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River of doubt
By Dan McCue
Patrick Barber knows the perils and challenges of maneuvering a barge up the Cooper River, through the Pinopolis Lock and across Lake Moultrie.

River of doubt:
CaroLinks facing criticism from officials, riverfront residents

By Dan McCue
Perhaps Carolinks should change the billboard at the Interstate 26 and Montague Avenue interchange to read “Rail, barges … controversy.”

High price tags moving into low-rent districts
By Kathleen Dayton
New homes and condominiums, traditionally a rare site on the Charleston peninsula, are rising in neighborhoods above and beyond Calhoun Street, keeping company with modest wood-framed homes as well as vacant lots and abandoned buildings.

Professional sports have $6 million economic impact
By Lindsay Danzell
When a South Carolina Stingrays player slaps a hockey puck into the net, a siren blares to signify the goal. But to the Charleston Metropolitan Sports Council, it sounds less like an alarm and more like “ka-ching.”

Local college market robust, but not over-saturated
By Kathleen Dayton
If tri-county residents aren’t getting smarter, they can’t blame a lack of colleges and universities in the area. More than 20 post-secondary educational institutions are spread across the Charleston area and more are on the way.

State’s murder rate doesn’t match public perception
By Andy Brack
A mother and her four children were shot and killed Sept. 30 in a North Charleston trailer. Two days later, Greenwood County authorities found four dead in two apparently unrelated murder-suicides.

Our state’s so-so Forbes business ranking is sobering
By Dennis Quick
The good news is that we finished nowhere near last. In fact, we finished near the middle, which I suppose translates to a respectable “C” on our economic report card.

Local galleries raise money for high school art classes
By Dennis Quick
In an art class at North Charleston’s R.B. Stall High School, juniors Quentin Chaplin and Jacqueline Liggins are hard at work on their paintings.

Endowed chairs:
MUSC simulator research promises economic benefits

By Dan McCue
To most observers, Dr. John J. Schaefer’s mannequin-based medical simulator is where the rubber meets the road for the potential of the state’s new endowed chairs to have a tangible, near-term impact on economic development.

Endowed chairs:
Researcher seeks key to why we’re drawn to what’s bad for us

By Dan McCue
Researcher Gary Aston-Jones, the Medical University of South Carolina’s endowed chair in neurodegeneration, does through science what artists, writers and poets have sought to do for millennia: He tries to understand the underpinnings of motivation and why so many of us are drawn to that which is bad for us.

Endowed chairs:
Sorenson: Collaborative spirit among state universities ‘remarkable’

By Dan McCue
Andrew Sorenson, in his fifth year as president of the University of South Carolina, was driving near Columbia after two days of meetings with his counterparts in the Southeastern Conference and still marveling over one consultant’s particularly chilly reception.

Charleston recipe entices prospective businesses
By Lindsay Danzell
Mix a dash of rich history and quality of life. Combine with a growing population and economy. And then add a large helping of business-friendly atmosphere. In a city known for crab cakes and shrimp and grits, this recipe showcases the appeal of the thriving Charleston market to national and international businesses.

Chief Justice offers advice, opinions during rare visit
By Dan McCue
In a recent and rare visit to the Holy City to speak with students of the Charleston School of Law, U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts said that those in attendance aspiring to be a judge should concentrate first on being good lawyers and should strive for balance in both their personal and professional lives.

SC Launch! funding helps reel in med-tech company
By Shelia Watson
Sabal Medical, a Seattle, Wash.-based medical technology company, has relocated to the Lowcountry after receiving a $150,000 investment from the South Carolina Research Authority’s SC Launch! program.

Accounting firms merging, joining Dixon Hughes
By Dan McCue
The merger of Charleston’s two largest accounting firms is good news for them and potentially good news for the city’s other, much smaller certified public accountants, according to a practitioner who went through a similar merger 18 months ago.

If passed, bond issue could speed up road projects
By Jessica Johnson
Among the many decisions to be made in the voting booth Nov. 7 is whether to allow Charleston County to issue $300 million worth of bonds to more quickly complete a series of road projects and make greenbelt purchases.

Complicated process leads to ‘Life Simplified’
By Jessica Johnson
It took years before South Carolina Federal Credit Union felt comfortable rolling out its new brand.

Board game chases players through marshes, historic sites
By Kathleen Dayton
A local artist and a North Carolina interior decorator have created a new board game that isn’t played on a board and will be sold exclusively at a King Street furniture store.

