After the taxpayer was kicked in the teeth by the General Assembly’s budget conference committee, it looks like members and candidates for Anderson County Council are willing to help with government transparency. My budget proviso to mandate all government bodies post their expenditures got axed, yet the discussion is alive and well. Read on:
Anderson County Council candidates speak out about open government
Part 5 in seven-part series – By Liz Carey (Contact)
Tuesday, June 3, 2008 ANDERSON COUNTY — Over the past year, questions have arisen about how open Anderson County government is with public records. County Council members Cindy Wilson and Bob Waldrep have said the administration has either delayed getting them the information they request or charged them hundreds of dollars to access the files in question.
Additionally, council members also have requested that financial information be more readily available, if not presented at each council meeting.
Several organizations made Freedom of Information requests in November for credit card expenditures for the county. A review of those records in February revealed thousands of dollars in food and entertainment expenses made by Anderson County Administrator Joey Preston, as well as other department heads.
Since then, South Carolina Senator Kevin Bryant introduced legislation that would require counties to post all of their expenditures online. He said South Carolina Comptroller Eckert had been able to do that for many state cabinets at no cost.
Read the full article
Jeff Foxworthy on SC
If someone in a Home Depot store offers you assistance and they don’t work there, you may live in South Carolina.
If you are ‘fixin’ to go anywhere or do anything, you may live in South Carolina.
If you’ve worn shorts on Christmas day, you may live in South Carolina.
If you’ve had a telephone conversation with a wrong number, you may live in South Carolina.
If ‘vacation’ means going to Myrtle Beach for a week, you may live in South Carolina.
If you install security alarms on your house and garage, but leave both unlocked, you may live in South Carolina.
If you carry jumper cables in your car and your wife knows how to use them, you may live in South Carolina.
If the speed limit on the highway is 55, you’re going 70 and everybody is passing you, you may live in South Carolina.
If you find 60 degrees ‘a little chilly’, you may live in South Carolina.
If you take time off work to watch college football, you may live in South Carolina.
If you know the names of any NASCAR drivers besides Dale Jr. or Jeff Gordon, you may live in South Carolina.
If you think iced tea only comes pre-sweetened, you may live in South Carolina.
If you know two or more people named ‘Bubba’, you may liv e in South Carolina.
If you think that all Yankee college students should move back home upon graduation, you may live in South Carolina.
If you actually understand these jokes, and share them with your friends, you definitely live in South Carolina.
prompt pay
Wouldn’t it be great if insurance companies paid claims as quickly as they require a policy holder to pay his or her premium? H. 3674 requires just that. This is a simple reasonable regulation that should be implemented in insurance contracts. Never been much on tighter regulations, but this is about fairness.I hope we can get to it before sine die. By the way, sine die is at 5pm on Thursday. I betcha can’t wait!
Coming Soon to a Bathroom Near You…
Family Research Council – Congress may be adjourned for the Memorial Day recess, but a series of misguided state bills aren’t providing any relief for pro-family groups. Just ask the residents of Colorado, where locals are bracing themselves for an “anti-bias” law that is actually changing where people use the restroom. Yesterday, over the protests of thousands of families, Gov. Bill Ritter (D) signed SB 200 into law. The legislation blurs the sexual lines by making all public accommodations, including locker rooms and restrooms, “gender-free.” In other words, anyone–regardless of their biological identity–will be welcome in the men’s or ladies’ room, including cross-dressers, men who self-identify as women, women who self-identify as men, and people who haven’t made up their minds. To read the full article…
The State of Georgia unshackles their children!
By Paul M. Weyrich (from freecongress.org)
There has been a major development in the State of Georgia yet the so-called mainstream media has completely ignored it and even the alternative media hardly has covered it. This past week Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue signed into law the most expansive school-choice program in the nation.
Unlike similar programs in other States, this program has no demographic restriction. All students are eligible for private school scholarships. The State Legislature set the cost of the school choice budget at $50 million. If the demand is similar in other States that amount likely will rise considerably. All pupils K-12 are eligible.
The program is similar to that which was enacted by the State of Louisiana and continues a trend imposing no eligibility requirement for the scholarships. Originally only inner-city students in failing public schools were eligible for school-choice programs. But now Arizona, Vermont, Ohio, Maine, Illinois and Iowa all impose no eligibility restriction. Read the full article
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