Online Forum: County Council District 8 Candidates

On October 6, 2023, the Aiken Chronicles submitted written questions to the two candidates, P.K. Hightower(D) and James Hankinson(R), in the upcoming Special Election for County Council District 8. The questions were compiled from submissions from Aiken Chronicles readers. The candidates’ responses are provided below.

The written online forum gives candidates and citizens time for thoughtful reflection on questions and responses. The hope is to contribute toward a better-informed electorate and a healthy democracy.

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Left: P.K. Hightower(D). Right: James Hankinson(R) and family.

Candidate Forum
for
Aiken County Council District 8

COUNTY LAW AND COUNCIL’S LEGISLATIVE PROCESS 

Are you familiar with Aiken County Code of Ordinances as to the powers and limitations of County Council? 

James Hankinson: Yes.

P.K. Hightower: Yes, I am familiar with the Aiken County Code of Ordinances. I referred to several of them when I served on the Aiken County Planning Commission (Chapter 17), and the Aiken County Historical Commission (Chapter 11.5). I also read Chapter 2, Administration. Recently, I have spent more time reading “A Handbook for County Government In South Carolina, 5th Edition, to gain a better understanding of the framework, governance, roles, and responsibilities of County Council. There are also training classes offered to newly elected county council officials to help them understand their responsibilities for governing the county.

When was the last time you read through the Aiken County Code of Ordinances? 

James Hankinson: August 2023.

P.K. Hightower: I have not read through the entire Aiken County Code of Ordinances. After holding community meetings, I have referred to various chapters (Chapter 11- Health, Social Services and Sanitation, Chapter 13 – Licenses, Permits and Misc. Business Regulations, Chapter 15 – Offenses and Miscellaneous Provisions, and Chapter 16 – Parks and Recreation) to better understand what can be done to help certain communities in District 8.

For example, I referred to Chapter 15 (Offenses and Miscellaneous Provisions), Article 111. Nuisances, because of issues in neighborhoods where road blockages are potentially prohibiting emergency vehicles from reaching citizens in need of medical attention. There are issues with dumping unknown materials in areas located within neighborhoods, noise from private entities and businesses close to neighborhoods, and dilapidated dwellings that are not being addressed. I am working to ensure the citizens know what can be done to help them address these issues as a unified community organization.

What, if any, ordinances do you believe are outdated and/or should be revisited? 

James Hankinson: I believe all should be revisited. 

P.K. Hightower: We should have a schedule to review all of the ordinances within an agreed upon timeframe (e.g., all ordinance reviewed within a four- year period). As the county grows and citizens encounter more and more issues the council should review and/or revise current ordinances as needed. Any ordinance that is based on federal regulations should be reviewed periodically to ensure we comply with the federal regulations.

If a resolution or ordinance is brought before Aiken County Council that appears in any respect to represent the interests of others over the interests of Aiken County citizens, taxpayers, and voters, how will you be prepared to stand against it?

James Hankinson: I will always make sure my constituents are first: I will ask for public opinion by conducting town halls throughout District 8 and take concerns back to council.

P.K. Hightower:  I will voice my concerns and vote against the resolution or the ordinance.

Would you vote on an agenda item that you have not personally read or understood? If the answer is “No,” is that a promise? 

James Hankinson: No, I wouldn’t vote on any agenda items that I have not personally read or understood. Yes, that’s a promise. 

P.K. Hightower: No, I promise to do my homework as a member of county council. I will work closely with the County Administrator to ensure council has all the necessary information to make an informed decision.

What is your position about voting on either a resolution or an ordinance where the name of the company is cloaked behind a project name, such as the proposed Project Sabal? 

James Hankinson: I would have to educate myself more on the topic before making a decision. As previously stated, I would not vote on an agenda that I haven’t any knowledge of beforehand. 

P.K. Hightower: First, I need to ascertain the need for the anonymity and then make a decision on supporting the resolution or ordinance.

CITIZEN INVOLVEMENT IN COUNTY GOVERNANCE

Do you believe that it is necessary for members of the Aiken County Council to have regular town hall meetings with Aiken County citizens, taxpayers, and voters outside of their committee, work session, and County Council meetings — and if so, how often and where? 

P.K. Hightower: Yes, it is important to have meetings with District 8 constituents to ensure I understand their needs and vision for the county. I plan to issue a monthly summary of county activities (via email) and let citizens know what is on the horizon for council. I will meet at least quarterly.

