Edisto News December 2015
Transcription
Edisto News December 2015
In this issue… • Water back in the news • New Town Council meets for first time • Christmas Parade December 12 …and lots more December 2015 FREE The Newspaper of Edisto Island and Edisto Beach, South Carolina from the FREE Vol. 10 No.12 EdistoNews Water, water, everywhere… Edisto Beach’s New Town Council Meets The Town of Edisto Beach installed it’s two new town council members and the new council met for the first time on Nov. 12, 2015. Jane Darby was sworn in as mayor for another four years by Judge Weeks, while Jerome Kizer and Crawford Moore took the oath of office and assumed their duties on council for their four-year terms. Newcomers Kizer and Moore had already been briefed on the agenda, so work commenced immediately on town business. First, Council thanked Billy Callahan for rescuing a port-a-let during the storm. The COUNCIL (continued on page 6) Christmas Parade The Edisto Beach Water and Sewer Committee members have been meeting to review new proposals for replacing the water lines, water pumps and installing a reverse osmosis system for the Town. Members of the committee are Bob Sandifer, Charlie Kerekes, Bob Renner, David Whitten and Jody Kleckley. At the Nov. 20 meeting, only three of the members attended barely making a quorum which would allow the meeting to proceed. The meeting was set as a first look of a new proposal submitted by Thomas and Hutton and other engineering firms that would ultimately bring the Town’s water into compliance with DHEC and EPA standards for Fluoride and Sodium content. The Town is regularly out of compliance with their standards. The proposals, of which there were eight, ranged in cost from an updated cost of $9,600,000 for the original proposed system that was defeated in a referendum, to $6,592,000 for a system using some of the existing equipment that the Town already has. Of all of the models that were shown, two offered the best performance-to-cost ratio. One concern is the present wells and their ability to produce enough water to feed the RO plant. The #3 well at the Lions Club is a small well (90 gallons per minute) that presently needs be upgraded. There is also the possibility that less water would be used if the homes on Edisto Beach WATER (continued on page 2) The Edisto Beach Christmas Parade will be on Saturday, Dec. 12 from 2 p.m. until 3:30 p.m., or until the last float passes. Please park on the side streets, but stay off of the lawns and be mindful of blocking access to people’s driveways. PARADE (continued on page 8) Page 2 The Edisto News December 2015 Au Contraire Event and Design specializes in Event Coordination for weddings, festivals and fundraisers, as well as handmade party and event items. Amanda Kelsey 843-478-0156 Specializing in the areas listed below and more: Day of & Full-Service Wedding Coordination Fundraisers & Festivals Birthday Parties Celebratory Showers Handmade party favors, chalkboards, jewelry and more! aucontraire.eventanddesign@gmail.com WATER (continued from page 1) were to abandon their whole house RO systems. However if there were good water, the townspeople may use more. It is quite a conundrum for the heavy thinkers to ponder. The proposals Proposal 4C would require a new well at Town Hall and take water from existing wells at the south end of the beach and process it at an RO plant to be built on the two vacant lots the Town presently owns across from Town Hall. This would require a new water line from well #6 (495 gallons per minute), well #1 (250 gallons per minute), well #2 (135 gallons per minute), and well #3, the Lions Club well, to Town Hall. The raw water would be processed and the wastewater would be pumped out into the ocean underneath Palmetto Blvd. The new RO plant would process more water than needed on normal days and would store the overage a holding tank under the RO plant and in the 100,000-gallon water tower at Town Hall and in the 200,000-gallon tank out on Palmetto Road. The water tank and pumps on Palmetto Road would need to be updated and the installation of booster pumps would be required that could pump water into the tank and then reverse direction and pump the water back out when it was needed. The present wells at that site would be mothballed so that in the event of an emergency, they could be used again. This system would help during the holidays when the beach is crowded and water use is the highest. Proposal 5B is the same except it would use an underground storage and recovery system at the State Park where the processed water would be pumped underground and stored in a well, and then pumped out when needed. This would replace the holding tank under the RO plant and offer more water holding capacity. The cost of the holding tank is approximately $210,000, the cost of the Aquifer Storage and Recovery System (ARS) would cost $755,000. This technique is comparatively costlier and requires a specialized technique; also, test wells would have to be drilled to insure that it would hold the water consistently and it not become contaminated with the existing groundwater. In the end, the Water and Sewer Committee is sending a proposal to Town Council with item 5B that has new wells and upgrades and includes the underground storage well. They also added the treated water storage that would go underneath the RO plant. The total for all of this is $7,000,000. As for incrementally doing the upgrade, the committee seemed to think the only part that could be delayed would be the underground storage well at the State Park. With no money to pay for the system, the town would have to issue bonds or get a loan for the WATER (continued on page 7) The Edisto News December 2015 Page 3 Obituaries Services for Mrs. Nancie Johnson Green were held on Friday, Nov. 20, 2015. The funeral service was held at 10 a.m. at the Edisto Island United Methodist Church, 8193 Palmetto Rd., Edisto Island, SC 29438. A reception followed in the church’s fellowship hall. A graveside service was held at 3:30 p.m. at Bamberg Memorial Gardens, 14836 Heritage Hwy., Bamberg, SC 29003. Following the service, a reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Spann Brabham, 3122 Railroad Ave., Bamberg, SC 29003. In addition to the funeral services, the family hosted a drop-in to celebrate her life on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2015 from 5 p.m.–8 p.m. in the conference room at The Plantation Course at Edisto, located inside Wyndham Ocean Ridge. In lieu of flowers in her memory, we kindly request donations be made to the Edisto Island United Methodist Church Building Fund, P.O. Box 485, Edisto Island, SC 29438. Donations will benefit the church that she and Harold helped build with their own hands. Buying or Selling on Edisto you can count on our sales team at Edisto Realty to assist you every step of the way with all your real estate needs. Our real estate professionals are committed to provide you with the best service. Stop by our office on the Boulevard and check out the what's new on the market or let us know if we can provide you with a free market analysis on your existing property. Hollace Savage Johnny Black Matthew Kizer Chris Walters Pete Anderson 843-607-0198 843-708-2174 843-709-4671 843-708-8501 843-729-4774 Traveling to Teach Sanders/Hornsby engaged Mr. John B. Sanders of Edisto Island and Ms. Kathleen Sanders of Bay Shore, N.Y. announce the engagement of their daughter, Marie Carolina, to Lovick Newton Hornsby III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Newton and Susan Hornsby of Edisto Beach. The bride, a graduate Elon University and of the Graduate School of The College of Charleston, is a teacher in Charleston County School District. The groom, a graduate of the College of Charleston, is the owner of Bay Creek Builders, LLC. A June 2016 wedding is planned. We should all be aware of these young people, Caroline (Salter) and Cole Smith, who were nourished by our community and have now committed themselves for two years as teachers on Vanuatu, a small archipelago in the South Pacific. There are two precious young people grew up here in our Edisto community. They dated all during high school and then college, married, and began their respective careers. After three years, they decided to join the Peace Corps, in order to “give back” and to have an adventure together. The Edisto News focuses on news and events of interest to the South Carolina Lowcountry, Edisto Island, Edisto Beach, Colleton and Charleston counties. Submission of editorial material does not guarantee publication, however every effort will be made to publish all submissions. Editorial submissions will be published as space and time are available. Letters to The Edisto News must include a name and address to be published. Please include a phone number in case of a question (the phone number will not be published.) The Edisto News cannot guarantee the return of materials submitted for publication and will not be responsible should such items be lost, erased or misplaced. News releases, story ideas, requests and digital photos or graphics should be sent to editor@EdistoNews.com or mailed to PO Box 267, Edisto Island, SC 29438. Advertisements, logos, photos for ads, etc. should be sent to advertising@EdistoNews.com. In all cases, e-mail attachments are the best method of submission and Microsoft Word as an attachment is the preferred program. (If you embed photographs in a document, also send copies as separate email attachments.) Mailed or faxed letters and news releases should be in upper and lower case. Do not submit information in all caps or memo style. While handwritten material is accepted, it must be legible. Typed or e-mailed submissions are preferred. Print photos, black and white or color, are accepted at any size. Digital photographs must be a minimum of 200 ppi at the 6" x 4" size. Articles may be edited for content, grammar, spelling and length. The Edisto News follows the Associated Press Stylebook when editing submissions. Letters to The Edisto News, and certain unsolicited articles, are published as submitted, without editing or corrections. Page 4 The Edisto News December 2015 Letters to The Edisto News Editor My wife and I have owned our condominium in Ocean Ridge for about eight years. We’ve lived full-time as a resident of Edisto Beach for three years. My wife is from Walterboro and I am a veteran of the United States Navy from Colorado. I love South Carolina and the slower pace of living that it brings. My wife calls me a South Carolinian transplant, since I’ve made it my home for 30+ years, and that’s how long I’ve been coming to Edisto Beach. Since I’ve been a full-time resident at Edisto Beach I’ve been very interested in the town Council and attending town Council meetings. It was at one of these meetings, immediately following the special election, after the sorrowful passing of Mayor Berley Lions, that I had learned the first piece of business that the newly elected mayor Jane Darby conducted was to introduce a resolution for the increase in Council pay by 100%. I didn’t think that was in the best interest of the The town or it’s good citizens When I asked the council, at a subsequent Council meeting, why they thought they needed a 100% pay increase, I was told by Councilwoman Patti Smyre that “she could not afford to take her husband to a $60 per person event on a teachers retirement.” When I asked Mayor Darby if any cost analysis was done to figure out just how much out-of-pocket expense was being spent by councilmembers, she replied “quite frankly Mr. Smith, we just looked at our bank accounts.” I personally do not think that is a justification for any pay increase, let alone a 100% increase. As a property owner at Edisto Beach, do yourself a favor and attend meetings, or at least request meeting minutes for your review. You are doing yourself a disservice if you do not. Don’t always trust what you here. Be an educated voter, not just a follower. Doug Smith Note: Letters to The Edisto News are printed as submitted, neither altered nor corrected, with formatting changes only. Edisto bEach statE park’s FaLL sUrViVaL sEriEs caLL 843-869-4430 to rEGistEr LiMitEd aVaiLabiLitY. MUst prE-rEGistEr. schEdULE oF coUrsEs All classes at 1:00PM sEptEMbEr 26: Edible Plants and Fungi octobEr 17: Hunting and Trapping NoVEMbEr 7: Wilderness Navigation dEcEMbEr 12: Alcohol Fuel Stoves ($5 materials cost) Susan Listens THE EDISTO NEWS Keeping everyone informed! First Tuesday of every month Ask your questions and get your answers then and there. Refreshments served. Lions stay busy keeping it clean Nine members of the Edisto Island Lions Club collected ten bags of trash along Hwy. 174 on Saturday, November 14, 2015. The South Carolina