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Legislation could punish businesses that hire illegal immigrants
By Molly Parker and Kristen Poland
Apolinar moved to the United States from Veracruz, Mexico in 1989, at the age of 20, leaving behind his parents and brothers and sisters to find employment in America so that he could help support his large family.

League pushes for Jasper port
By Dan McCue
Days before the governors of South Carolina and Georgia are expected to unveil the findings of a commission charged with crafting a bi-state plan for a container terminal in Jasper County, the leadership of the S.C. Coastal Conservation League continues to push for the development of the site as an alternative to a new terminal at the former Charleston Naval base.

Jafza reveals early plans for Orangeburg
By Dan McCue
Baseball fields, public parks, nature trails and lush vegetation might not be the first things one typically thinks of when imagining a vast warehouse and distribution-based commerce park.

Going green a natural fit for spa industry
By Kathleen Dayton
What could possibly convince a successful corporate executive to change careers and open her own business? For Laura Kennedy, the answer came by way of a seaweed bath in Ireland.

Business school dean links business, academia
By Molly Parker
A common critique of higher education is that administrators and professors get so wrapped up in academia that they fail to recognize the needs of the business community for which they train students.

Attract the brainiac: You must become ‘way cool’
By Bob Bouyea
It is no longer OK to be a cool community. Today a community has to be “way cool” to attract the best and brightest, according to Bruce Yandle, a professor and interim dean at the College of Business and Behavioral Sciences at Clemson University. Actually, that is according to Yandle’s granddaughter.

Grassroots movement needed to improve schools
By Andy Brack
Charleston education advocate Jon Butzon said something at a meeting this week that struck home: Until it costs politicians more to do nothing about South Carolina’s education system than it does to do something, not much will get done.

Charleston expects ’08 budget to be unaffected by fire
By Kathleen Dayton
The tragic fire that killed nine Charleston firefighters at the Sofa Super Store on June 18 has affected the bottom line of the city’s emergency funds, but officials don’t expect it to cause problems for the 2008 budget.

Santee Cooper hopes to generate 40% green power
By Molly Parker
Against the backdrop of Santee Cooper’s plans to build a coal plant in Florence County, the state-owned utility earlier this month rolled out an aggressive agenda to generate at least 40% of its power from non-greenhouse gas-emitting sources by 2020.

SCE&G reaches accord on rate increase
By Molly Parker
South Carolina Electric & Gas business and residential customers will see an increase in their electric bills starting Jan. 1, but the amount will be substantially less than what the investor-owned utility requested, according to a proposed agreement the utility signed in late October.

Tech outlook: brighter locally than nationally
By Shelia Watson
When Paul Graham, a nationally known programming language designer and author of several books on technology, spoke at the Future of Web Applications conference in October, he made several predictions of the tech industry’s outlook from a macro view.

Squeezing out more fuel economy could impact auto jobs
By Molly Parker
Two years ago, Charles Van Rysselberge bought his first sports utility vehicle—an Infinity QX4—because he wanted a safe automobile that could tote such loads as home-improvement wares from Lowe’s.

Coalition charged up to promote plug-in hybrid cars
By Kristen Poland
It’s tough enough remembering to charge your cell phone and iPod each night, but soon the most important thing to plug in before you head to bed might be your car.

Middleton’s inn contrasts modern against historic
By Kathleen Dayton
After 23 years, reactions still are mixed over the design of one of the Lowcountry’s more unusual inn properties, which also happens to be one of the area’s more off-the-beaten path accommodations.

Orangeburg seen as Jafza’s gateway to North America
By Dan McCue
Orangeburg, S.C., the gateway to North America? That’s part of the vision driving the development of Jafza International’s development of 1,300 acres at the crossroads of Interstate 95 and U.S. Highway 301 into a massive logistics, distribution and manufacturing center.

Southeast benefits from Dubai ports controversy
By Dan McCue
Ironically, the political difficulties one of Jafza International’s sister companies, DP Ports, encountered after it bought and quickly disposed of the assets of the British Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co. two years ago may have enhanced the market position of the Port of Charleston and other facilities in the Southeast.

Jafza was asked to consider CaroLinks purchase
By Dan McCue
When CaroLinks CEO Lucy Duncan-Scheman made her first trip to Dubai last February, she was offering more than just land options in Orangeburg. Duncan-Scheman has revealed she was also ready to sell all or part of the company she founded in 2005.

