South-Carolina
Volleyball Finalizes 2024 Schedule
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina volleyball announced its 2024 fall schedule on Thursday, featuring seven non-conference matches at home and a new-look Southeastern Conference schedule that pits the Gamecocks against newcomers Oklahoma at home and defending national champion Texas on the road.
The team’s annual Garnet and Black Scrimmage will be on Saturday, Aug. 17 at 5 p.m. with a home exhibition against Coastal Carolina set for the following Saturday, Aug. 24 at 6:30 p.m. The regular season opens on the road, with three games over three days hosted by Duke. The Gamecocks start the tournament on Aug. 30 against 2023 NCAA tournament participant Kansas, which held a 24-6 overall record and won its first-round match last postseason. On day two is Colgate, the defending Patriot League champions and winners of 22 games a year ago. The weekend wraps up on Sept. 1 against the host Blue Devils, who finished with a 19-10 mark last fall.
The bulk of the team’s pre-conference schedule will come in the friendly confines of the Carolina Volleyball Center, starting Sept. 6-8 when the Gamecocks host Temple and North Carolina. The weekend opener against the Owls will be the fourth meeting between the two programs, first since 2012. South Carolina hosts the Tar Heels on Sunday, Sept. 8 in a return game from 2022’s meeting in Chapel Hill.
After a one-off midweek match at home against College of Charleston on Sept. 10, the Gamecocks will host a four-team tournament the following weekend. The team plays a Friday doubleheader on Sept. 13, facing Stetson at 1:30 p.m. with a 7:30 nightcap against FIU. After a day off, the weekend closes with a 2 p.m. match against Wake Forest on Sunday, Sept. 15. South Carolina has not faced Stetson since 1986 and will play FIU for the first time since 2013. The Wake Forest game is also a 2022 return game, the Deacons won on their home court two seasons ago. The non-conference season wraps up with a pair of one-off games, hosting East Carolina on Sept. 17 at 6:30 and ending with the next chapter of the Clemson rivalry on Sept. 20 in the Tigers’ home gym. South Carolina is 7-1 in the series dating back to 2015.
Conference play begins at home on Sept. 27, with a home match against Mississippi State that precedes a challenging three-game road swing that starts on Wednesday, Oct. 2 with a trip to Austin for Texas’ first-ever home SEC match. After an early bye weekend, the Gamecocks then go to Georgia on Oct. 11 and Florida on the 13th. Other SEC home games include Ole Miss (Oct. 18), the team’s first meeting ever with new SEC foe Oklahoma (Oct. 20), Auburn (Oct. 27, Senior Night), Kentucky (Nov. 1, Alumnae Night), Tennessee (Nov. 3), Florida (Nov. 27) and Texas A&M (Nov. 30) will be the regular season finale.
Entering its seventh season under head coach Tom Mendoza, South Carolina returns seven veterans who played in 20 or more matches last season, aided by a recruiting class of two freshmen and two transfers.
Full ticket information for the season will be announced at a later date, for updates on the team heading into preseason practice in August, follow @Gamecockvolley on Twitter and Instagram.
South-Carolina
SC-Ga.’s Jasper port barely treading water after 19 years
The short-term prospects for the long-planned megaport in Jasper County aren’t gaining much steam.
In fact, they appear to be nearly dead in the water.
At one of his first public appearances before lawmakers, S.C. State Ports Authority CEO Micah Mallace provided a update last week about the Jasper Ocean Terminal that South Carolina and Georgia vowed to develop together along the Savannah River nearly two decades ago.
“Where are we with that now?” asked Rep. David Weeks, D-Sumter.
Mallace, with his first 100 days under his belt, replied that the SPA’s Peach State’s counterpart isn’t as engaged as it was earlier on in the drawn-out process.
“I think that the Georgia Ports Authority has been clear in their intentions and that they wish to deliver more infrastructure, more capacity that they control individually … on the Georgia side of the river, if you will,” he said Jan. 28.
He added that South Carolina’s nearest maritime rival “enjoys ample capacity for the foreseeable future for the next couple of decades.”
“We remain committed to delivering something in Jasper at the right time but certainly don’t have the funding nor the demand to do so in the short term,” Mallace said of the SPA.