Department of Transportation approved the Lions Club as a partner in The Adopt-AHighway Program in May, 2015. The designated section of our island’s main highway is the two miles between Oyster Factory and Peters Point roads. Anyone interested in participating in this worthwhile endeavor is encouraged to contact project chairman Dave Blauch or any Edisto Island Lions Club member. The Edisto News December 2015 Page 5 Cub Scouts “L.E.A.R.N.” about horse rescue Local Edisto Cub Scout Parker Black, participated in a campout at the L.E.A.R.N. Horse Rescue in Meggett, S.C. on Oct. 17, 2015. While there, he and other cub scouts participated in a service project where they cleaned and helped beautify the grounds. After the service project was completed, the kids got to ride in a pony cart and also ride a horse. One of the highlights of the campout was an American flag retirement ceremony. Parker and his fellow Cub Scouts learned the proper way to dispose of tattered American flags. It was a very respectful, patriotic and solemn ceremony. Parker concluded the Popcorn fundraising season on Oct. 24, 2015. He and his family want to say a heartfelt thank you to the Edisto community. Without your support, this season would not have been the success that it was. Also, a huge thank you to Edisto True Value! The True Value family have allowed Parker to sell popcorn in front of their location for two years now. Thank you all so much! The final totals and rankings of where the Cub Scouts placed in the fundraiser haven’t been announced yet. The results will not be announced until January. We will publish Parker’s results at that time. DECEMBER BARGAINS of the MONTH ® SAVE 20% or more 9 YOUR CHOICE 99 16-Pk. AA or AAA Coppertop Alkaline Batteries Duralock Power Preserve™ technology allows the batteries to stay fresh in the package for 10 years. E 137 963, 962 B12 While supplies last. 12-Pk. AA or AAA Quantum Alkaline Batteries Hi-Density Core™ technology provides unbeatable long-lasting power. E 187 581, 582 B12 While supplies last. 1399 SAVE 35% or more 2-Pk., 90W Halogen Floodlights 1,790 lumens of light. 1.4 years rated life. Perfect for indoor or outdoor use. E 150 911 B3 While supplies last. 29 SAVE 35% or more 99 34-Pc. Socket Set Includes 72-tooth, 3/8-in. drive ratchet, 1/4-in., 3/8-in. drive, 6-point sockets in standard and metric sizes. Shatter-resistant case. Lifetime warranty. R 202 751 2 While supplies last. 120, 121 Edisto True Value 827 Oyster Park Drive (Behind Enterprise Bank) Phone (843) 869-4420 Sale ends 12/31/2015 ©2015 True Value® Company. All rights reserved. Find the Shipping right products project and TrueValue.com expert advice at True Value®. FREE to for ouryour store on your orders. Page 6 The Edisto News December 2015 COUNCIL (continued from page 1) unit had been washed away and was on the loose. Council performed the second and final reading for the implementation of the Provisions of Fairness in Lodging Act. This new ordinance, which is intended to assure that private homeowners (Airbnb renters and others) who rent their homes, pay all applicable taxes including the town’s accommodation tax. After the final reading, the ordinance was passed. Council then approved $10,000 from the Hospitality Fund for Coastal Science Engineering to survey sand inventory after recent storms. This survey is necessary to qualify for funding for beach re-nourishment. Other business went through without much fanfare. Pete Anderson was recognized for his eight years of dedication in serving on Town Council. Pete reminded everyone that his “rePete” campaign worked very well. Council only had four members since earlier this year, when the death of Mayor Burley Lyons made it necessary that a special election be held for the office of mayor. Councilwoman Jane Darby was elected to fill out Mayor Lyons’ term. free RETRO CLIPART The Edisto News is made possible by our advertisers. Without their support there would not be a local newspaper. Please thank them and ask other businesses to help in keeping us all informed and entertained. http://www.ClipartOf.com/ The Edisto News WATER (continued from page 2) work. Town Council will have to decide the issue sometime in the future. In the March 3, 2015 minutes of the Water and Sewer Committee, David Whitten asked Town Administrator Iris Hill if Council would ask for the approval from the voters via referendum as the project progressed. Administrator Hill said she had not heard anyone recommend going back to the voters. There will be a poll feature on the new Town website that could be utilized. That could incorporate input from nonresident property owners as well as resident, voting property owners. The decision was, if the project was done incrementally, the people who are paying the increase in the water rates will not be impacted all at one time, but over a period of time. There was a question among the committee if the project was phased in incrementally, would water quality be at an acceptable level before the project is completed. There will not be a clear answer. Ultimately, Council will decide if quality is the most pressing issue, or infrastructure is the piece of the project that is How to Remove Fouride from Water Despite the fact that many technologically advanced countries have stopped or banned the use of fluoride in water, the U.S. and Canada continue to promote water fluoridation. Fluoride (in the form of sodium fluoride, fluorosilicic acid, or sodium fluorosilicate) is added to many municipal water systems. Yet according to a growing number of scientific studies, fluoride is a health risk at any level. In January 2011, Health and Human Services and the Environmental Protection Agency announced their intent to review the maximum allowable amount of fluoride in drinking water. This was based on recent data that indicates allowable levels may be contributing to dental fluorosis,* skeletal fluorosis and other symptoms. A shocking 41 percent of adolescents 12–15 years old in fluoridated communities now have dental fluorosis! *Dental fluorosis is a defect in the enamel of the teeth caused by too much fluoride. Affected teeth show discoloration, ranging from white spots to brown and black stains. Teeth with fluorosis are more porous. In severe cases, the porosity results in extensive pitting, chipping, fracturing, and decay of the teeth. Most fluoride that is added to municipal water is an unnatural form of fluoride that contains sodium. It is over 80 times more toxic than naturally-occurring calcium fluoride. The Material Data Safety Sheet (MSDS) for sodium fluoride shows the lethal dose (LD-50) that will kill 50 percent of a population of rats is 52 mg/kg. (That’s why it is used as rat poison.) The LD-50 for calcium fluoride is 4250 mg/kg. — less toxic than table salt. The fluoride ion (F-) is extremely reactive and strongly attracted to calcium. Its preference for calcium FLUORIDE (continued on page 13) December 2015 funded first. Once the matrix is established with costs for each one of the project phases to achieve an overall result, then Council Page 7 will decide how to proceed. Administrator Hill expressed her confidence in the four firms that came to the pre-submittal meeting, stating that she was looking forward to innovative, out-of-thebox ideas from them. Administrator Hill said a completion timeline had not been established yet. Bob Sandifer suggested reminding Council of the pros and cons of the incremental process. Administrator Hill asked if the Committee would like to send her their concerns to compile and present to Council if incremental implementation is pursued. Charlie Kerekes said that he thought Council had already been made aware of the issues and had chosen the incremental route anyway. Administrator Hill said that she didn’t think it would hurt to remind them. The unofficial timeline is two to three years for the infrastructure to be updated and about two years for construction of the RO plant. RO water could be available in four to five years. More to come. Page 8 The Edisto News December 2015 PARADE (continued from page 1) In recent years, there have been up to 30 entries and with good weather forecast there may be even more. As always, there will be candy thrown from the parade participants so watch out for the little ones running out to fill their pockets with goodies. To register your entry into the parade, call the Edisto Island Chamber of Commerce at 843-869-3867. There is no fee and it’s a lot of fun. Last year’s winners were: Street Parade Clubs, Organizations, Schools Category: • 1st Place – Edisto Womens’ Club • 2nd Place (Tie) – Edisto Belles and Edisto Art Guild Business Entries: • 1st Place – Atwood Vacations • 2nd Place (Tie) – True Value Hardware and Apex Pest Control Cars, Carts, Scooters, Motorcycle Entries: • 1st Place – Convertibles of Edisto • 2nd Place – SC Gold Wing Riders Association Immediately following the street parade there will be the annual lighting of the Christmas tree by Mayor Jane Darby at the Horizon. Following that, the Coffee Shop on Edisto at Edisto Watersports will host an outdoor oyster roast with live music by David Crawford. Tickets are $25 each or $40 per couple for all-you-can-eat oysters. Beer and wine will be available for sale, no coolers will be allowed. Boat Parade Last year, the first place winner, and crowd favorite, was Pressley’s (The boat parade had only one boat!!) There is no information about a boat parade at the time of publication, however the folks at Edisto Watersports are considering one. Contact them at 843-869-0663. The Edisto News King’s Daughters brings the Center for Birds of Prey to Jane Edwards A red tailed hawk, an eagle owl, and Stephen Schabel, Director of Education at the Center for Birds of Prey, visited Jane Edwards Elementary School in the cafeteria On November 19. The elementary students and 40 members of King’s Daughters watched, learned, and ducked as Stephen educated everyone about birds of prey. Under Stephen’s direction each bird flew across the room just inches from everyone’s heads. A few students and adults even had the bird’s feathers touch the top of their heads while most felt a slight breeze as the birds flew over. The demonstration was sponsored by King’s Daughters. The Center for Birds of Prey is located in Awendaw where one can see many more birds of prey and attend daily demonstrations. December 2015 Public Safety Day The Edisto Island Lions Club hosted our community’s first Public Safety Day on Saturday, Nov. 6, 2015. Lions Mike Kelly and Archie Livingston presented the idea to the Lions Club board last spring, and were given the go-ahead to approach the Edisto Beach Volunteer Fire Department and the Town’s public safety officials about developing this program. Mike, also a member of the Volunteer Fire Department, spearheaded the event, garnering support from that department and the Town’s officials. The First Public Safety Day was deemed a success, and plans are already under way to make this an annual event. Edisto Island Tide Predictions – December 2015 Tue Dec 1 5:14 a.m. 0.5 ‘ 11:35 a.m. 6.2 ‘ 5:48 p.m. 0.7 ‘ Wed Dec 2 12:13 a.m. 5.5 ‘ 6:05 a.m. 0.9 ‘ 12:25 p.m. 5.9 ‘ Sunrise 6:38 p.m. 0.9 ‘ Sunset 7:04 a.m. 5:15 p.m. 7:05 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Thu Dec 3 1:05 a.m. 5.4 ‘ 7:01 a.m. 1.1 ‘ 1:15 p.m. 5.6 ‘ 7:31 p.m. 1.0 ‘ 7:06 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Fri Dec 4 1:56 a.m. 5.4 ‘ 8:01 a.m. 1.2 ‘ 2:04 p.m. 5.5 ‘ 8:24 p.m. 1.0 ‘ 7:07 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Sat Dec 5 2:46 a.m. 5.4 ‘ 8:59 a.m. 1.2 ‘ 2:55 p.m. 5.4 ‘ 9:15 p.m. 0.9 ‘ 7:07 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Sun Dec 6 3:37 a.m. 5.6 ‘ 9:53 a.m. 1.0 ‘ 3:46 p.m. 5.4 ‘ 10:02 p.m. 0.7 ‘ 7:08 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Mon Dec 7 4:27 a.m. 5.8 ‘ 10:42 a.m. 0.8 ‘ 4:36 p.m. 5.5 ‘ 10:47 p.m. 0.5 ‘ 7:09 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Tue Dec 8 5:15 a.m. 6.0 ‘ 11:29 a.m. 0.6 ‘ 5:24 p.m. 5.6 ‘ 11:31 p.m. 0.3 ‘ 7:10 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Wed Dec 9 5:59 a.m. 6.3 ‘ 12:14 p.m. 0.4 ‘ 6:09 p.m. 5.7 ‘ 7:11 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Thu Dec 10 12:14 a.m. 0.1 ‘ 6:40 a.m. 6.5 ‘ 12:58 p.m. 0.2 ‘ 6:50 p.m. 5.8 ‘ 12:57 a.m. -0.0 ‘ 7:18 a.m. 6.6 ‘ 1:40 p.m. 0.1 ‘ 7:30 p.m. 5.9 ‘ Fri Dec 11 Last Quarter New Moon 7:11 a.m. 5:15 p.m. 7:12 a.m. 5:16 p.m. 5:16 p.m. Sat Dec 12 1:40 a.m. -0.1 ‘ 7:56 a.m. 6.7 ‘ 2:22 p.m. -0.0 ‘ 8:10 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 7:13 a.m. Sun Dec 13 2:22 a.m. -0.2 ‘ 8:36 a.m. 6.7 ‘ 3:04 p.m. -0.1 ‘ 8:52 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 7:13 a.m. 5:16 p.m. Mon Dec 14 3:06 a.m. -0.2 ‘ 9:18 a.m. 6.6 ‘ 3:47 p.m. -0.2 ‘ 9:38 