turned a regulation after Deliberate Parenthood sued the state. The regulation was purported to be reviewed by the complete panel of the Fourth Circuit Courtroom of Appeals, however now that has seemingly modified.
Gov. McMaster stated in a press release that the state is submitting a movement to permit the invoice to enter impact.
Legal professional Normal Alan Wilson filed that emergency movement to begin imposing The Fetal Heartbeat invoice as quickly as doable. The courts have given Deliberate Parenthood till Monday to reply.
Pope says a bipartisan committee has already been discussing subsequent legislative steps.
That committee is chaired by Republican Consultant John McCravy, who additionally leads the Household Committee. This new committee is made up of eight Republicans and 4 Democrats from the state’s Home of Representatives. It can write the invoice and likewise take public testimony.
”We’ve fought laborious over time to do increasingly to guard life however we need to do it in a smart and simply manner,” he stated.
Whereas a complete ban is just not utterly off the desk, Pope hopes there may very well be some protections for when moms lives are at risk.
“That’s one thing we’ll must debate out and must take care of and listen to either side,” Pope stated.
Whereas all that’s being mentioned, the 2 very totally different teams say they’re already making ready their recreation plans to advocate for his or her respective facet.
”Now we transfer for laws that will mainly make a state that protected unborn ladies, unborn youngsters and their moms,” Gatling stated.
”Give attention to the South Carolina Normal Meeting and we’re gonna must maintain that focus as a result of we’ve got plenty of laborious days, weeks, and months forward of us and it’s gonna be actually laborious work,” Warner stated.
Pope says they lawmakers may very well be referred to as again within the subsequent month or so to take up abortion legal guidelines and listen to what the committee deliberate.
Copyright 2022 WBTV. All rights reserved.
South-Carolina
Dawn Staley’s $25M extension ensures she will remain force in women’s basketball
The notification popped up on Aliyah Boston’s phone late Friday morning, moments before she left the locker room and headed to the Unrivaled practice court.
South Carolina’s legendary coach Dawn Staley had signed a $25 million extension that locked her in through the 2029-30 season and made the Hall of Famer the richest coach in women’s college basketball history.
Boston almost texted Staley to ask where her college coach was planning to take her to dinner to celebrate. But Boston’s congratulatory message would have to wait until after shootaround.
“That’s pretty dope,” Boston said. “What Coach Staley has done for women’s basketball and how much she just advocates for us, especially, for one, being an investor in Unrivaled, you see how much she puts into the sport, and so I’m so glad that it’s coming back for her.”
South-Carolina
Ford Records World Lead at Corky Classic
LUBBOCK, Texas (Jan. 17, 2025) – South Carolina Track & Field standout JaMeesia Ford paced the Gamecocks in the opening day of the Corky Classic in Lubbock, Texas.
South Carolina won a pair of events on the first day, led by a new world-leading time in the women’s 400 meter sprint by Ford. The Fayetteville, N.C. native clocked 51.20 to win the event, posting the second best time in Gamecock indoor history. In addition, Ford’s time ranks first in the NCAA this season. Ford’s teammate, Zaya Akins, also posted a new personal best in the 400m, running 52.15 to place third overall in the event. Akins’ new personal best time also ranks third in the NCAA and is currently third in the world standings.
The Gamecock women competed in just two field events with Omaria Gordon recording a new personal best in the women’s long jump for the third consecutive meet. The freshman jumper posted a mark of 6.19m (20-3.75) for the seventh best indoor long jump in program history, finishing fifth overall.
South Carolina’s men’s team captured one win as well, as Channing Ferguson secured the title in the men’s long jump. The All-American athlete jumped 7.47m (24-6.25) for the win, recording the seventh best jump in program history and ranking 16th in the NCAA.
All three Gamecocks who ran the men’s 400m set new personal best times, led by Josiah Wrice who clocked 46.38 for the sixth best indoor time in program history. In addition, Wrice’s 400m debut currently ranks him fifth on the NCAA leaderboard.
The Gamecocks will return to action tomorrow in the final day of the 2025 Corky Classic. The first event for South Carolina will be at noon (EST) with the women’s 200 meter sprint.
