As mentioned in the post previous to this one, I just wanted to make sure this important news got highlighted. The South Carolina Supreme Court voted 5-0 that the Columbia mask mandate violates state law. This ruling apparently also put to bed any efforts by schools to issue their own mask mandates…at least for this year.
Columbia’s City Council had voted 5-1 last month to issue another mask mandate. Here’s the article from The State Newspaper explaining the mask mandate ordinance.
As though our times can’t get any stranger but here in South Carolina, if you have kids in elementary, middle or high school, they are more likely to be masked if they attend a private school rather than a public school. Sound crazy? It is!
Last year with all the Covid craziness with education, private schools across the nation saw an increase in students as parents looked for other options outside of the virtual learning and heavy mask mandates that so many public schools were using.
In South Carolina, the legislature wrote in to the budget bill that became law a specific order that public schools could not issue mask mandates for their students for the coming year. (Note: this might change with next year’s budget). There has been plenty of push back against that as well as court challenges. The courts ruled against the law as it pertained to state colleges…they can require mask mandates. But somehow public schools still could not require masks. The City of Columbia went ahead with their own indoor mask mandate including schools and day care centers. Well the South Carolina Supreme Court just struck down Columbia’s mask mandate. The vote was 5-0. If I’m reading this correctly, it strikes down any school official or school board thinking they can institute a mask mandate this year. With this news, I do expect a big move or schools to go to virtual. How long will they go that route? Hard to know.
I’m not going to call out the specific private schools that are requiring masks but if you’re considering a private school and the mask issue is an important one for you, make sure you do your homework.
Here we go again with the virtual schooling. Not sure if the districts have gotten better about delivering education via the computer than they have in the past 18 months but we are about to find out. I suspect this is the first notice of many schools going virtual. The good news is this is supposed to only be for a week. We’ll see.
Here’s the story about the three schools in Laurens County that are going virtual during Labor Day week.
As if 2021 hasn’t had enough drama with the Covid situation and people trying to get back to doing things in person – including going to school. We’ve seen all kinds of supplychain and labor issues in the broader marketplace. Well now the labor shortage has reached a critical point for Greenville County Schools. Yesterday GCS sent out communications about the bus driver shortage and asked for parents to contact the district to let them know if they can drive their own kids to school. They said that they were short over 100 bus drivers and they can’t do all the routes. So parents are asked to carpool together to help get their kids to school. It seems the district will need to redraw the bus routes for the existing bus drivers that they do have.
I don’t know why there is such a shortage of bus drivers this year? I could guess. Perhaps with all the scaremongering over Covid, maybe the people who normally drive buses don’t want to expose themselves potentially to getting Covid or the Delta variant. Maybe they don’t want to have to wear a mask? Maybe they don’t want to have to ask each child that gets on the bus without a mask if they would like a mask. Maybe it just doesn’t pay enough.
In South Carolina, it’s my understanding that the state of SC owns the buses but the school districts need to furnish the drivers. Last week Molly Spearman, State Superintendent of Schools, issued a mask mandate for all school children riding state owned school buses. The one caviat is that if the student is not wearing a mask and refuses to put on the mask offered by the bus driver that the student must still be allowed to ride the bus – maskless. BTW, somehow the school districts are not allowed to issue schoolwide or systemwide mask mandates because it is prohibited by law in South Carolina now at least for the 2021-2022 school year.
Based upon the communications that I saw, this would seem to me to be the permanent state of affairs this year for business in the Greenville County Schools system. I hope I’m wrong and that they can find people to take these jobs but given the challenges many employers are having these days finding qualified candidates, I’m not holding out hope.
Prisma Health will not require vaccines as a condition of employment at this point. This comes as a bit of a surprise given a number of other hospitals in South Carolina have gone ahead and made vaccines a requirement to work. Prisma has been front and center on the Covid-19 issue here in the Upstate. From my stand point they have been a key player on Team Covid to keep the fear high in the state so this really is surprising but good news!