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 7:14 a.m. 5:16 p.m. 10:06 a.m. 6.5 ‘ 4:32 p.m. -0.2 ‘ 10:30 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 7:15 a.m. 5:17 p.m. Tue Dec 15 3:51 a.m. -0.1 ‘ Page 9 Wed Dec 16 4:40 a.m. -0.0 ‘ 10:59 a.m. 6.4 ‘ 5:21 p.m. -0.1 ‘ Thu Dec 17 5:34 a.m. 0.2 ‘ 11:56 a.m. 6.2 ‘ 6:14 p.m. -0.1 ‘ 11:27 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 7:15 a.m. 5:17 p.m. 7:16 a.m. 5:17 p.m. Fri Dec 18 12:26 a.m. 6.0 ‘ 6:35 a.m. 0.3 ‘ 12:54 p.m. 6.1 ‘ 7:13 p.m. -0.1 ‘ 7:17 a.m. 5:18 p.m. Sat Dec 19 1:26 a.m. 6.1 ‘ 7:44 a.m. 0.4 ‘ 1:54 p.m. 6.0 ‘ 8:16 p.m. -0.3 ‘ 7:17 a.m. 5:18 p.m. Sun Dec 20 2:27 a.m. 6.3 ‘ 8:53 a.m. 0.3 ‘ 2:56 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 9:17 p.m. -0.5 ‘ 7:18 a.m. 5:19 p.m. Mon Dec 21 3:28 a.m. 6.5 ‘ 9:58 a.m. 0.1 ‘ 3:57 p.m. 5.9 ‘ 10:16 p.m. -0.7 ‘ 7:18 a.m. 5:19 p.m. 11:12 p.m. -0.9 ‘ 7:19 a.m. 5:20 p.m. 7:19 a.m. 5:20 p.m. First Quarter Tue Dec 22 4:29 a.m. 6.8 ‘ 10:59 a.m. -0.2 ‘ 4:58 p.m. 6.0 ‘ Wed Dec 23 5:27 a.m. 7.0 ‘ 11:55 a.m. -0.4 ‘ 5:55 p.m. 6.1 ‘ Thu Dec 24 12:05 a.m. -1.1 ‘ 6:20 a.m. 7.1 ‘ 12:48 p.m. -0.6 ‘ 6:47 p.m. 6.1 ‘ Fri Dec 25 12:57 a.m. -1.1 ‘ 7:10 a.m. 7.1 ‘ 1:37 p.m. -0.6 ‘ 7:36 p.m. 6.1 ‘ Sat Dec 26 1:46 a.m. -1.0 ‘ 7:56 a.m. 7.0 ‘ 2:23 p.m. -0.6 ‘ 8:23 p.m. 6.0 ‘ 7:20 a.m. 5:22 p.m. Sun Dec 27 2:32 a.m. -0.9 ‘ 8:41 a.m. 6.8 ‘ 3:06 p.m. -0.4 ‘ 9:09 p.m. 5.8 ‘ 7:21 a.m. 5:22 p.m. First Tuesday of every month. Full Moon 7:20 a.m. 5:21 p.m. 7:20 a.m. 5:21 p.m. Susan Listens Mon Dec 28 3:16 a.m. -0.6 ‘ 9:25 a.m. 6.5 ‘ 3:47 p.m. -0.2 ‘ 9:56 p.m. 5.6 ‘ 7:21 a.m. 5:23 p.m. Ask your questions and get your answers then and there. Tue Dec 29 3:59 a.m. -0.2 ‘ 10:10 a.m. 6.2 ‘ 4:27 p.m. 0.0 ‘ 10:43 p.m. 5.4 ‘ 7:22 a.m. 5:24 p.m. Wed Dec 30 4:41 a.m. 0.1 ‘ 10:56 a.m. 5.9 ‘ 5:06 p.m. 0.3 ‘ 11:31 p.m. 5.2 ‘ 7:22 a.m. 5:24 p.m. Refreshments will be served. Thu Dec 31 5:25 a.m. 0.5 ‘ 11:43 a.m. 5.6 ‘ 5:47 p.m. 0.5 ‘ 7:22 a.m. 5:25 p.m. Town Hall, 6 p.m. Page 10 The Edisto News December 2015 Lowe’s and Keep America Beautiful giving back to Edisto is free everywhere! www.EdistoNews.com News • Photos • Polls • Respond To News Advertising Specials Get it on the go! Edisto Island is a small, family island with approximately 1,200 homes. The island’s population swells to thousands more in the peak season with the return of tourists and second-home owners. Plus, there are campers at the 1,255 acres of Edisto State Park and day trippers from Charleston to Botany Bay Wildlife Preserve who arrive via scenic Highway 174. So, we were so please when Keep America Beautiful (KAB) and Lowe’s bestowed a $20,000 Community Grant for the improvement of the vista when arriving at Edisto Beach. But that’s not all that Lowe’s did. Jason Hall, manager of the West Ashley Lowe’s #655, and store employee Katelin, along with the Lowe’s Heroes volunteers, showed that they believe that giving back is more than just writing a check. They showed that it’s also about donating time and expertise. Edisto Island witnessed firsthand Lowe’s commitment to giving back to the community. Working with the Town of Edisto Beach to improve the causeway, they delivered materials, provided expertise, and equally important, donated their time. They not only made possible the improvement of the causeway, but they also upgraded a high traffic area at Bay Creek Park by installing pavers. Through the Keep America Beautiful/Lowe’s grant, the Edisto Beach community was positively impacted. It’s amazing how much can be accomplished in just a few days with teams of dedicated people to accomplish multiple tasks while still performing their duties to their family and jobs. Thank you all for improving our community. The Edisto News December 2015 Page 11 Ship’s Store 843-869-9226 Hours Monday - Sunday | 4pm-10pm Outdoor Dining & Entertainment during peak season We Cater Too! Please ask us for details w w w.pre ssl e ys att he mar i na . com Live Entertainment on the Deck 843-631-5055 Bait & Tackle Marine Supplies Shirts & Hats Souveniers Drinks & Beer Snacks & Ice Charters 843-631-5065 Sunset Cruises Dolphin Tours Custom Trips Inshore Fishing Kayaking w w w.t hemar inaeb.com Page 12 Annual Oyster Roast at Sand Creek Farm has record attendance A bright and sunny day, fresh oysters, fantastic music and a picturesque location that could accommodate the record crowd turned out to be the perfect recipe to bring out many of Edisto’s finest for a great cause. Over 500 people came from near and far to enjoy the company of friends while helping to raise funds for the Edisto Island Open Land Trust on Sunday, Nov. 15. The true success is due to the generosity of Mark and Tucker Crawford, the hosts; Jamie Westendorff of Charleston Outdoor Catering; the music by Edisto Gumbo; all the amazing volunteers and especially the event sponsor, The Huffines Company. The Edisto News December 2015 The Edisto News FLUORIDE (continued from page 7) overrides its attraction to other ions. In nature, fluoride is most often bound to calcium. When fluoride is added to water in the sodium form, it is only a matter of time before the sodium is exchanged for calcium. When sodium fluoride is ingested, it rapidly robs the body of calcium. In fact, sodium fluoride poisoning results when calcium is stolen from the blood. The anecdote (calcium) makes enough calcium available so that it does not have to be stolen from the body. According to the National Academy of Sciences, fluoride is not an essential nutrient and no amount of fluoride is necessary in the human body. The human body does not need fluoride for any physiological process and no human disease will result from a “deficiency” of fluoride. Because it has no physiological function, when fluoride cannot be immediately excreted (via kidneys) it is taken to parts of the body where it can be sequestered. It is attracted first to calcified areas (teeth, bones, and pineal gland) and also ends up in nerve and connective tissues. The truth about fluoride The use of fluoride in drinking water is the result of a huge campaign to dispose of unnatural forms of fluoride. These are waste products from aluminum, steel, cement, phosphate, and nuclear weapons manufacturing. The truth is, fluoride is a proven neurotoxin; it causes birth defects, impairs the immune system, causes muscular weakness, gastrointestinal symptoms, and bone and joint symptoms; it suppresses thyroid function, and it causes permanent disfiguration of teeth. Fluoride is also a cumulative poison. While small amounts taken on a daily basis may not be noticeable, the long term effects will definitely affect a person’s quality of life as it builds up in the body. Few healthcare practitioners are trained to recognize the effects—until it is too late. And what is worse is the fact that the fluoride added to water also often carries other toxic materials which may include lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium. December 2015 It is not within in the scope of this article to discuss the negative effects of fluoride. If you are interested, there are numerous books on the subject and there is an abundance of information on the Internet. How do I get the fluoride out of my water? Once you are aware of the negative impact of fluoride on your health—and especially if you live in an area where the water is fluoridated— you will have to decide what to do about it. To complicate matters, fluoride is absorbed through the skin, and by inhalation. Showering and bathing in fluoridated water is also a problem. Fluoride is actually more dangerous when absorbed through the skin and/or lungs because it enters the bloodstream more easily, bypassing the gut where it binds with minerals from food. When it is not feasible to remove the fluoride from your entire water supply, limiting time in the shower or bath and reducing the temperature of the water helps minimize the amount of fluoride absorbed. “Most fluoride that is added to municipal water is an unnatural form of fluoride that contains sodium. It is over 80 times more toxic than naturally-occurring calcium fluoride.” To top it all off, fluoride is difficult to remove from water. Most water filter sales literature avoids the subject. When buying a water filter, you may be comforted by reading that the system you are purchasing removes 95–99 percent of contaminants, but if it does not specifically state that it removes fluoride, you can bet it doesn’t. Fluoride is a very small ion (atomic number 9). It cannot be “filtered” out of water. At this time, fluoride removal is limited to four main methods discussed below. Page 13 1 . Distillation Distillation is capable of removing just about anything (except volatile compounds) from water. If you have a distiller, you can remove fluoride. The obvious drawback to distillation is that the process is time and energy consumptive. Distillation also leaves the resulting water empty and lifeless. If you use distilled water you need to add minerals (salts) back to the water. You should also consider structuring and energetically enhancing distilled water (returning the life force) using any of the methods in Chapters 11 and 12 of Dancing with Water. 2. Reverse Osmosis Reverse osmosis (RO) represents a reverse of normal osmotic processes. It relies on pressure and a semi-permeable membrane to remove contaminants from water. RO can remove between 90–95 percent of fluoride (depending on the efficiency of the system and depending on how well the system is maintained). Contaminants are trapped by the RO membrane and flushed away in the waste water. The process requires between two and four gallons of water to produce one gallon of RO water (depending on the quality of the water and the efficiency of the RO unit). Source water with an abundance of contaminants (including hard water) can reduce the efficiency of an RO system and it can shorten the life of the membrane. Similar to distillation, RO has a good track record for removing almost everything from water. Quality RO systems include pre-filters to remove VOCs (volatile organic compounds), heavy metals, hard water minerals, and other contaminants that reduce the life of RO membranes. And similar to distillation, RO leaves water empty and lifeless. The addition of salts and the re-introduction of life force are necessary to bring RO water back to energetic compatibility with the human body. 3. Activated alumina Fluoride is strongly attracted to activated FLUORIDE (continued on page 14) Page 14 FLUORIDE (continued from page 13) alumina (corundum/aluminum oxide) which has a large surface area with a huge array of tunnel-like pores. For this reason, activated alumina is the most commonly used fluoride removal media today. When used properly, it can remove up to 98 percent of the fluoride in water while also removing arsenic. The challenges with activated alumina are many. First of all, since the process works by ion exchange, the water must remain in contact with the media for an extended period of time—long enough for the fluoride to be adsorbed by the media. When the flow rate is faster than .25 gallon/minute, there is not enough time to adsorb all the fluoride in the water. Another difficulty with activated alumina is that the media becomes saturated with fluoride. Depending on the amount of media in the system (how large the filter is) and on the amount of fluoride in the water, systems using activated alumina either need to be recharged or replaced often. The last difficulty with activated alumina is that aluminum is released into the treated water. This effectively trades one problem for another. Some systems address this; others do not. The Edisto News December 2015 fluoride from the whole home. Many consisder them the answer to the fluoride problem. They are not. The drawback to this type of system is an environmental problem. Caustic chemicals are required to backwash (sodium hydroxide) and to recharge (sulphuric acid) the media—chemicals that end up in the waste water. And when these “tanks” are eventually replaced, they end up in a landfill, loaded with fluoride, arsenic, lead, mercury and cadmuim. magnesium plays a protective role by countering and reducing the toxic effects of F-.” (Cerklewski F L. Influence of dietary magnesium on fluoride bioavailability in the rat. American Institute of Nutrition 117 (3) 456-500, 1987) Most people are magnesium deficient – and not just slightly. Blatantly ignored in modern medicine, magnesium deficiency is rampant, responsible (at least in part) for the increased incidence of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, asthma, arthritis, high blood pressure, chronic fatigue syndrome, attention deficit and many other conditions too numerous to list. Magnesium has been referred to as the “master mineral” because of its involvement