James Hankinson: Yes. One of the things I would like to do as Councilman Hankinson is to meet with the constituents of District 8 by conducting town halls quarterly or as needed. These meetings could possibly take place at community centers, The Aiken County Library, or luncheons/dinners.

With the sole exception being truly abusive language — by voice, text, or social media — do you promise never to block the communications from your constituents or folks in Aiken County? 

P.K. Hightower: No, I would not block communications from constituents about County Council activities. However, I have experienced truly abusive language on social media about me as a candidate. Knowing that the information is not true but is being repeated based on unsubstantiated claims is counterproductive. Currently, misinformation is a disservice to our society and we must do all we can to avoid it by communicating the facts and nothing but the facts not unsubstantiated claims.

James Hankinson: I believe everyone should be able to speak their mind in a respectful manner. No, I promise not to block anyone who is being respectful. 

County Council presently allows three minutes of time for individual citizens to speak on non agenda items at the end of meetings. Do you believe that is a sufficient and fair allocation of time? 

P.K. Hightower: It depends on the number of people who would like to comment on issues. I would suggest we revisit how we operate the public comment period by designating a certain amount of time for all comments (e.g., 30 minutes and two citizens (15 minutes/citizen)), requiring the citizen to sign-in, and have citizens provide the clerk a summary of their concerns and what action does the citizen want county council to take related to their issue. The council should provide the citizen feedback on their issue within an allotted time period.

James Hankinson: Yes, I do believe that’s enough time. Any more time should be one-on-one or in a town hall with your council member. 

County Council meeting minutes currently do not reflect what citizens actually say during a meeting. As a Council member, would you be willing to ask for additions to Council meeting minutes to better document citizen concerns and questions? 

P.K. Hightower: Yes, I would like to have citizens briefly document their concerns to assure their issue is fully understood. They should also provide what actions they want from County Council. The County Council should provide resolution in writing to the citizen.

James Hankinson: If the statement is true, yes I would. 

INDIVIDUAL, LONG-STANDING ISSUES

Aiken County is heavily reliant on the one-percent sales tax that requires voter approval to fund capital projects. If voters say no to the next sales tax referendum, would you vote for a property tax increase to fund necessary capital projects such as purchases of emergency response vehicles? 

James Hankinson: No, I would vote against it.

P.K. HightowerAiken County is heavily reliant on the one-percent sales tax that requires voter approval to fund capital projects. If voters say no to the next sales tax referendum, would you vote for a property tax increase to fund necessary capital projects such as purchases of emergency response vehicles? 

No one wants an increase in sales or property taxes; however, as a council we have to determine how to fund emergency response vehicles (grants with the help of Lower Savannah Council of Governments, excess budget, etc.). In my professional career I help employees look for ways to be more efficient thereby doing more work with less money. The South Carolina Manufacturing Extension Partnership can help the county implement Lean Six Sigma process improvements to save money for dire county service needs. It is not an easy decision; however, we have to make the case to Aiken County citizens to either vote for the one-cent local option sale tax or expect property taxes to increase.

Does Aiken County pay its employees a fair, competitive wage? If not, how would you propose to improve wages and benefits to improve retention rates and employee satisfaction? 

James Hankinson: Each job has a different pay scale. I would have to look at each job title and learn more about the positions. (No matter where you work everyone can use more money).

P.K. Hightower: I cannot make a blanket statement saying that all Aiken County employees are not paid a fair wage. I do know that the council can have compensation perform a market analysis of job functions and determine where we are as a county and develop a plan to address the disparity during the budget process. The same goes for the benefits package. The county has limited funding and must save either in administrative cost or constituent service.

What approaches to crime prevention by the Sheriff’s Office are working and which ones are not working, in your opinion? 

James Hankinson: In my opinion, with the Sheriff’s Office, the neighborhood watch is very effective in my area.

P.K. Hightower: In my opinion, the Neighborhood Watch Programs working in conjunction with the Sheriff’s Office are the most successful programs. The two entities have to work with each other to address crime.

PERSONAL MOTIVATION

What are your top 3 reasons for running for the District 8 seat on Aiken County Council?

P.K. Hightower: 
1. My more than 30-years of public service in Aiken County and my desire to help make our community better was the biggest motivation for running.
2. The desire to empower District 8 communities to solve problems rather than being victims.
3. Use my professional skills to help streamline administrative processes to save money for constituent services.

James Hankinson: God, Families, and being the voice of all of the constituents in District 8.