On Monday this past week there was a significant Medical Freedom Rally at Prisma’s Greenville Memorial Hospital. Several hundred people showed up to peacefully protest (not the kind of peaceful protest on display across American in the summer of 2020) the prospect of Prisma requiring vaccines for employment. Perhaps our voices had an impact? We may never know.
Well, here we go…the crazies in Columbia, SC are hell bent on continuing with the fear propaganda. Remember we have a Republican Governor here in South Carolina by the name of Henry McMaster. If you’re looking at moving to SC because you are escaping a blue state, I’d give McMaster a C+ to B- grade. He is not DeSantis. His State Superintendant of Education is Molly Spearman. She just issued a mask mandate requiring all students and staff on any and all state-owned school buses. I don’t know how many state-owned buses Greenville County School uses but I will find out soon I’m sure and will update this post.
NOTE: “buses will be equipped with a supply of face coverings that meet CDC Order requirements. If a student boards without a face covering, drivers will offer the student a face covering. However, no student should be denied transportation for failing to adhere to the CDC Order.
I don’t know if there will be many students with the courage to get on those buses without a mask but according to Molly Spearman, they must be allowed to get on the bus even if their faces are not covered with a MASK!
The Greenville County School Board met yesterday, August 24, 2021 and it was a packed house. It was not eventful like we have seen at other school board meetings across the country. I suspect had the South Carolina legislature and Governor McMaster not stepped in to ban masks this year, this might have been a very different meeting. I have no doubt that Greenville County Schools would have mandated the county’s school children all wear masks during the school day. But that is not the environment we are in today fortunately. We have seen tremendous pushback on mask mandates throughout South Carolina but there are other school districts that are requiring them as well as many colleges in SC given the recent South Carolina Supreme Court ruling on masks requirements.
If you want to watch, I tried to have the video begin at the start of the board meeting which is at the 22:50 mark. Some school board trustees were in masks. Some in the crowd were in masks. A number of parents came up to speak pro and con on the mask. I was not able to be at the meeting but I’ve been told there were lots of people who were not allowed in and they were listening in outside the meeting room. Most of them were of course against the mask.
Greenville County Schools is the largest school district in the state of South Carolina. There are 72,000 students in the district and they have a budget $715,000,000 for the 2021-2022 school year.
The latest census data is out and Greenville County remains the largest county in the state of South Carolina. Charleston is once again the largest city in the state.
Greenville County: 525,534
City of Greenville, SC: 70,720
Here are the Quick Facts for South Carolina produced by the US Government Census Burea.
GSP International Airport announced earlier this month that Contour Airlines would be starting up nonstop flights from Greenville to Nashville. This is great to hear and much needed to fly people back and forth from these booming southern cities. The start date is November 17, 2021
Contour Airlines started in 1982 and has continued to evolve and grow. Hopefully they will see lots of success on this route.
If you haven’t flown in or out of GSP International, it is one of the best small airports in the country and a tremendous asset to the entire Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderon area in Upstate South Carolina.
Blockchain, Bitcoin, crypto, stable coins, tokens, NFTs….the new technology just goes on and on and on. How in the world can we keep up with it all?
One of the really big things coming to real estate in the future I believe is this idea of tokenization. Once we start putting real estate on the blockchain it opens up ownership to many more people and it is expected to take out a lot of the friction and costs in transferring property today.
Imagine some day where if you have an extra $5, $10, $20k+ and you’d like to start investing in real estate. Your options are quite limited today. Now imagine if you wanted to own some real estate and you just purchase some tokens with ownership in a particular building. It may not be as easy as buying a stock but it might be easier than buying a car and certainly much easier than trying to buy property today.
If you’re interested in learning more, I’d recommend you take the 15 minutes and watch this excellent overview explaining the tokenization of real estate and how this will work on the blockchain by Interaxis.