in over 300 enzyme systems including protein synthesis, muscle and nerve function, blood glucose control, and blood pressure regulation. Magnesium is required for energy production and for the synthesis of DNA. It also plays a role in the active transport of calcium and potassium across cell membranes, a process that is important to nerve impulse conduction, muscle contraction, and normal heart rhythm. BC-Carbon Activated alumina There are many point-of-use filters that claim to remove fluoride using activated alumina. The problem with most of these systems is that they only work for a short period of time (usually far less than claimed) before they become saturated. The other difficulty is that point-of-use systems do not slow the flow rate enough to provide adequate time for adsorption. Recent testing of a variety of these filters revealed that few functioned as claimed for more than a few weeks. Unless the activated alumina can be cleaned and recharged or replaced regularly, and unless the flow rate is slow enough to allow time for adsorption, activated alumina may not be what you are looking for. There are some “tank” type fluoride removal systems that are capable of working for many years with a backwashing and recharging cycle and an occasional topping off of the media. These systems are often used to remove 4. BC-Carbon Bone-Char (BC) Carbon has been used for centuries to remove naturally-occurring fluoride from water. It works similar to the way bones in the human body attract fluoride. Bone contains a porous matrix that is rich in surface ions. These can be readily replaced by fluoride and by some of the other contaminants that arrive along with fluoride (heavy metals). Bone char effectively removes a number of contaminants. When used alone, BC-Carbon can remove up to 90 percent of the fluoride in water. The efficiency of bone char can be improved by adding pre-filters that remove heavy metals and other contaminants before exposure to the BC-carbon. Bone char works best at a slightly acidic pH and may not work as well with hard water. This medium is being successfully incorporated in many systems where cartridges can be replaced as the media becomes saturated. But this method is also not without problems. Obviously, bone char is an organic medium. Medical grade bone char is important to ensure that the bone char itself is clean. How to remove fluoride from your body Magnesium follows a similar absorption path as fluoride. According to a study by the American Institute of Nutrition, a diet low in magnesium results in a higher concentration of fluoride in the bones – and likely elsewhere. The study concluded: “In summary, it can be stated that in intoxication with fluorine compounds, Unlike many other nutrients that are better supplied in food, water can be an excellent source of magnesium. Approximately 50 percent of the magnesium contained in mineral water is absorbed. This is greater than the amount absorbed from food. The ‘magnesium-in-water’ effect was identified years ago as beneficial for those on a low magnesium diet. Supplying magnesium in water may be helpful in releasing toxic levels of fluoride accumulated through years of drinking fluoridated water. It may also have numerous other benefits. Read the article on making magnesium bicarbonate water, www.dancingwithwater.com/articles/ magnesium-bicarbonate-water-the-importance-ofbicarbonates-and-magnesium/ The ultimate solution to the fluoride problem is to stop fluoridation. You may visit the Fluoride Action Network — www.fluoridealert.org/ to find out how you can make a difference in your community. The Edisto News December 2015 Page 15 Desalination New plant tests U.S. appetite for seawater desalination By ELLIOT SPAGAT Associated Press CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) — There’s far more riding on the Americas’ largest seawater desalination plant than the 50 million gallons of drinking water it will produce for the San Diego area each day. The plant, which opens this year, will help determine the future of seawater desalination in the U.S. The billion-dollar project is only the nation’s second major seawater plant. The first U.S. foray in Tampa Bay is widely considered a flop. “You have to be able to say we did it there, it worked there,” said Peter Beland, North America editor for Global Water Intelligence, which tracks the industry. Supporters consider seawater desalination a partial answer to drought in the U.S. Opponents say high costs and threats to marine life leave better alternatives, like recycling and conservation. Huge by U.S. standards, Carlsbad barely cracks the International Desalination Association’s list of 50 largest seawater plants, which are mostly in the Middle East. Its Israeli designer modeled it on one in Tel Aviv that produces nearly three times the water. Tampa, which has half the capacity of Carlsbad, opened in 2007, a decade after it went to bid. Along the way, a key investor declared bankruptcy, its replacement failed to secure financing and the plant repeatedly failed performance tests. San Diego County Water Authority officials vowed to “Tampa-proof” their effort, tapping experienced builders and getting developer Poseidon Resources LLC to shoulder much of the risk. In return, the Boston-based company will get a 9.66 percent return on investment, even more if it hits certain targets. The plant uses a well-proven technology called reverse osmosis, which uses powerful pumps to shoot ocean water through 2,000 white fiberglass tubes to capture salts. First, silt and other solids are removed to prevent membranes from clogging — a task that hobbled the Tampa plant. Treated water is pumped uphill on a new 10-mile pipeline to San Diego’s existing grid. “Each element, each building block of the plant is something that has worked before elsewhere,” said Avshalom Felber, chief executive of IDE Technologies, the plant designer. “That wasn’t the case in Tampa.” San Diego began considering desalination in the early 1990s when drought exposed dependence on water brought hundreds of miles from Northern California and the Colorado River. It picked Carlsbad, a prosperous suburb of 110,000 people, because it could draw water from a power plant next door that uses up to 600 million gallons from the ocean daily to cool turbines. Under a 30-year agreement, the regional agency will pay up to $2,367 an acre-foot, more than double what it will pay to import water next year from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. (An acre-foot supplies two typical households for a year.) The San Diego agency says the plant will provide about 8 percent of the region’s drinking water and raise the average monthly household bill about $5. Bob Yamada, its water resources director, said desalination “is not going to be a silver bullet that solves all of our problems” but has better positioned the region for drought. Poseidon is pursuing an identical-size plant in Huntington Beach, positioning the Los Angeles suburb as California’s next battleground. In May, the State Water Resources Control Board adopted rules that may give developers pause. The state will prefer projects that tap the ocean under sand - often with angled pipes which Poseidon says would be cost-prohibitive in Huntington Beach. The rules also limit salt concentrations of water that is discharged back to the ocean. Even before the rules, developers considered California a tough market. Poseidon worked six years to win regulatory approvals and survived vigorous legal challenges from environmental groups. “I see extremely big difficulties in California,” said Carlos Cosin, chief executive of Abengoa Water, a unit of Spain’s Abengoa SA and a major plant builder. He considers regulatory frameworks in other parts of the U.S. and the world more favorable. Coastal power plants in California are also ending or sharply reducing use of ocean water under new regulations to protect marine life, preventing desalination plants from piggybacking on their infrastructure, as Carlsbad will initially. Some new power plants are instead using air to cool turbines. “Carlsbad was the horse that got out of the barn before we closed the doors but it’s not going to happen again,” said Joe Geever, a consultant to Surfrider Foundation, which unsuccessfully sued Poseidon. Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the state water board, said Carlsbad proves that large desalination plants can be built in California but is noncommittal on whether others will follow. She said Carlsbad is “quasi-grandfathered” under the new rules. Carlsbad is already off to a better start than Tampa: Initially expected to open next year, it is well ahead of schedule. “It’s hard being a pioneer,” said Ken Weinberg, who helped lead the San Diego agency’s desalination drive until retiring this year. “They always say it’s great to be second.” Page 16 The Edisto News December 2015 December 2015 Sunday 29 Monday 30 Tuesday 1 . Susan Listens Town Hall–6 p.m. Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 6 7 Edisto Community Chorus Christmas Concert Edisto Beach Baptist Church 6–7 p.m. 8 Wednesday 2 Susan Listens Town Hall–6 p.m. ■ Town Council Work Session Town Hall 10 a.m. Arts & Crafts Market Bay Creek Park 9 a.m.–5 p.m. ■ Holiday Bags Coffee Shop at Edisto 11 a.m.–2 p.m. Hanukkah begins at sunset 13 14 15 16 Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 ■ ZBA Meeting Town Hall – 5 p.m. 20 21 Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 3 Arts & Crafts Market Bay Creek Park 9 a.m.–5 p.m. ■ TIDE Committee Town Hall 10 a.m. ■ Pallet Creations Coffee Shop at Edisto 11 a.m.–2 p.m. 9 Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 Thursday 23 Planning Commission Meeting Town Hall 5 p.m. Arts & Crafts Market Bay Creek Park 9 a.m.–5 p.m. ■ Pallet Creations Coffee Shop at Edisto 10 a.m.–12 noon 4 Trivia Night Coffee Shop at Edisto 5 p.m.–7 p.m. 10 11 17 Trivia Night Coffee Shop at Edisto 5 p.m.–7 p.m. 24 Town Hall Closed 28 29 Fall Survival Series Edisto Beach State Park 1 p.m. ■ Christmas Parade Palmetto Boulevard 2 p.m. Boat Parade Big Bay Creek 5 p.m. 18 19 25 26 Edislo Java Free Coffee Friday 7–9 a.m. ■ Live Music Cotton Blue Band Coffee Shop at Edisto 5 p.m.–7 p.m. Tailgate Party Coffee Shop at Edisto Noon–until Town Hall Closed Kwanzaa Christmas 30 Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 Dissection! Shark – All ages ($5) Edisto Beach State Park 1 p.m. Call 843-869-4430 to pre-register ■ Edisto United Annual Cocktail Party Bay Creek Park 5–9 p.m. 12 Edislo Java Free Coffee Friday 7–9 a.m. ■ Sip ‘n Shop Coffee Shop at Edisto 4 p.m.–7 p.m. Winter Solstice 27 Saturday 5 Edislo Java Free Coffee Friday 7–9 a.m. ■ Live Music Cotton Blue Band Coffee Shop at Edisto 5 p.m.–7 p.m. King’s Daughters Christmas Luncheon 11 a.m. ■ Trivia Night Coffee Shop at Edisto 5 p.m.–7 p.m. ■ Town Council Meeting Town Hall 6 p.m. Copper Bangle Bracelets Coffee Shop at Edisto 11 a.m.–2 p.m. ■ Planning Commission Work Session Town Hall – 4 p.m. 22 Friday 31 1 begins 2 Town Hall Closed Arts & Crafts Market Bay Creek Park 9 a.m.–5 p.m. New Year’s Day 3 4 5 Methodist Church Clothes Closet 10–1 and 3–6 . Susan Listens Town Hall–6 p.m. 6 7 8 Arts & Crafts Market Bay Creek Park 9 a.m.–5 p.m. 9 Edislo Java Free Coffee Friday 7–9 a.m. Orthodox Christmas E-mail your calendar events to: editor@edistonews.com LEGEND: Federal Holidays Holidays Government Special events Regular events Live music The Edisto News December 2015 TIO Edisto Beach State Park presents , a 3 part series where we’ll explore the inner workings of squid, frogs, and sharks! Through hands-on dissections, we will investigate their anatomy and discover how these animals breathe, pump blood, and digest their food. In addition, we’ll find out how our own body systems are both similar and different! Saturdays at 1:00PM October 24th Squid – Ages 8+ ($5) November 14th Frog – Ages 10+ ($8) December 5th Shark – All Ages ($5) Must pre-register. Call 843-869-4430 to make reservations. Space is limited. 1 9 4 8 5 8 1 9 6 6 4 9 3 6 9 3 8 1 5 4 4 8 8 7 9 2 9 6 5 9 5 Susan Listens 2 first Tuesday of every month. Ask your questions and get your answers then and there. Refreshments will be served. Town Hall, 6 p.m. Page 17 Mobile 843-566-2525 Office 843-869-3939 143 Jungle Road Edisto Beach, S.C. 29438 edistocindy@gmail.com www.DiscoverEdistoBeach.com Licensed in SC & GA Page 18 The Edisto News December 2015 Sesame Street moves to pay TV is free everywhere! www.EdistoNews.com News • Photos • Polls • Respond To News Advertising Specials Get it on the go! Edisto Pro Wash Creating A Cleaner Image TM P r e s s u r e Wa s h i n g Homes . Business . Marine Jon Kizer/Owner 843-830-8667 . 