If you win your race, what do you personally hope to achieve by representing District 8 on the Aiken County Council?

P.K. Hightower: Make Aiken County be more efficient and cost effective to save as much money for constituent services.

James Hankinson: When I’m Councilman Hankinson, I would concentrate on the constituents and their families. I would like to focus on communities with the most needs while maintaining currently structured communities. Adding family amusement and activity options would bridge the gap for District 8.

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The Amentum Model: “Loosey Goosey”

Loosey Goosey
Part Three in a Three-part Story

CORRECTION 10/11/2023: An auto-correction error placed the word, “billion” in the following sentence, which has been corrected to read: “The primary blame for the creation of this now-$7.7 million project was attributed to lack of communication, lack of oversight, and lack of a clear budget.”

1998-1999: The Aiken Community Playhouse Considers a Move
2000-2001: The Amentum Model: “Corporate Coup”
2002: The Amentum Model: “Loosey Goosey”

In 2002, the headlines began to convey concerns over the real-world cost of the public-private development project between the City of Aiken and the Aiken Corporation.

February 9, 2002 headline: “Council has stage fright – community playhouse seeks $1.5 million to finish theater”17

Those costs came into sharp focus in February 2002. City Council members seemed blindsided, saying they’d never been consulted on the project’s cost overruns. City Manager Roger LeDuc said, “I just found out with the mayor about a month ago.” 17

Angie Fitzgerald, president of the Aiken Community Playhouse board of directors, said that the playhouse had been forced to seek additional funding from the City because of the multi-use nature of the building. 

Indeed, the scope of the facility had morphed from being a new home for the Aiken Community Playhouse in 1998 to serving as a combo “center for performing arts,” the headquarters for an international nuclear-industry contractor, and a meeting and events center for the City of Aiken.

Over the prior two years, the Aiken Community Playhouse had not only lost naming rights for the facility, but had seen three name changes — the Westinghouse Performing Arts Theater (2000); the Aiken Center for Performing Arts, (2001), and the Washington Center for the Performing Arts (2002). And they had yet to even open.

The increased costs were due to, among other things, the changed scope of the project and the “design-as-you-go approach” that became necessary to expedite construction in order to meet the Washington Group’s move-in deadline. Juxtaposed with the posh accoutrements, such as expensive, state-of-the-art audio visuals and other technologies to accommodate corporate clients. was the reality that, with funds scraping rock bottom, the work of finishing the interior of the Playhouse side of the building would need to rely on volunteer labor.

Community complaints had been ongoing since the summer of 2001 about the ungainly appearance of the rear side of the Playhouse, which had been sheathed in green metal siding, rather than the brick used on the front facade and the Washington Group’s portion of the building. According to Aiken Corporation meeting minutes, there was discussion over having a mural painted or having the City horticulturist plant some greenery to cover the metal siding on the Playhouse rear.

The February 9, 2002 editorial page of the Aiken Standard featured a letter by local citizen Nancy Wilds, one of the co-founders of the Historic Aiken Foundation (HAF).

This facade, as seen in the October 2023 photos, below, is visible from a number of vantage points, including Park Avenue, Chesterfield Street, the Municipal parking lot, and the AU parking lot off of Park Avenue that also serves Neon Fig and other businesses. The exterior areas of the City-owned Playhouse are unkempt in places.

October 2023: Views of the green metal facade and other exterior features of the City-owned Playhouse side of the Amentum building as seen from the AU Health and Neon Fig parking lot off of Park Avenue

October 2023: Park Avenue view of the green metal facade of the Playhouse side of the Amentum building.

October 2023: The rear views of the Playhouse facade as seen from the Municipal parking lot and Chesterfield Street

February 15, 2002 headline: “Playhouse Now Needs $1.1M”18

On February 14, Aiken City Council members toured the building. The $1.5 million funding request by the playhouse had been reduced to $1.1 million by a few downgrades, such as limiting the use of carpeting in the auditorium and eliminating a luxury box. 

Aiken Corporation chairman Wade Brodie explained that the playhouse needed additional funding due to “a misunderstanding of the financial terms for the facility,” including $229,620 for land costs, $240,160 for architectural fees, $30,000 in site preparation fees, and an additional $250,000 in ‘soft cost.” 18

Mr. Brodie also indicated that the cost had ballooned due to change orders associated with the multi-use nature of the facility, which was to be used by “the actors, the Washington Group, and other community groups.”18

Onlookers to the unfolding saga had difficulty reconciling the various numbers being tossed back and forth like so much Monopoly money.

