PRESORT STANDARD US POSTAGE PAID CHARLESTON, SC PERMIT NO. 137 POSTAL PATRON
Since May 2005 • Volume 19 • Issue 10 • IslandEyeNews.com
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August 25, 2023
Photo by Brian Sherman.
SI Council will look at banning beach bonfires
Among those on hand for the IOP Police Department’s Aug. 14 press conference were, left to right, IOP Police Department Lt. Robert Forsythe; South Carolina Law Enforcement Division Senior Agent Anthony Sampson; Charleston Police Department Lt. James Byrne; IOP Police Chief Kevin Cornett; Charleston County Sheriff’s Department Lt. Chris Craven; and Summerville Police Department Capt. Chris Hirsch.
April 7 shooter is now in custody By Brian Sherman For The Island Eye News The Isle of Palms Police Department has made its fifth and most important arrest connected to a shooting on the beach April 7. Police Chief Kevin Cornett announced at a press conference Aug. 14 that the person who fired the shots, injuring five people, is now in custody. Charleston Police Department officers arrested 18-year-old Davion Bobby Del’Shawn
Singleton. He has been charged with attempted murder, possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime, unlawful carrying of a firearm and possession of a stolen vehicle. Singleton, a Summerville High School senior, was arrested more than four months after the incident, which occurred at around 5:20 p.m. on the beach near 1140 Ocean Blvd. IOP police officers were on the beach responding to a (Continued on page 6)
By Brian Sherman For The Island Eye News The Sullivan’s Island Town Council will consider banning bonfires on the only beach in South Carolina that still permits them. Fire Chief Anthony Stith told members of the Council at their Aug. 15 meeting that he would recommend doing away with all open flames on the beach for a variety of reasons, among them safety, the administrative headaches connected with issuing permits, the possibility that fires could spread to the Maritime Forest, the debris that some people leave behind and the problems fires could cause for the turtles that nest on the island. Council members were not in complete agreement concerning the possibility of banning bonfires. The issue will be studied by the Public Safety Committee, which includes Mayor Pat O’Neil and Council Members Scott Millimet and Carl Hubbard, and a decision on the subject eventually will be made by the entire Council. Town Administrator Andy Benke explained that permits for bonfires on the beach cost $25 for residents and $100 for nonresidents – along with a refundable $500 security deposit. Stith said that between July 2021 and June of this year, 649 permits were issued. He noted that during the year that ended in July 2022, 115 permits went to islanders and 187 to off-islanders. Nonresidents also requested more permits than residents in the year ending in June 2023 by a 254 to 93 margin. Fires are not allowed on holiday (Continued on page 2)
Sullivan’s in no hurry to rule on rezoning for private club By Brian Sherman For The Island Eye News More than one member of the Sullivan’s Island Town Council has agreed to “hit the pause button” on a request to rezone a historic property on the island so developers can create a private club. At its regularly scheduled meeting Aug. 15, the Council heard from 28 speakers – most of them island residents – on the pros and cons of rezoning the Sand Dunes Club property to allow Sullivan’s Island Bathing Company to spend
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more than $30 million to renovate the 90-yearold facility and turn it into the Ocean Club, which will cost $60,000 to join. They also listened to a lengthy statement from Council Member Scott Millimet, who pointed out that “We should not be guided by the developer’s sense of urgency or a goal to have the club open by any specific date. Haste causes errors – and we may get only one shot to get this right.” Millimet suggested that the town hire an expert to study traffic issues that might occur if the club is permitted to open at 1735 Atlantic Ave.,
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and he questioned whether the presence of the club would require the town to increase the size of its Fire and Police Departments. “If added staffing is required, it may cost the town taxpayers hundreds of thousands a year,” he said. “It is hard to ask the town to pay higher taxes to cover the safety needs of a private club to which many or most islanders may not be members.” The following day, Millimet said the next move should be made by the developers. “The ball’s in their (Continued on page 5)
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