843-869-3939 3rd Generation Edistonian l o c a l l y ow n e d & o p e r a t e d FREE estima tes Licensed . Bonded . Insured Sesame Street’s move raises the question of what public broadcasting’s place is in a massively multi-channel streaming universe. Twitter and other social-news outlets were filled with images of Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch on Thursday, and mashups that blended Sesame Street characters with those from Game of Thrones and True Detective. Why? Because news leaked out that the company behind the classic kids’ TV show has signed a deal with HBO to broadcast the next five seasons of Sesame Street exclusively on the subscription-only service. For many critics, this deal seemed to symbolize the decline of publicly-supported broadcasting in a massively multi-channel universe. And the fact that it involves one of the world’s most beloved pieces of children’s programming made the news of the HBO arrangement even more painful for some. MIT researcher Chris Peterson said the deal damages “one of the last few truly good things in the world.” “The show is a perfect example of the kind of thing that many of us feel instinctively ought to be some sort of public trust,” wrote Washington Post blogger Alyssa Rosenberg. The Parents Television Council criticized the deal because “In order to watch original episodes of the most iconic children’s program in television history, parents are now forced to fork over about $180 per year and subscribe to the most sexually explicit, most graphically violent television network in America.” Some argue that Sesame Street is only doing what it has to do in order to survive. They point out that the show will still be available on PBS for free, although the episodes shown on the public broadcaster will be delayed by nine months. And many note that children — especially young ones — aren’t typically that concerned with the timeliness of the shows they watch, so there probably aren’t going to be howls of outrage from Sesame Street fans that someone else is getting early access. That time delay still rankles for many, however, because it means that a program which was specifically designed to help educate poor children will be unavailable to those children, until after it has already been watched by children of more wealthy families who can afford HBO subscriptions. “I get why Sesame Street did the HBO deal, but it makes me sad we’re privatizing a national treasure originally aimed at educating poor kids,” comedian Brian Gaar said on Twitter. From HBO’s perspective, nabbing Sesame Street is a key part of the broadcaster’s plan to appeal to younger viewers. The competition for streaming-video audiences has been heating up, as services like Hulu and Netflix continue to beef up their offerings, and both have made inroads into the child market (Hulu has a deal with Nickelodeon and Netflix owns shows like “Reading Rainbow”). Although Sesame Street is far from the hot new thing, it has a fairly dependable audience. All of this jockeying for power is just part of a much broader transformation of the TV universe, with streaming services like Netflix becoming far more dominant as the traditional cable bundle collapses, and new providers taking over the from traditional giants. Where and how public media fits into this new landscape isn’t exactly clear. Although PBS was sanguine about the Sesame Street deal, the loss of such a landmark show has to hit hard, especially for an entity that like many public broadcasters is struggling to stay afloat. National Public Radio faces similar challenges: Some of its popular shows are losing listeners, and SESAME (continued on page 21) The Edisto News December 2015 Page 19 “Home of the Ugly Fish” – Whaley’s is a fixture of Edisto Beach. Coastal Living magazine says Whaley's is “one of South Carolina's Best Seafood Dives.” Hours Lunch 11:30 a.m.– 2:30 p.m. (Mon. – Sat.) Dinner 5 p.m. – 9 p.m. everyday Bar Open 11:30 a.m. – until (Mon. – Sat.) Bar Opens 1 p.m. (Sun., no lunch) Hours will change during the off season. Please call for hours during the months of Dec., Jan., Feb., Mar. Don't want to eat out? Order takeout from Whaley's Restaurant and Bar, while on Edisto, by calling 843-869-2161. We'll have your order ready pronto, so you can enjoy your meal back at your rental or on the beach. And don't forget when your ready to socialize whether it's dining, dancing, or just hanging out with friends, Whaley's is the place to go!! This old filling station serves to-die-for fresh, local shrimp on cheesy grits. Other divine offerings include crab cakes, pan-seared mahi mahi, Big Ugly Burgers, and Sushi Nachos. No trip to Edisto is complete without a trip to Whaley’s. 2801 Myrtle St. 843-869-2161 www.whaleyseb.com Like us on Facebook Boy struck and killed saving sister ROCK HILL, S.C. — An 11-year-old South Carolina boy pushed his younger sister out of the way of a car before it struck and killed him, the children’s mother told local media Tuesday. La’Darious Wylie and his sister Sha’Vonta, 7, were waiting at a bus stop in Chester, S.C. on October 27, The Herald reports. As the car approached, La’Darious pushed his sister to safety, and when she got up off the ground, the car had driven off. “He knew to look out for her,” his mother, Elizaberth McCrorey, told the newspaper. The boy died the next day. His mother said she donated his organs so other children might survive injuries or illness. Police say the driver, 57-year-old Michelle Johnson, never called for help. She was charged with felony hit and run resulting in death, which carries up to 25 years in prison. Johnson posted $25,000 bond Friday, and did not explain her actions in court. Eddie stowe says: Never connect more than one extension cord together; instead use a single cord that is long enough to reach the outlet without stretching. Page 20 The Edisto News Hometown Boy Has Spoken Again Be the first on Edisto to get Sam Lybrand’s brand new hard-hitting book entitled God Save America - American Standards Of Behavior. Amazon has it on sale right now. Contact them today. This book deals with the widespread moral decay that is going on in America today and some practical solutions. America can have a bright future but we must select the right kind of people to lead us in the future. You will like this book. December 2015 Yogi-isms Yogi Berra died on Sept. 22 of this year. As much as being known as a baseball Hall of Famer, he’s also well known for his malapropisms and often unintentional witticisms. These are but a few: 1. When you come to a fork in the road, take it. 2. You can observe a lot by just watching. 3. It ain’t over till it’s over 4. It’s like déjà vu all over again. 5. No one goes there nowadays, it’s too crowded. 6. Baseball is ninety percent mental and the other half is physical. 7.A nickel ain’t worth a dime anymore. 8. Always go to other people’s funerals, otherwise they won’t come to yours. 9. We made too many wrong mistakes. 10. Congratulations. I knew the record would stand until it was broken. 11. You better cut the pizza in four pieces because I’m not hungry enough to eat six. 12. You wouldn’t have won if we’d beaten you. 13. I usually take a two-hour nap from one to four. 14. Never answer an anonymous letter. 15. Slump? I ain’t in no slump… I just ain’t hitting. 16. How can you think and hit at the same time? 17.The future ain’t what it used to be. 18. I tell the kids, somebody’s gotta win, somebody’s gotta lose. Just don’t fight about it. Just try to get better. 19. It gets late early out here. 20. If the people don’t want to come out to the ballpark, nobody’s going to stop them. 21. We have deep depth. 22. Pair up in threes. 23. Why buy good luggage, you only use it when you travel. 24. You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you are going, because you might not get there. 25. All pitchers are liars or crybabies. 26. Even Napoleon had his Watergate. 27.Bill Dickey is learning me his experience. 28. He hits from both sides of the plate. He’s amphibious. 29. It was impossible to get a conversation going, everybody was talking too much. 30. I can see how he (Sandy Koufax) won twentyfive games. What I don’t understand is how he lost five. 31. I don’t know (if they were men or women fans running naked across the field). They had bags over their heads. 32. I’m a lucky guy and I’m happy to be with the Yankees. And I want to thank everyone for making this night necessary. 33. 33. I’m not going to buy my kids an encyclopedia. Let them walk to school like I did. 34. In baseball, you don’t know nothing. 35. I never blame myself when I’m not hitting. I just blame the bat and if it keeps up, I change bats. After all, if I know it isn’t my fault that I’m not hitting, how can I get mad at myself? 36. I never said most of the things I said. 37.It ain’t the heat, it’s the humility. 38. If you ask me anything I don’t know, I’m not going to answer. 39. I wish everybody had the drive he (Joe DiMaggio) had. He never did anything wrong on the field. I’d never seen him dive for a ball, everything was a chest-high catch, and he never walked off the field. 40. So I’m ugly. I never saw anyone hit with his face. 41. Take it with a grin of salt. 42. (On the 1973 Mets) We were overwhelming underdogs. 43. The towels were so thick there I could hardly close my suitcase. YOGI (continued on page 23) The Edisto News SESAME (continued from page 18) for a variety of reasons it has yet to capitalize on the growing interest in podcasts. For Sesame Street in particular, the shift toward streaming has meant a sharp decline in DVD sales, one of the key sources of revenue for the program (which only got about 10 percent of its funding from PBS). In 2014, Sesame Workshop lost $11 million, and its operating revenues were down by close to 14 percent. That trend meant it essentially had no choice but to do the deal with HBO, according to Sesame Workshop CEO Jeff Dunn. “The losses just kept getting bigger. It was like, ‘If we don’t find another way to replace this revenue stream, then we either have to shut the show down or…’” said Dunn. In some ways, public media entities like NPR and PBS seem to fit perfectly with the ondemand market, where users and fans support the things they want to, rather than buying cable bundles. In fact, the public-media model is very similar to the idea of “crowdfunding” popularized by startups like Kickstarter and Indiegogo. With so many competing media sources, however, there’s a chance that public broadcasters could get lost amid the noise, and/or have their flagship programs taken away by more well-funded entities like HBO as subscription streams take over from mainstream TV programming. That seems to be what’s at the heart of much of the Sesame Street backlash. And the ultimate solution to that problem is far from obvious. Listeners to NPR stations are aging faster than the overall radio audience and listening less to the network’s most popular radio programs, according to new data shared by the network. Though NPR is seeing some listening gains on digital platforms, particularly with podcasts, its broadcast audience has dropped. Average–quarter-hour (AQH) listening during morning drive time has dropped 11 percent in the past five years, and afternoon drive audience has declined 6 percent. The only age bracket that has increased listening to NPR stations is the 65plus audience. NPR’s oldest listeners are “kind of saving us at the moment,” said Jeff Hansen, PD at KUOW in Seattle, at a meeting of news and talk station programmers Sept. 30 at the Public Radio Program Directors conference in Pittsburgh. But relying on an older audience to sustain NPR stations is only a “temporary solution,” he added. “The question then becomes, what can we do as stations now to bolster that radio listening?” Public radio programmers and others at the meeting suggested a variety of options, including attention to broadcast, management, marketing and digital strategies. Ultimately, Hansen said, “the radio audience is still funding most of what we do.” ‘It’s a different world’ In addition to the overall AQH drop during morning drive, Morning Edition has seen a 20 percent drop among listeners under 55 since 2010, according to Gwynne Villota, a senior research manager at NPR, who shared the Nielsen data at the PRPD meeting. “This is an important metric,” said Villota. “. . . It is tied to a lot of revenue at [NPR’s] level and at [the station] level.” The gap between older and SESAME (continued on page 25) December 2015 Page 21 Master-tech Complete Auto Repair & Transmission Specialist Have a Safe and Happy Holidays! He’s gonna need to call Master Tech after that! Nationwide Warranty Offered • Fleet Work • Excellent Customer Service Scanner Diagnostics • Locally Owned and Operated Since 2007 Brook Smith, Owner | 843-539-1600 | 1954 Cottageville Hwy. Edisto Beach Police charge Summerville man with stalking The Edisto Beach Police Department has charged a Summerville man with Stalking. Christopher Henry Garrick (DOB 12/10/1978) of 113 East Walnut Cir., Summerville, SC, was charged after repeatedly contacting the victim, in person and by electronic means. The victim, who had a previous relationship with Garrick, has reported several incidents to law enforcement. Garrick has been advised on at least two occasions to stop contacting the victim. Garrick also has a “no contact” order from the court system as a condition of a bond in one of the incidents. According to Chief George Brothers, Garrick has been stalking the victim since late summer. Brothers stated, “This is a clear case of a former boyfriend refusing to let go of a relationship. Garrick had placed the victim in fear of her safety. This is exactly why these laws were written.” Garrick was arrested and detained at the Colleton County Detention Center awaiting a bond hearing. Page 22 The Edisto News December 2015 December 2015 Volunteer Calendar a.m. shift = 9:00 am-1:00 pm; p.m. shift = 1:00 pm-5:00 pm. Gate closes at 5:30 Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu 1 2 CLOSED CLOSED DEER GUN DEER GUN HUNT HUNT 6 K am Bob M K pm John M B am Sue B pm Massie, Amy 13 14 15 K am Mary Sue K pm John M B am Sue B pm_______ K am Charlie K pm Carolyn? B am Ben B pm Jerwers CLOSED 20 21 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT 22 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT K am Bob M K pm John M B am Sue B pm Massie, Amy 27 K am Bob M K pm John M B am Sue B pm_______ Girls fall in love with what they hear. Boys fall in love with what they see. That’s why girls wear makeup and boys lie. 7 8 9 CLOSED CLOSED CLOSED DEER GUN DEER GUN DEER GUN HUNT HUNT HUNT 28 K am Charlie K pm Carolyn? B am Ben B pm _______ CLOSED 29 16 Fri 3 K am Doug W K pm Mary Sue B am Jim B B pm Pam M 10 K am Doug W K pm Mary Sue B am ________ B pm Pam M 17 Sat 4 K am Mary/Susan K pm Ed/Girls B am Jim W B pm Kitsie, Roger 11 K am Mary/Susan K pm Ed/Girls B am Jim W B pm Kitsie, Roger 18 5 K am Doug G K pm Doug W B am Nona, MK B pm Andersons 12 K am Doug G K pm Doug W B am Nona, MK B pm________ K am Doug W K pm Bob M B am Jim B B pm Pam M K am Mary/Susan K pm Ed/Girls B am Jim W B pm Kitsie, Roger CLOSED YOUTH DOVE HUNT 23 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT 24 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT 25 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT Merry Christmas 26 CLOSED ARCHERY DEER HUNT 30 K am Bill S K pm Sarajune B am Bob M B pm Charlie B 31 K am Doug W K pm Mary Sue B am Jim B B pm Pam M Classified Ads For Sale Selling cage-free fresh eggs. Indigo Hill Road (across from the Trinity Church.) Pick-up only. Terri Hardeman. 869-3304 is free everywhere! www.EdistoNews.com News • Photos • Polls • Respond To News Advertising Specials Get it on the go! Armoire – solid heart pine, no veneers. 80”H x 44”W x 22”D — $375. 843-696-1331 19 K am Bill S K pm Sarajune B am Bob M B pm Charlie B Grandfather clock – Emperor model #425. Cherry, moon dial, lyre pendulum, beveled glass. Perfect condition — $500. 843-696-1331 The Edisto News December 2015 Page 23 After the Christmas parade, there will be a barbecue fund raiser for Jose Licona. Starts at 3:00, $10 per plate, proceeds go to the family. Good food, Good friends, Good fun . . . and the best views on Edisto! Coffee Shop Now Open! 7 a.m.– 11 a.m., Closed Mondays Dinner 5 p.m. – 9 p.m. Happy Hour 5 p.m. – 7 p.m., Tuesdays–Fridays Live music Fridays & Saturdays! Staying at Wyndham? Get 10% off! Ask the waitstaff for details Now Open For Lunch! 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. 102 Palmetto Blvd. Edisto Beach, SC YOGI (continued from page 20) 44. Little League baseball is a very good thing because it keeps the parents off the streets. SCE&G Hollywood Business Office 45. Mickey Mantle was a very good golfer, but we weren’t allowed to play golf during the season; only at spring training. New hours of operation: Tuesdays and Thursdays only 8 a.m.–1 p.m. Closed for lunch 2 p.m.–5 p.m. 46. You don’t have to swing hard to hit a home run. If you got the timing, it’ll go. 47.I’m lucky. Usually you’re dead to get your own museum, but I’m still alive to see mine. 48. If I didn’t make it in baseball, I won’t have made it workin’. I didn’t like to work. 49. If the world were perfect, it wouldn’t be. 50. A lot of guys go, ‘Hey, Yog, say a Yogi-ism.’ I tell ’em, ‘I don’t know any.’ They want me to make one up. I don’t make ’em up. I don’t even know when I say it. They’re the truth. And it is the truth. I don’t know. Ladies Night at Edisto True Value Hardware. Pictured (Left to Right): Waylon Cain, Alan Langley, Connie Green, Jamie and Haley Collins, Brenda Hester, Katie Black, Rechard Mitchell, Robert Harrell Not Pictured: Emily Johnston, Crawford Moore AnimalLoversOfEdisto.com AnimalLoversOfEdisto@gmail.com or 843-869-3869 Mail to: 8112 Palmetto Rd., Edisto Island, SC 29483 501c3 Tax Exempt. Page 24 The Edisto News December 2015 Do Words Kill? Is Political Rhetoric Inciting Christians to Violence? “In the beginning was the Word,” according to the Bible. God’s words created the universe; He spoke us into being. Words created our world - literally. Words have power — to uplift or to tear down — to inspire or to incite — to heal or to hurt — to create or destroy. Words define our reality — for better or for worse. In the aftermath of the recent shooting at Planned Parenthood in Colorado Springs, it’s time we examine the role of words in our politics and in our society. Those who defensively insist that their vicious verbal attacks on Planned Parenthood have nothing to do with a single gunman’s massacre of innocent citizens are fooling themselves. We all understand the power of words. Words shape our perception of the world; words trigger emotions; words wound; words have consequences. Those who write books and blogs understand the power of words; those who work in advertising and sales know the power of words; those in the media are savvy about the power of words; and political leaders know all-too-well the power of words. Words call us to action: to buy things, to vote a certain way, to hate those who are different from us, to eat certain foods and wear specific brands of clothes ... and yes, to kill. America was established by words — the Declaration of Independence. Our rights and responsibilities are secured by words — the Constitution. Words commemorate significant events in history — the Gettysburg Address. Words capture the hopes and dreams of a people - MLK’s “I Have a Dream” speech. We memorize those words; we recite those words; we refer to those words; we call on those words to define who we are and what we stand for as a nation. Those who pooh-pooh the lethal power of words are forgetting (or ignoring) the horrific results of deadly orators such as Hitler and Mussolini. History is replete with examples of political leaders who used their words to incite hatred, start wars, and lead their people to commit genocide. Jesus was not the only spiritual leader who taught us the power of words. Five hundred years before Jesus was born, Buddha cautioned his followers: “Be careful of your thoughts, for your thoughts become your words. Be careful of your words, for your words become your actions. Be careful of your actions, for your actions become your habits. Be careful of your habits, for your habits become your character. Be careful of your character, for your character becomes your destiny.” Buddha wasn’t just talking about politicians and pundits — he was talking about all of us. One of Buddha’s guidelines on the Eight-fold Path is the concept of Right Speech, the first principle of ethical conduct. Buddha pointed out that “words can break or save lives, make enemies or friends, start war or create peace. He explained the elements of right speech: 1. to abstain from false speech, especially not to tell deliberate lies and not to speak deceitfully, 2. to abstain from slanderous speech and not to use words maliciously against others, 3. to abstain from harsh words that offend or hurt others, and 4. to abstain from idle chatter that lacks purpose or depth.” Is Donald Trump guilty of verbal violence? Are Carly Fiorina, Ted Cruz, and Ben Carson WORDS (continued on page 27) Churches of Edisto 8060 Botany Bay Rd. 843-869-3715 Sunday School 9 a.m. Prayer Meeting 6:30 p.m. Church Service 10 a.m. Bible Study 7 p.m. Rev. Arnold Gordon Bethlehem RMUE Church 8017 Point of Pines Rd. 843-577-5521 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Rev. Wesley A. Moore Sr. Calvary A.M.E Church 8318 Pine Landing Rd. 843-869-3672 Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service 11 a.m. Rev. N. Brown 2438 Highway 174 843-869-9202 Bible Study 9 a.m. Worship 10 a.m. Bible Study Thursdays 6:30 p.m. 414 Jungle Rd. 843-869-2662 Sunday School 9 a.m. Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. Rob Heath 3319 Palmetto Rd. 843-869-3456 Adult Bible Study 8:45 a.m. Worship Service 9 a.m. Rev. Scott Efird 1890 Hwy. 174 843-869-2300 Sunday School 9 a.m. Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. Portee III 1644 Hwy. 174 Historic Sanctuary 843-869-2037 Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. John Fisher, Vicar 945 Hwy. 174 843-869-1961 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. Hunter Steamboat Landing Rd. 843-869-1138 Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service 11 a.m. Rev. Harrison Jenkins Pine Landing Rd. 843-869-0990 Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service 11 a.m. Rev. Marion Gadsden New First Missionary Baptist Church 1644 Hwy. 174 843-869-2432 Sunday School 8:30 a.m. Worship Service 9:45 a.m. Rev. Albert (Chick) Morrison Presbyterian Church on Edisto Island 2164 Hwy. 174 843-869-2326 Sunday School 9 a.m. Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. Ashley Sanders St. Frederick and St. Stephen Catholic Church 544 Hwy. 174 843-869-0124 Saturday Mass 5 p.m. Sunday Mass 11:45 a.m. Rev. Mark Good Trinity Episcopal Church 1589 Hwy. 174 843-869-3568 Traditional Service 8 a.m. Casual Service 9:15 a.m. Sunday School 10:15 a.m. Choir Service 11:15 a.m. Rev. Weyman (Wey) Camp Hwy. 174 843-753-2273 Worship Service 10 a.m. Rev. Wiggins Allen A.M.E Church Church of Christ of Edisto Island Edisto Beach Baptist Church Edisto Island United Methodist Church Edisto Presbyterian Church USA Episcopal Church on Edisto Greater Bethel A.M.E Church Greater Galilee Church Mount Olive Baptist Church Zion Reformed Episcopal Church The Edisto News SESAME (continued from page 21) younger listeners of NPR stations is widening. Stations are losing listeners 12–44 years of age. NPR projects that by 2020, its stations’ audience of 44 year olds and younger will be around 30 percent, half that demographic’s audience share in 1985. Among all radio stations, AQH for listeners 54 years old and younger dropped from spring 2012 to spring 2015. News and talk stations, both commercial and noncommercial, saw AQH decline in all age groups — most dramatically among 45–54 year olds, for which AQH dropped 24 percent. NPR stations saw a 20 percent decline in AQH in that age bracket. Younger people “may well still be aging into listening to us someplace, and that’s what NPR One and lots of other initiatives are about,” Villota said. “But I don’t think we can count on them aging into radio listening any longer. Lifestyle-wise, there are so many things competing for our attention … It’s a different world.” On the upside, the 65+ audience increased listening to NPR stations by 18 percent and NPR newsmagazines by 22 percent. Villota noted that some of the demographic changes can be attributed to “a fundamental shift in our country’s demographics,” she said. “With the baby boomers moving out of that bracket and into older ones, there is a little bit of a vacuum that Gen X is simply not big enough to fill. But it’s still an alarming trend, because we do need to build these younger listeners so that we have listeners in the future.” What about digital? Meanwhile, audience on digital platforms has been growing for NPR and stations. NPR saw a 75 percent increase in podcast downloads from January 2014 to January 2015. Station websites saw a 61 percent increase in audience from 2013 to 2014, and NPR.org grew its audience nearly 35 percent. But Villota acknowledged that tools are lacking to track digital listening and “at this point, we don’t think that digital listening is making up for the lost broadcast listening,” she said. NPR stations’ streaming audience grew 39 percent from June 2013 to June 2015, reaching 34,816 active sessions, according to Triton December 