March 10, 2002 headline: “Arts Center Debate Expected — Aiken City Council to Consider $935k loan to finish downtown theater”19


With March 2002 also came the realization that the Aiken Community Playhouse — which had started out in November 1998 with the ambitious dream of buying and renovating an old theater for $500,000 — was now deeply in debt. Playhouse members were forced to hold out their hats to finish construction of the Playhouse portion of this elaborate structure, whose cost was now clocking at $4.2 million for a theater that belonged to the City of Aiken, not the theater group.

The playhouse group — which had earlier committed to raising $441,000 through “an aggressive capital improvement campaign,”19 for the demolish-and-rebuild option brought to their table in March 1999 — saw their commitment jump several times, finally arriving at over $2 million in March 2002. The requested $935k loan to the Playhouse was to be repaid to the City and was not part of the City’s own $2.2 million “commitment” to the cost of the Playhouse side of the structure.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the building, the non-profit Aiken Corporation had inherited the $3.5 million dollar Washington Group building without fronting any money of their own.  Despite a lack of investment, the Aiken Corporation’s newly-created, for-profit arm in this public-private development project, known as LED of Aiken, Inc, would, according to newspaper accounts, receive $29,000 per month in rent from the lucrative SRS federal contractor tenant that the Aiken Corporation had courted two years earlier to locate its corporate headquarters in Aiken.

As the tally of these still-mounting costs continued to come into focus, the heat from City Council members, the local newspaper editor, and local citizens reached critical mass. City Council, which had initially been critical of the Playhouse for increasing costs, came to the realization that the Playhouse was the least responsible party for what the newspaper described as “the headlong race to complete the Washington Government office project and the theater without sufficient regard for the mounting cost.”19

The primary blame for the creation of this now-$7.7 million project was attributed to lack of communication, lack of oversight, and lack of a clear budget.19

City leaders admitted, “mistakes were made” in the development of the Washington Center for Performing Arts, and “efforts are underway to sort out how they occurred.” 19

March 12, 2002 headline: “Washington Center for the Performing Arts – Smith: ‘It’s still loosey-goosey’ — Theater funding moving ahead, confusion remains.”20

As the local paper recounted, the only thing that City Council and the Aiken Corporation could agree on in the Monday night City Council meeting was that there was enough blame to go around regarding the confused financing. 

Councilman Richard (Dick) Smith said, “It’s still loosey-goosey. When we start talking about money in a project this large, we need to have that written down.”20

Councilman Smith said that a lack of oversight had left everyone unsure of who was paying for what, and when they agreed on it. He called for a complete audit and said that future projects should call for an overall projects manager responsible to the City.

Council member Pat Cunning remarked, “Nobody ever said, ‘That’s your budget, live with it.’”20

In this same meeting, City Council discussed two different loan proposals before them — one to Aiken Corporation for $3.5 million dollars as a mortgage for the Washington Government office complex; another to the Aiken Community Playhouse for $935k to complete the work on the interior while awaiting outstanding pledges and other anticipated income.

The City also agreed to fund over $700k in land and architectural costs paid by the Playhouse when the group earlier anticipated owning the building. 

Regarding the Aiken Community Playhouse agreement to raise $1.6 million to fund construction of the City-owned building, Council member Mike Anaclerio deemed it “unfair to expect a civic group to bear such a burden in funding the project,” saying, “My main case is that no other organization in the city has ever paid this size of a share for their project.”20

City Council meeting minutes March 11, 2022. Click to view full size.

March 13, 2002: Aiken Standard editorial headline: “Let’s learn from errors downtown.”21

An Aiken Standard editorial page piece titled, “Let’s learn from errors downtown,” ascribed the cause of what it termed “consternation” over the project to “the lack of oversight on the construction and an escalation of costs that has apparently caught everyone concerned unaware.” 21

“The ensuing confusion has led to requests for loans, bickering over payments, and questions of who is to pay how much for what.” 21

Paragraphs later, the piece concluded, “Few will question the worthiness of the project on Newberry Street. It will be a feather in Aiken’s cap for decades. The manner in which the overall project was handled, however, leaves much to be desired.”21

March 18, 2002: Special meeting Work Session between the City of Aiken and the Aiken Corporation

Questions and concerns were raised over the terms of the two loans before City Council, as well as the language of the ordinances and the degree of oversight the City might exercise with future Aiken Corporation projects. These questions and concerns would spark, at times, to contentiousness during the later public hearing on March 25.