Rep. Leon Stavrinakis of Charleston chimed in that it “doesn’t sound like you have a partner right now” for the project.
“That’s right,” Mallace said.
The 1,500-acre site on the South Carolina side of the Savannah River was was first identified as a prime deep-water maritime hub location about 40 years ago.
The two states formally agreed to pursue the deal together in March 2007 and acquired the site near Ridgeland the following year for $7.6 million. They’ve since contributed a total of roughly $20 million over the years to pay for preliminary engineering studies, consultants and other expenses.
The original goal was to be open in 2025.
The Jasper terminal would be a $5 billion game changer for the Southeast shipping industry, outfitted with up to 10 berths that could handle as many as 7 million cargo containers a year. County leaders were eager to build the terminal as quickly as possible to create thousands of jobs and expand the tax base.
The proposed Jasper Ocean Terminal (upper right) was announced in 2007 for a 1,500 acres on the South Carolina side of the Savannah River in Jasper County.
The timing was reassessed and pushed back in 2018, when a new forecast showed the new terminal wouldn’t be needed until 2035 at the earliest, a decade later than the previous estimate.
By then, Georgia was starting to move on. It chose in 2019 to stick close to home by outlining plans to convert about 200 acres up the river on Hutchinson Island near downtown Savannah into a three-ship container terminal that’s expected to open in 2030.
The decision pushed work at the Jasper site even further back.
The Port of Charleston, meanwhile, saw an unexpected expansion opportunity drop in its lap when WestRock Co. agreed to sell its shuttered Cooper River paper mill to the SPA two years ago. The $110 million purchase is expected to more give the authority’s neighboring North Charleston Terminal room to grow through 2050 or beyond.
For now, all preliminary work at the Jasper port property is on hold. The six-member board that South Carolina and Georgia created to move the project along hasn’t met since October 2024. Its website hasn’t been updated.
Andy Fulghum, Jasper County’s administrator, said in an email that he and other local officials have “been at this a long time” but they understand “all of this is market-driven.”
He also was appreciative that the area’s Statehouse delegation for helping redirect funding from the idled terminal effort “to assist us with some current economic development projects.”
“This makes sense and will help us to better respond to current landside port-related development interest in that area,” he said.
A $1.8 million budget request last week will go toward a new trade park in Jasper that, ironically, will handle cargo shipments from the Port of Savannah.
South-Carolina
University of South Carolina students have fun in the snow
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – As snow came down in Columbia, some University of South Carolina students enjoyed the rare winter weather by partaking in one of the most classic snow day activities: sledding.
Students gathered at the top of one of the hills near the university’s Athletic Complex and slid down it using inner tubes, plastic bins and any other substitute they could find to enjoy this time-honored snow day activity.
Send us your snow day pictures and videos by clicking/tapping here.
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South-Carolina
Statehouse Dispatch: Feb. 2, 2026 – ACLU of South Carolina
When we can, we highlight good ideas in the Statehouse. They do exist! Here are two bills that have a chance of passing — if we speak up and let lawmakers know we support them.
Senate Bill 385 would protect the wellness of pregnant people when they enter the carceral system. Under this bill, if a person informs medical staff upon entering a jail or prison that they are pregnant and then test positive on a pregnancy test, they would be eligible for release on bail for the duration of the pregnancy and 12 weeks after the birth of a child. Pregnant people would only be eligible if they are deemed not to be a threat to themselves or others.
This bill currently has one sponsor, Sen. Tameika Isaac Devine of Richland County. One way to improve a bill’s likelihood of passing is to find more cosponsors. Look up your state senator using the Find Your Legislators page and let them know you support S. 385.
Another bill in need of more co-sponsors is Senate Bill 16, which would stop the state from committing children to the Department of Juvenile Justice for “status offenses,” or behaviors that are only illegal because of someone’s status as a minor. Examples of status offenses include truancy and delinquency.
Before committing a child to DJJ for incorrigibility, parents or guardians would have to show they have tried counseling first. This bill would make several positive changes to ensure children are given a chance at rehabilitation rather than confinement or punishment.
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