2015 Digital data shared during the session. But Pandora’s audience that month was 50 times that, and Spotify’s audience was nearly 25 times larger. While podcasts are seeing growth, they still represent a small portion of listeners’ audio habits, according to an Edison Research survey presented at PRPD. A sample of people 18 years old and up were surveyed about their audio listening habits over a 24-hour period. The average listener heard about four hours of audio, listening to radio 57 percent of the time and podcasts just 2 percent of the time. The 17 percent surveyed who called themselves frequent public radio listeners listened to more radio but fewer podcasts. Podcasts accounted for 4 percent of total audio consumption among millennials. Addressing the decline Station program directors and others at the PRPD meeting suggested possible approaches to growing audience. “The biggest thing you need to do with your broadcast service is fix it,” said Steve Olson, president and CEO of Audience Research Analysis, who said he had studied audience trends of several news/talk stations. News stations often drive away core and fringe audience during middays, in early evening, and weekend afternoons and evenings, Olson said. “[Stations] can gain anywhere from 10 to 25 percent of your AQH if you address those spots that aren’t working,” he said. “The second half of the equation . . . There’s gotta be somebody at your station who is ultimately responsible for your air sound so that nothing goes on the air, that you have control over, that doesn’t sound great,” Olson said. While some stations have sought to produce more local news, some meeting attendees warned that the outcome must be high-quality. More “bad local news” won’t fix declining audiences, they said. Public radio stations need to improve editing and should train people to “have a more forceful sense of what they want to say yes and no to,” said Ben Calhoun, director of programming and content at WBEZ in Chicago. KPLU in Seattle is considering giving staff more time to create original radio programming, said Matt Martinez, director of content. Martinez is considering cutting back on episodes Page 25 of the station’s weekend show Sound Effect. Producers of the weekly show are “making lots of compromises,” Martinez said, airing “pieces that they would have rather killed, pieces that they thought should have gone through a couple of more edits, and it was not-so-great local radio.” By cutting back on shows, Martinez said he believes Sound Effect could get “to the point where locally, we are producing great audio that is indistinguishable from national content.” Participants also discussed whether public radio stations are providing the optimal mix of local and national content on digital platforms. Most station websites barely promote the station’s connection to NPR, said researcher John Sutton. “You can go to almost any station these days and scroll down the website and you will not find NPR on it, except in a tiny corner,” he said. Yet core listeners are listening mainly to NPR programming. “No one’s moving the NPR part of their brand into the digital space,” Sutton said. “It’s not a hard thing to do.” That prompted a response from Tim Eby, GM at St. Louis Public Radio, who said he was rethinking his station’s digital strategy. The station has focused more on local digital content to set itself apart from national and international competitors online, he said. But “the expectation from our audience on the broadcast channels is that magic of local and national, and if we take that away in the digital space, maybe we’re not delivering the kind of magic we should,” Eby said. In a post on Medium Oct. 7, Eby also suggested that “national producers and CPB invest in a major research project on millennials to understand how the public radio news product can best reach and serve them in our increasingly fragmented media environment.” Public radio stations also need to get better at developing talent, said consultant Graham Griffith. In addition to hiring for potential — especially hiring “people who make you uncomfortable,” he said — public radio stations need to “keep as many of those people as possible by continuing to provide new challenges to them and make sure they’re constantly stimulated by the work environment, not just by the product they’re creating.” Page 26 The Edisto News December 2015 Giving a Firearm as a Gift? Some Reminders from NSSF By Bill Brassard The backing you need for the future you deserve! knowledge that will help you open doors of your own. 300 Robertson Blvd. Walterboro, SC 29488 (843) 549-2526 www.1stfederalofsc.com 428 Highway 174 Edisto Island, SC 29438 (843) 869-9734 The holidays are just around the corner. As hunters, shooters, collectors or just plain plinkers, it’s a natural instinct to want to share our enjoyment of firearms with others. What better way to do that than to make a gift of a firearm to a family member, close friend or relative? The first thing to remember if you’re thinking about giving someone a gun is that … it’s a gun! You already know that ownership of a firearm brings with it some serious legal and ethical obligations that other consumer products don’t. So let’s look at some questions you may have about giving a firearm as a gift. The first question you have to ask is whether the intended recipient can legally own the firearm where he or she lives. More than 20,000 different gun laws on the books, even the kinds of firearms that law-abiding citizens can own vary from place to place; for example, juveniles (under age 18) generally speaking are precluded by law from possessing a handgun. Check out the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) website for an overview of local laws and, whatever you do, don’t forget that you can never under any circumstances transfer a firearm to someone you know — or have reasonable cause to believe — legally can’t own one. That’s a federal felony, so be careful. There’s no federal law that prohibits a gift of a firearm to a relative or friend that lives in your home state. Abramski v. United States, a recent Supreme Court decision involving a “straw purchase” of a firearm did not change the law regarding firearms as gifts. The following states (California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington State) and the District of Columbia require you to transfer a firearm through a local firearms retailer so an instant background check will be performed to make sure the recipient is not legally prohibited from owning the gun. Maryland and Pennsylvania require a background check for private party transfer of a handgun. There are exceptions, so it’s important to carefully check the law of your state or ask your local firearms retailer. The ATF recommends that if you want to give someone a new firearm, rather than going to a gun store, buying it on your own and giving it to, say your father, consider instead purchasing a gift certificate from that retailer and giving it to Dad as his present. That way he’ll get the exact gun he wants, and there’s no question about who is “the actual buyer of the firearm,” which is a question any purchaser must certify on the Federal Form 4473 at the time of purchase. You can only ship a handgun by common carrier (but not U.S. Mail) and a long gun by U.S. Mail or common carrier to a federally licensed retailer, but not to a nonlicensed individual in another state. With all carriers, federal law requires you to declare that your package contains an unloaded firearm. To be safe, always consult your carrier in advance about its regulations for shipping firearms. What if you want to give “Old Betsy,” your favorite old deer rifle, to your son or daughter as a college graduation gift? Again, in most states, there’s no law that says you can’t, but some states require even inter-family transfers to go through a licensed retailer. Remember, you can never transfer a firearm directly to another person who is a resident of a different state. In that case, you must transfer the firearm through a licensed retailer in the state where the person receiving the gift resides. Using a gift certificate GUNS (continued on page 27) The Edisto News December 2015 WORDS (continued from page 24) GUNS (continued from page 26) from a firearms retailer near where the recipient lives might be a good solution. Pre-1898 antique firearms are generally exempt from the retailer requirement. Be safe and check with your retailer or local law enforcement before you hand overyour prized possession. It’s often an emotional moment when a treasured family heirloom is passed down to the next generation. These moments are part of what our cherished enjoyment of firearms is all about and represent that unique bond that sportsmen have with their fellow enthusiasts. So enjoy the holidays and do it right! guilty of contributing to a toxic political culture? Is Bill O’Reilly culpable for fanning the flames of hate? Does Rachel Maddow contribute to intolerance and anger with her commentary? Does John Oliver commit violence when he ridicules public figures? Jesus and Buddha would both tell us that looking for someone to blame for the Planned Parenthood massacre will not bring answers — or healing. The real question we need to ask is: “How do my words contribute to violence in the world? In what ways do I participate in a social and political culture of intolerance, hate, and/or violence?” For as long as we point fingers of blame at one another, we fail to see our own culpability. “And why behold you the mote that is in your brother’s eye, but consider not the beam that is in your own?” the Bible chastises us. Every time we yell at someone who cuts us off in traffic, we are being verbally violent. Each time we call someone an “idiot” or Page 27 “moron,” we are guilty of wrong speech. If in exasperation we blurt out, “If you do that I’ll kill you!” to our spouses, our words are an attack. When we lose our tempers and drop the F-bomb on someone who angers us, that F-bomb really is a bomb. It does damage. Idle threats are not idle — they are seeds we plant in our psychic and cultural soil — seeds that take root and later blossom into violent acts. We reap as we sow. If we want more civil discourse, we must start with ourselves. If we want less violence in our country, we must stop committing violence with our words. Change doesn’t start in Washington — it starts with each and every one of us, where we live and work. Gandhi taught us, “We must be the change we wish to see in the world.” And the Christian hymn echoes: “Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me.” BJ Gallagher is a sociologist and author of over 30 books, including “If God Is Your Co-Pilot, Switch Seats” (Hampton Roads). Page 28 The Edisto News December 2015 Depression in old age: Fighting a malady spurred by grief, pain, disability By GARY ROTSTEIN Edisto Island’s All Volunteer “No-Kill” Canine Rescue AnimalLoversOfEdisto.com AnimalLoversOfEdisto@gmail.com or 843-869-3869 Mail to: 8112 Palmetto Rd., Edisto Island, SC 29483 501c3 Tax Exempt. All donations are tax deductible DECEMBER BARGAINS of the MONTH ® SPECIAL PURCHASE 497 YOUR CHOICE 18-Gal. Red Storage Tote Features molded handles for easy transport. Perfect for storing holiday décor. W 204 527 B8 While supplies last. 60-Qt. Clear Storage Tote with Green Lid Lid snaps firmly into place. W 204 528 B6 While supplies last. Contents not included. 5 SAVE 40% or more 99 18-In. x 30-In. Gray Mat Mildew-resistant. Holds up to 1-qt. of water. Slide-resistant rubber backing. W 321 372 B10 While supplies last. Boots not included. 