Duncan-Scheman talks of life and ‘triumph’
By Dan McCue
Lucy Duncan-Scheman has been a high profile Charlestonian since she moved back to her hometown from Washington, D.C., in 2005, making a splash and inspiring controversy with a proposal to use barges and rail to transport cargo from the port here to an inland site in Orangeburg.

Scheman defends CaroLinks against critics, charges
By Dan McCue
An investigation by the S.C. Attorney General’s office into financial dealings of CaroLinks’ founder Lucy Duncan-Scheman continues with no word on whether criminal charges will be filed, according to a spokesman for the agency.

Charleston Air Force Base gets facilities facelift
By Shelia Watson
The Charleston Air Force Base has embarked on an array of construction projects that will not only spruce up the base and housing areas but also pump money into the local economy.

Port of Charleston sees growth in break bulk
By Dan McCue
Despite a shortage of bulk ships and the escalating shipping rates that accompany such a shortage, the Port of Charleston sees real opportunities in the future of break bulk shipping on the city’s waterfront.

AirTran presence increases all flights at Charleston
By Molly Parker
Charleston International Airport officials are elated about the airport traffic that has taken off since AirTran Airways began servicing the market in late May.

Credit crunch delays housing market upswing
By Kathleen Dayton
When analysts began looking at the housing market at the first of the year, they saw a downturn they expected to correct by the year’s end. What they didn’t anticipate was the credit crunch.

Holiday sales may sink retailers’ hopes for 2007
By Kathleen Dayton
“Modest,” “challenging,” and “conservative” are some of the words retail analysts are using to describe the upcoming holiday season as retailers enter the fourth quarter, traditionally their busiest season of the year.

FHA loans soar in wake of subprime crash
By Molly Parker
On Halloween, the Federal Reserve cut the interest rate for the second time in two months, hoping to shield the rest of the economy from the housing market’s ills.

Condos reverting to apartments in soft market
By Kathleen Dayton
Back when the housing market was hot, a strong investor market spurred a bevy of condominium projects and saturated the market with new condos.

Licensing board rejects education requirement
By Shelia Watson
The S.C. Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation has turned down a request to make continuing education a requirement for contractor licensing, much to the chagrin of several contractors in the Lowcountry.

Longer runways could attract more business
By Molly Parker
The improvements planned for The Charleston International Airport aren’t just for the flying public.

Commerce park needs manufacturing rebound
By Dan McCue
It was the kind of gathering of public officials and economic developers that always puts a smile on Lewis Gossett’s face.

Monks form advisory committee in response to PETA
By Shelia Watson
After several months under fire from an animal rights advocacy group, Mepkin Abbey, the Trappist monastery in Moncks Corner, has started the process of appointing an advisory committee to review the egg production business.

Military housing may be outsourced to private sector
By Shelia Watson
The idea may not be new, but it’s getting close to home. Privatizing housing for military families became an official priority in 1996. That year, the U.S. Department of Defense enacted its Military Housing Privatization Initiative as part of the Defense Authorization Act.

People love to buy, but they don’t want to be sold
By Jeffrey Gitomer
I’m in Las Vegas at the mall. Not just anywhere. The Forum Shops at Caesars Palace. If you’re a store owner, it’s the most expensive retail rental property in America.

Snagging corporations in your fundraising efforts
By June Bradham
Q. With so many great companies in Charleston and so many more big corporations relocating to the area, we want to expand our fundraising efforts to include corporate giving. These asks are a bit intimidating. How can I prepare my staff and increase the likelihood that these companies will give?

Taking sales lessons from the fun-loving RiverDogs
By John Carroll
In two earlier columns we focused squarely on the ballpark where the Charleston RiverDogs play minor-league baseball with a style and substance that provide excellent lessons for professional selling. Here are several more valuable lessons from that ballpark.

Apple’s iPhone included all the right ingredients
By Bruce Murdy
When was the last time you waited 20 minutes in line at 10:30 a.m. on a Wednesday night to spend $2,000 on technology you didn’t really need?

Today’s Profile: P.J. Johnson, Summerville Medical Center
By Kristen Poland
Teamwork, trust and consistency make up the heart of success. University of South Carolina football coach Steve Spurrier understands this, which he displays by building a foundation for the Gamecocks football program that he hopes will result in the team’s first-ever Southeastern Conference championship.

Today's Profile: Robin Reynolds, Family Circle Cup
By Kristen Poland
As the saying goes, you never get a second chance to make a first impression. Like the rest of quaint Daniel Island, the Family Circle Cup Facility strives to make the best of impressions on every visitor walking through its gates, whether to take in a tennis match or a jazz concert.


















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