Men’s Individual Results
60 Meters (Prelims)
19. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 6.77q
21. Anthony Greenhow – 6.80q
60 Meters (Semis)
18. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 6.76
21. Anthony Greenhow – 6.83
400 Meters
4. Josiah Wrice – 46.38*
10. Devan Crumpton – 47.04*
19. Jasauna Dennis – 47.44*
60-Meter Hurdles (Prelims)
10. David Warmington – 7.92q
60-Meter Hurdles (Semis)
15. David Warmington – 7.95
Long Jump
1. Channing Ferguson – 7.47m/24-6.25
Women’s Individual Results
60 Meters (Prelims)
9. Cynteria James – 7.40Q
13. McKenzie Travis – 7.42q*
17. Jayla Jamison – 7.46Q
60 Meters (Semis)
9. Cynteria James – 7.31*
11. Jayla Jamison – 7.35
17. McKenzie Travis – 7.44
400 Meters
1. JaMeesia Ford – 51.20*
3. Zaya Akins – 52.15*
60-Meter Hurdles (Prelims)
18. Kennedy Flynn – 8.66q
60-Meter Hurdles (Semis)
17. Kennedy Flynn – 8.66
Long Jump
5. Omaria Gordon – 6.19m/20-3.75*
Pole Vault
12. Lena Richardson – 3.76m/12-4
— Emma Stone – NH
* – denotes indoor PR
South-Carolina
Dawn Staley contract: Everything South Carolina coach said about record salary, impact on team
COLUMBIA — South Carolina coach Dawn Staley is the highest-paid coach in the history of women’s college basketball as of Friday with a new contract that takes effect immediately and will run through 2029-30.
Staley, who won her third national championship at South Carolina in 2024, will receive an annual salary of $4 million with a $250,000 increase every season and a $500,000 signing bonus that makes the total value approximately $25.25 million.
“I’ve never been driven by money at all, never, ever,” Staley said on Friday afternoon. “Money is the byproduct of your success and your ability to work hard and be successful in your space. I do think it represents what can be in other professions that women for whatever reason are not paid for doing the same type of work, for the same type of job and I think this is an example of what it can look like, feel like, sound like and I hope everybody is happy about it for what it represents.”
Before the new contract, LSU coach Kim Mulkey was the highest-paid coach at $3,264,000.
Staley’s salary was the third-highest among women’s college basketball coaches, according to the USA TODAY Sports database from March 2024 but both she and UConn coach Geno Auriemma were making $3.1 million in terms of total pay.
“I think what it represents is, we play to a certain standard and I do think when we are able to get a raise like this, it’s to your standard,” Staley said. “I don’t think anyone expects us to play lower than our standard and we haven’t. Rewarded is a hard work for me because it’s earned. When you’ve done what you’re suppose to do and well above what you’re suppose to do you should be paid accordingly.”
Although she said she doesn’t usually share this kind of information with her players unless they ask, she did talk about what a contract like this may mean to them down the line.
“There’s going to be a time in their lives where they’re going to feel like they’re doing a job and they are getting paid less,” Staley said. “How to handle those instances. It’s a fight no matter what, it’s a fight … it’s a fight to explain to people what your worth is. You have to do some comparisons with coaches here, and coaches in other spaces and it’s the way it is, it’s negotiations. Our negotiations as women are a little bit different because we are valued a little bit different but I think when it’s all said and done, it’s the same things you apply to this game … negotiations are a game … you go back and forth.”
Staley said former athletic director Ray Tanner, who had been working as AD until a little over a month ago, played a huge role making her new contract happen and that current athletic director Jeremiah Donati came in towards the end.
“It took a while for it to happen, a long time and fortunately we got to this great place that makes me look good but it makes our University and athletic department look great in the grand scheme of things,” Staley said. “Ray Tanner did a great job, ran a hard bargain.”
On the men’s side, Kansas coach Bill Self was the highest-paid coach as of March 2024 with a total pay of $9,625,624. In March, South Carolina men’s basketball coach Lamont Paris was given a six-year deal that pays him $26.25 million over the life of the contract, or an average of $4.375 million per year.
“The board of trustees did something that is extraordinary because it really just doesn’t happen but I’m glad it’s South Carolina, our University and our board, that no matter what, we look good,” Staley said. “I’m glad I am the person to be able to handle it because I truly don’t care about the money, I do care about the principle of it. Don’t care about the money but it’s the right thing to do though.”
Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at lkesin@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @Lulukesin
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