Daniel Island center seeks to draw upscale retailers
By Kathleen Dayton
The Daniel Island Co. and a Charlotte, N.C., developer hope to give Charleston retail an upscale nudge with an open-air lifestyle center on Daniel Island.

Layaway gone the way of the horse and buggy
By Kathleen Dayton
One of retail’s oldest purchase plans is bowing out of department stores across the nation. Layaway is going away.

Nothing scary about Halloween sales for local retailers
By Kathleen Dayton
You can dress up as a cockroach for Halloween this year, but it will cost you $105.

More apartment units in the works to meet demand
By Dennis Quick
The spate of apartment-to-condominium conversions during the past few years seriously shrank the number of available apartments in the Lowcountry, according to real estate experts.

Experts advise weighing mortgage options
By Dan McCue
A recent tumble in interest rates and fears fueled by analysts’ forebodings about a looming surge in the nation’s foreclosure rate are prompting many homeowners across the country to convert their existing adjustable rate mortgages to new ARMs with a more distant adjustment date or to other, “safer” financing vehicles.

Developments changing face of peninsular Charleston
By Kathleen Dayton
New condominium complexes and renovated houses are multiplying on the streets of Charleston’s upper peninsula, where some of Charleston’s poorer neighborhoods are in a state of transition.

New condos bring affordable housing to Daniel Island
By Dennis Quick
Daniel Island, where the average price for a single-family home exceeds $700,000, has low-cost housing on the front burner of its homebuilding activities.

Teamwork may be the best thing for new agents
By Paul Samuels
Q: I am a new real estate agent and I have heard that joining a team of agents is a better way to start out in a very complicated, competitive business. What are your thoughts?

New Homes Tour shows off Charleston builders
By Kathleen Dayton
Potential home buyers got the chance to tour 44 new homes around the tri-county region during the recent Charleston New Homes Tour, held during the first three weekend of October.

First phase of Cane Bay nearly mapped out
By Jessica Johnson
The master plan for Cane Bay Plantation may take decades to be fully realized, but the first phase is almost mapped out. Only one first-phase parcel remains unsold.

Economical palmetto trees showing up all across S.C.
By Kathleen Dayton
No matter where you are in the Lowcountry, you’re probably not far from a sabal palmetto, South Carolina’s state tree.

Applied Technology & Management expands on the water
By Shelia Watson
Applied Technology & Management is a company that knows how to grow.

RTMA studies rural feeder system for commuter rail
By Shelia Watson
For the director of the Berkeley-Charleston-Dorchester Regional Transportation Management Association, continued success is a matter of priorities.

Commuter rail’s ‘Catch-22’
By Shelia Watson
Commuter rail in the Lowcountry has found itself in a “Catch-22” situation: Almost everyone involved in studying the possibility agrees that it is certainly a good idea—possibly even critical to future economic development—but it will be difficult, if not impossible, to afford.

Labor Department: Region not qualified to apply for additional BRAC funds
By Dan McCue
After a year of laying the groundwork, economic developers in the Charleston region have learned they did not get the $6 million Base Realignment and Closure funding they were seeking to implement the AngelouEconomics report’s plan for local economic growth.

Law enforcement training center receives DHS funds
By Shelia Watson
Earlier this month, President Bush signed into law the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2007, which provides $32 billion in funds for the department and several sub-agencies, including money for projects in Charleston.

Partnership enables MUSC to obtain imaging equipment
By Shelia Watson
A strategic alliance with Siemens Medical Solutions will enable the Medical University of South Carolina to obtain the latest in high-tech imaging equipment, much of it at reduced costs and the bulk of it destined for MUSC’s new hospital, due to open next summer.

Knowing your market key for early business survival
By Ted Albenesius
Market research is a systematic and objective way of determining who your potential and actual customers are and for collecting information to gain an understanding of their needs, their desires and, most importantly, their behavior.

Your internal picture of the most important person in the world
By Jeffrey Gitomer
Got sales sense? The sense of selling, or sales sense, comes from mastering a series of internal senses. These senses are both subtle and blatant. They are both simple to understand and complex to master, but they hold the key to your sales success.

How to survive the perils of corporate networking
By John Carroll
You know the scene. You walk into a room of people with the purpose of expanding the network of those who know you, trust you, would buy from you or recommend you to others.

Making your case with a strong case for support
By June Bradham
Q. I am the chairman of the development committee of a local charity. Recently, the development officer asked me to review our “case for support.” What is that?

Remember, in a high-tech world, it’s still about people
By David L. Rawle
I know. I know. We live in a high-tech world of communications and marketing, and we all tend to become obsessed with the power and possibilities of technology.


















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