Note that the minutes for the March 18 special meeting are currently mis-filed under March 11 in the City records. Click this link to view the 5-page minutes of this meeting.

March 25, 2002: Calls for an independent, third-party audit

Before City Council during the March 25 public hearing were the second readings on two ordinances — one authorizing the City to lend the Playhouse $935k, another authorizing the City to lend up to $3.5 million to LED of Aiken, Inc. the newly created, for-profit subchapter S Corporation, to which the Aiken Corporation was the sole shareholder.

Discussions initially centered on the terms of the loan to Aiken Corporation and LED of Aiken, Inc., whose names were used interchangeably in discussion. Concerns also went to the existing language in the ordinance, which had the Aiken Corporation agreeing to “cooperate” with City Council on any new projects using funds derived from revenue on the Washington Group building. Councilwoman Jane Vaughters made a case for changing the language to “must agree” with City Council. Further discussion led to a compromise of “will mutually agree” with the City Council, but this was defeated when put to a vote.

From here, the discussion turned to a call from Councilman Richard Smith for an amendment to the ordinance to to require a financial audit and a management audit of the relationship between the Aiken Corporation and the City of Aiken. His motion was seconded by Councilwoman Jane Vaughters.

According to the minutes, Councilman Cunning expressed concern over the cost of such an audit and pointed out that the city taxpayer would have to pay for such an audit.

Councilman Smith stated a rough cost would be $10,000-$15,000 and said, when you’re talking about a $3.5 million project, this would not be too much to spend to make sure things are done “completely right in the future.”

Mayor Cavanaugh questioned hiring someone to make an investigation of something. Councilman Smith responded that he would not call this an investigation, but an independent management audit. According ot the minutes, Councilman Smith stated that he “did not feel this could be done objectively in-house.”

Deliberation ensued, followed by Councilman Smith withdrawing his motion to require an independent, third-party management and financial audit. Councilwoman Vaughters agreed to the withdrawal. The matter of a management audit was to be discussed at the work session on April 8, 2002. 

This stage of the history is not well-served in this recap. The full text of the March 25 minutes, provided below, must be read to capture the important nuances of these discussions.

Aiken City Council minutes 3/25/2002. 16 pages. Click to view full size.

April 5, 2002 Letter to the editor: “The taxpayer has a right to know what happened.”22

Letter to the Editor, Aiken Standard, April 5, 2002

April 8, 2002: Independent, third-party audit is off the table and replaced with an in-house management audit.

From Aiken City Council work session minutes, April 8, 2002. Click to view full size.

The April 8 minutes recapped Councilman Smith’s earlier request for independent audits as a requirement of the loan, in order to review the financial, legal and business aspects of the construction and the relationship between the Aiken Corporation and the City of Aiken. Smith had given Council an outline of the various points that he wanted raised in these audits and wanted further discussed with City Council.

In what appeared to be a matter of compromise, Councilmembers Smith and Vaughters agreed that, given Council’s concerns over the cost, an in-house audit would be fine. Councilman Smith said that he wanted the Aiken Corporation, in concert with City staff, to prepare written statements to the questions which he raised, that could be looked at and evaluated. Then they could decide what to do in the future.

May 1, 2002 headline: “Construction process at Washington Complex under review.”23 

The in-house management audit by City of Aiken staff attorney, Richard Pearce, was underway. A set of questions, including those earlier provided by Councilman Smith, were reportedly being posed to all parties involved in the project — the members of the Aiken Corporation, Washington Group, and Playhouse, in addition to the builder and the architect of the Newberry Street facility.

June 10, 2002 headline: “Council to Discuss Audit on Downtown Complex.”24

On Monday, June 10, the local newspaper, reported that the City’s in-house management audit had found, “no irregularities in the construction of the Washington government complex on Newberry Street” and that “communications breakdowns were responsible for much of the confusion in the project’s execution.” The total project cost was quoted as $5,441,858.11, not including the costs for land acquisition, demolition and professional services. 24

According to the article, City manager Roger LeDuc stated that City Council would have the management audit “in hand” for that evening’s meeting, and that Council, “may choose to discuss the audit findings in any manner they deem appropriate.”24

According to the meeting minutes, no discussion took place. The only mention of the audit was in the minutes of the work session that took place before the City Council meeting, where it was decided that Council would meet again the following week for a special work session at 7:00 a.m. on June 18 to review and discuss a number of items laid out by City Manager Roger LeDuc. The topic of the management audit was not among the items proposed for discussion. Councilman Smith asked that Council make time to discuss the Management Audit during the June 18 special work session

June 18, 2002: Discussion of management audit missing in 7:00 a.m. special work session

If discussion of the management audit took place during the 7:00 a.m. June 18 meeting — or during any other City Council meeting — that discussion is stubborn to be found in the record. Below is the only mention of the management audit in the June 18 special meeting.