7 SAVE 35% or more 99 10W LED Indoor Flood Light 650 lumens; dimmable. Lasts up to 22.8 years. Equivalent to a 65W incandescent bulb. E 180 865 B4 While supplies last. 122 Edisto True Value 827 Oyster Park Drive (Behind Enterprise Bank) Phone (843) 869-4420 Sale ends 12/31/2015 ©2015 True Value® Company. All rights reserved. Find the Shipping right products project and TrueValue.com expert advice at True Value®. FREE to for ouryour store on your orders. For Nancy King, the start of depression was the death of her husband when she was in her mid60s. An on-the-job back injury for nursing aide Dee Miller caused her chronic pain in her late 60s, sinking her mood and erasing her desire to get out of the house. The deep blues arrived for Richard Janecek later in life, as medical conditions weakened the workaholic and left him unable to perform his usual physical activity. Grief. Pain. Disability. They’re among the primary causes of depression at late age for adults. Retirement, social isolation and chronic insomnia are other factors that trigger lower feelings among some elderly than they experienced when younger. Fortunately for King, Miller and Janecek, they have received help as participants in studies at the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Late Life Depression Prevention and Treatment Research. It is one of the few academic centers focused on late-life depression nationally, with the National Institute of Mental Health recently awarding it a fiveyear grant totaling nearly $9 million to bolster its efforts. Charles Reynolds, a psychiatry professor and director of the center, said its focus has evolved from treatment in the early years to equal emphasis on prevention now. Different studies search for methods to identify symptoms early and figure the right therapy, medication and other means to keep them from overwhelming individuals who have become vulnerable to what can seem like an inexplicable but paralyzing inertia. “There are peaks and valleys, but no one told me the valleys would be so deep,” said King, 82, who credits the center with giving her the coping skills to get over her bereavement-related depression. Victims experience low energy and mood, lack of pleasure in activities, sleep disturbances, loss of appetite and other problems. For Miller, a 68-year-old former nursing aide, a back injury led to problems at work, constant pain and reduced motivation she didn’t recognize as depression because she’d never experienced it before. She came to the center for help last year and was revived by a program of counseling, temporary drug therapy and exercise. “My body still aches, but I deal with it,” she says now, noting that lots of social interaction with other residents of her senior housing complex also helps. Jordan Karp, an associate professor of psychiatry and anesthesiology who is heading one of Pitt’s new prevention studies — one specifically focused on people troubled by pain — said about one-fourth of older adults with chronic pain have major depression. Chronic lower back pain is worst of all for them, he said. When older adults are in pain, they don’t sleep well. When they don’t sleep well, they might not take their medication properly. With all of those out of sync, they’re more likely to be depressed. “We’re trying to break this cycle,” which ties the pain and depression together, Karp said. “You have to treat them as linked conditions.” Reynolds said depression is rarely an isolated condition among the elderly, but “amplifies the disabilities that exist otherwise in old age.” Thus, the rate of depression among people over age 60 is estimated to be between 20 and 30 percent in long-term care settings, where patients or residents would presumably have physical afflictions limiting them. In the general community, Reynolds said, no more than 3 percent of people in the same DEPRESSION (continued on page 29) The Edisto News December 2015 Page 29 Mortality rate among middle-aged, white Americans rising A decades-long decline in the death rate of middle-aged white Americans has reversed in recent years, according to a surprising new analysis released Monday. The cause of the reversal remains unclear. Researchers speculate it might be the result of the bad economy fueling a rise in suicides, plus overdoses from prescription painkillers and illegal drugs like heroin, and alcohol abuse. “That could be just a volatile mix that could set off something like this,” says Angus Deaton, a professor of economics at Princeton University who conducted the research with his wife, Anne Case, another Princeton economist. Deaton was awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on poverty. Overall, the U.S. mortality rate has been falling by about 2 percent a year since the 1970s. But the upsurge in suicides and drug overdoses among middle-age whites, among other trends, prompted Deaton and Case to look more closely at this group. They analyzed data from CDC and other sources, including other countries. “Pretty quickly we started falling off our chairs because of what we found,” says Deaton, whose findings were published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The mortality rate among whites ages 45 to 54 had increased by a half-percent a year from 381.5 per 100,000 in 1999 to 415.4 in 2013, the most recent year for which data are available, the researchers found. Even so, the mortality rate for middle-aged African-Americans was higher: 581.9 per 100,000 in 2013. Hispanics fared better with a mortality rate of 269.6 per 100,000 in the same year. “There was this extraordinary turnaround” among whites, Deaton says, likening the reversal to a large ship suddenly changing directions. Based on the findings, Deaton and Case calculated that 488,500 Americans had died during that period who would have been alive if the trend hadn’t reversed. “We’ve been talking about this at various academic meetings and you look around the room and peoples’ mouths are just hanging open,” Deaton says. “This is a deeply concerning trend,” says Dr. Thomas Frieden, who heads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention but wasn’t involved in this research. “We shouldn’t see death rates going up in any group in society.” The Princeton researchers analyzed data from other Western countries and didn’t see the same trend. “It’s particularly important that they don’t see it in other countries,” says John Haaga, the acting director of behavioral and social research at the National Institute on Aging, which funded the research. “So something’s clearly going wrong with this age group in America.” The trend appears to be being driven by increased mortality among those with the least amount of education. “Those are the people who have really been hammered by the long-term economic malaise,” Deaton says. “Their wages in real terms have been going down. So they get into middle age having their expectations just not met at all.” It remains unclear why the mortality rate only increased among whites and not AfricanAmericans or Hispanics. Deaton and others have a theory about the difference for whites. “One possible explanation is that for whites their parents had done better economically and they had been doing pretty well. Then all of a sudden the financial floor dropped out from underneath them,” says Jon Skinner, a professor of economic and medicine at Dartmouth College who co-authored a commentary accompanying the article. “For African-American and Hispanic households things had never been that optimistic and so perhaps the shock wasn’t quite as great.” DEPRESSION (continued from page 28) age range are presumed to have depression. Janecek said finding the right drug was crucial in his case to recover from his low moods resulting from physical ailments. Cancer treatment, knee replacement and other maladies left the former sheet metal worker, now 78, unable to care for animals and do other physical labor in the way he had been accustomed. “Richard was depressed because he couldn’t accomplish as much at 78 as he had at 68 or 58,” said his wife, Karen. George Niederehe from NIMH called such tales “the story of late life. … It’s rare to find people age 75 and older (with depression) who don’t have some other combination of illnesses that complicate the picture.” Eddie Stowe says: When hanging outdoor lights, keep electrical connectors off the ground and away from metal rain gutters. Use insulated tape or plastic clips instead of nails or tacks to hold them in place. Page 30 Jane Edwards News Jane Edwards Elementary School (JEES) is an important element of the Edisto Island community. It is part of Charleston County School District (CCSD) District 23. Currently JEES has pre-K through grade 5 and is the only operating public school on Edisto. Some of the latest events, news, and volunteer needs at JEES will be highlighted monthly. Parent Involvement Day Jane Edwards Elementary School celebrated our 4th Annual Parent Involvement Day on Nov. 19 by hosting a delicious Thanksgiving lunch. Parents, staff and students were also encouraged to dress as their favorite book character for ‘Character Day’ while either reading that book to others or talking about the book. Animal Lovers Canine Rescue The wonderful volunteers of Animal Lovers Canine Rescue The Edisto News December 2015 responsibility school winner! hosted a community service picnic for students and their families on Nov. 21 to discuss the importance of giving back to others (including animals!) and how to take care of pets. Students and their families were able to play with, walk, and feed the adorable and loving animals! Birds of Prey Birds of Prey from Awendaw, S.C. put on an exciting show for Jane Edwards students, faculty and parents. They brought in a Red Tailed Hawk and a Eurasian Eagle Owl. Thank you Kings Daughters for sponsoring this wonderful program for our Jane Edwards family! as we did! A special Thank You to the parents and community members who came out to help that day. We were able to revitalize the garden by creating five new raised beds with materials generously donated by Clemson Extension. Everyone is thrilled to see our first vegetable crops in the ground with plants grown ourselves from seeds in recycled cafeteria milk cartons! Financial Literacy Seminar There will be a FREE 6 week financial literacy course Jan 12th through Feb. 16 on Tuesdays from 5:30–7:30 at the Edisto Chamber of Commerce. Register between December 3–20 online at bit.ly/ JaneEdwardsRegister. Register locally at First Federal Bank during these dates between 8:30 and 5:00. Topics will focus on improving credit and getting out of debt! Child care and refreshments will be provided plus there will also be door prizes! Terrific Kids The responsibility winners for the month of October: Jazell Pettaway (CD), Jayda Hill (Kindergarten), Liliana Servilla (1st Grade), Jazerah Fenley (2nd grade), Wendy Perez Licona (3rd grade), Lashonda Burnell (4th grade), Sierra Moultrie (5th grade). The winning students were honored during a school luncheon with their parents/ guardians. Congratulations to those students and congratulations to Jayda Hill for being our overall Red Ribbon Week Students at Jane Edwards celebrated Red Ribbon Week and its theme: ‘Respect Yourself Be Drug Free’ during the last week of October. Students and staff participated in various activities including donating to the Red Cross. Students dressed as twins to represent teaming up against drugs. School Nurse, Kathy Zemp and second grader, Jazerah Fenley dressed as twin nurses. Students and staff raised $100 for this wonderful organization — way to go Panthers! Day of Caring We had a blast in the garden on Trident’s United Way Day of Caring. Without the help of University School of the Lowcountry, we couldn’t have gotten as much done Spotlight Student at Jane Edwards This month Jane Edwards recognizes Spotlight Student Kamryn Graham. This third grader has many qualities that make her a stand out in her school. Nominated as the epitome of respect from her class, Kamryn is described by her teacher, Mr. Rob Haithcock, as a model student. Active in the after school clubs of Google CIS First, Cheerleading, Young Naturalist’s JEES (continued on page 31) The Edisto News JEES (continued from page 30) and Tippi Toes Dance, Kamryn finds the balance in both school and in extracurricular activities. As a part of the gifted and talented class, SAIL, she has really demonstrated her academic prowess! Keep an eye on this go-getter; she has a bright future ahead! Trip to the Citadel and After School Athletics On Oct. 31 Jane Edwards students joined groups from E.B. Ellington and Minnie Hughes in attending a college football game! The Citadel donated tickets to their game vs. Mercer. It was a beautiful day and the Citadel was a great host. Students were invited onto the field before the game to watch warm-ups, and interact with the players and cheerleaders. Thank you to Charleston County Parks and Recreation for providing transportation. The after school athletics and cheerleading programs at Jane Edwards are providing an opportunity for students to have healthy exercise and learn skills in basketball, baseball, running and gymnastics. Many have noticed the improvement in skills, but more significantly the growth in confidence and teamwork. Please consider volunteering to help these programs to continue. Please contact Mrs. Estes at Melissa_ estes@charleston.k12.sc.us or 843869-2124. Contact: Mrs. Susan Miles, Principal, at susan_miles@ charleston.k12.sc.us, 843-8692124 December 2015 Page 31 Page 32 The Edisto News 495 Hwy 174 | 866.713.5214 | atwoodvacations.com is free everywhere! www.EdistoNews.com News • Photos • Polls • Respond To News • Advertising Specials Get it on the go! Eddie Stowe says: Always turn off holiday lights when you leave the house unattended or when going to bed. December 2015
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