Archive for February 12th, 2009

Network moves into historic Simkins House

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

The SC Progressive Network has set up shop in the Modjeska Simkins House in downtown Columbia. We have been using the space for our monthly Midlands meetings over the past year, thanks to Historic Columbia Foundation, which has managed the property since 2007. In February we signed a lease to rent the house, and are now holding regular office hours there.

When Foundation Director Robin Waites handed over the keys, she said, “Modjeska must be smiling right now.”

Ms. Simkins was the matriarch of the state’s civil rights movement. Her work spanned six decades, until her death in 1992. The home where she lived for 60 years sits on a lot at 2025 Marion Street just off Elmwood. It served as office and meeting place, and housed visiting civil rights advocates, including Thurgood Marshall.

“The place has a really good vibe,” said Midlands Co-ordinator John Dawkins. “I’m excited to be moving into a space with so much history.”

Network Director Brett Bursey said, “We haven’t given up on owning our own building, but this is a gracious offer that is a good fit for us right now. Having offices right downtown will allow us to work with interns and volunteers, and will keep us more engaged with what’s happening in the city and in the State House.”

The Simkins House is fully accessible, has two offices, a kitchen, a sun room, a proper front porch and two meeting rooms — which we invite our member groups to use.

One of the first groups to express interest in holding meetings at the Network’s new headquarters is the Greater Columbia Central Labor Council. It has been meeting at the office of the state AFL-CIO, which is in the process of moving outside of Columbia.

“The timing is perfect for us,” said SC AFL-CIO President Donna Dewitt, who serves as Network Co-chair. “We’ll have a place to hold meetings as well as access to office space when we are in Columbia to lobby or attend hearings,” she said. “I think it’s going to be a vibrant place for our Network members to congregate and collaborate.”

Bursey said, “I worked closely with Ms. Simkins for 25 years, and was proud that she called me one of her children. It seems a wonderful opportunity to keep Modjeska’s spirit alive.”

If you are interested in using the House to hold your group’s meetings, call us at 803-808-3384 or email network@scpronet.com.

For more photos of the Simkins House, taken on Moving Day and at our first meeting in our new headquarters, click here.

 

Modjeska Simkins

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Join us for a house warming party March 7, 5:30-7pm
Modjeska Simkins House, 2025 Marion St., Columbia
FREE and open to all. Come help us celebrate!

DeMint short-selling U.S. economy

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

By S.C. Sen. Brad Hutto (D-Orangeburg)

As the nation struggles with its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression some in Washington, D.C., are fighting a rear-guard action to block the President Obama’s stimulus plan.

And among them, U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint, is jockeying to become leader of the heel-dragging pack.

This professional ad man knows the importance of burnishing his brand. He has become a stock fixture on the national media circuit. If you need someone to defend the failed economic policies of former president George Bush, schedule Jim DeMint for your show.

DeMint’s ideas sound good to a dwindling number of true-believers who think tax cuts can solve any problem and that magical forces will repair an economy in disarray without public intervention.

What’s becoming increasingly apparent is that DeMint is not only out of step with Democrats and moderate Republicans, but that he is also out of touch with the real world – the one where South Carolinians live.

DeMint on Tuesday voted against the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which fortunately passed the Senate with a 61-37 vote. The stimulus package is designed to get money into the economy quickly through spending projects to save or create 3 million U.S. jobs over the next four years. The version passed by the House Jan. 28 included $3.2 billion for South Carolina’s needs from road repairs to college tuitions.

On ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” Feb. 1 DeMint joined a conversation that also included U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., and two chief executives – FedEx’s Fred Smith and Google’s Eric Schmidt.

Google has particular interest for South Carolinians. The company recently opened a computer data center in Berkeley County, and has bought land in Richland County, where it might open another – if demand is there.

But DeMint thought he should lecture the chief executive of one of the most successful American companies about economics, trotting out studies from the conservative Heritage Foundation that favors tax cuts over direct public spending.

Schmidt, a soft-spoken man who measures his words carefully, replied, “I’m worried that tax cuts alone … won’t be sufficient because people are not paying any taxes because they’re not making any money.”

“There are plenty of cases where directed spending does help things to happen more quickly,” Schmidt said. “Most of the [stimulus package] money actually goes to reasonably short-term things in education, state relief, various other things that help people in the very short term. Some combination of all that money has got to get out now to get people going again.”

Schmidt and Smith, the FedEx chief executive, shared one message: Congress needs to act quickly to get the economy moving. “I’m sure this stuff is going to get fixed by you guys, because you’re working very hard on it,” Schmidt said.

“I wouldn’t count on it,” DeMint replied.

This is not the first time DeMint has made such comments.

In a column that ran Jan. 22 in The State he warned Republicans against helping President Obama pass a meaningful stimulus plan. “Should the bill fail to revive the economy, its bipartisan character would inoculate the new president from sole responsibility for what Republicans could otherwise brand “The Obama Recession.”

DeMint is using one of South Carolina’s seats in the U.S. Senate to act like a hedge fund manager – trying to lure citizens and donors to bet that the economic failure his party created will worsen.

South Carolinians can’t afford to be so cynical.

Hutto represents Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell and Orangeburg counties. He can be reached at CBH@scsenate.org.