October 10, 2023: Looking Back

Also stubborn to be found in City’s of Aiken records is the report from Richard Pearce’s management audit — something that should be an easily accessible part of the public record. After several attempts by experienced researchers to locate the management audit in the City records, a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request was filed on Tuesday, October 3, 2023 for the following:

  • A copy of the management audit and financial audit(s) of the Aiken Corporation’s Washington Group/performing art center project as referenced in the April 8, 2002 City Council meeting minutes.
  • The list of questions submitted to Richard Pearce for inclusion in the audit.
  • A record of any discussions that took place among City Council regarding the completed audits.

The FOIA was completed the next day, on October 4, 2023, with a return of 220 pages of documents, which are available for viewing at the pdf below.

Included in this pdf are Richard Pearce’s management audit report and supporting documents. Not included among these 220 pages of documents is a copy of Councilman Smith’s original questions as submitted to Council and Richard Pearce.

Nor is there any record of discussion among City Council members on the completed audit.

Missing from the 220 pages of documents is the reportedly attached statement of opinion made by Aiken Community Playhouse second vice-president Philip H. Porter, Jr., which was referenced on page 124 (see image below) and again on page 127 of the above pdf.

On Thursday, October 5, 2023, a FOIA request for “the statement of opinion by Philip H. Porter, Jr. regarding project management systems” was filed. This results of this request are still pending. This any any other updates to this story may be published in a future epilogue to this story.

Learning from Our Errors

While the June-July 2002 meeting minutes did not reflect discussion on of the the management audit, the minutes did record discussion on the first and second readings on the Aiken Corporation’s next project — the upcoming 2003 construction of the Willow Run Business Park spec building. This project was a dismal failure. The spec building, completed in 2003, was finally demolished after 20 years of sitting empty.

The Aiken Corporation’s “Amentum model” went on to be repeated, albeit on a smaller scale, in the controversial 2008-2010 Railroad Depot project on Union Street — another public-private development project that promised to draw tourists and bring prosperity to the downtown. Numerous citizens spoke out in protest at the time.

One local resident, who described the Depot as a “boondoggle” in her 2007 letter to the editor, wrote,

“On Monday, the Depot project presenter used the Washington Center and Newberry Street as references. The Washington Center [now Amentum Center] project and the problems that are now glossed over were a big mess — changing designs, not enough money, incomplete business plan. How soon council forgets.”25

Another local resident, who described the Depot project as a “D.C.-style bailout,” wrote in her 2010 letter to the editor:

“Ten years after the mayor and city council told taxpayers that the railroad depot would be privately funded, they have gone back on their promise, and now the pack taxpayer will be on the hook to complete and maintain the newest downtown money pit. I was one of six individuals who expressed concern over the transfer of ownership of the Depot to the city. We were told by the mayor and city council members that the Depot would ‘draw people to Aiken,’ and that ‘we didn’t understand the railroad depot’s benefit to the city….” 26

City Councilman Dick Dewar, in a guest editorial published in the Aiken Standard on November 9, 2011, questioned the Aiken Corporation’s “financial and management acumen.”

Speaking on the Railroad Depot project, Dewar wrote, “Without city Council approval, the Aiken Corporation expanded the scope of the depot project and in the process spent over $2 million and incurred debt of over $800,000.” 27

Mr. Dewar went on to detail the then-latest requests by the Aiken Corporation — the third such request — to change the terms of their original $3.4 million loan to the City for the Newberry project. Mr. Dewar wrote:

“In summary, the Aiken corporation has repeatedly initiated projects for small amounts, or to be funded privately, but has an expanded the size incurring debt and responsibilities they cannot support. They then appeal to the city Council to use taxpayer dollars to meet these responsibilities. Given the history of financial and  management problems With the Aiken corporation, I think the city Council needs to restrict their ability to initiate projects without adequate funding.” 27

Mr. Dewar called on his fellow council members to take the several actions, including to, “prohibit the Aiken corporation from spending money they don’t have. They must agree to stringent cost controls from City Council.” 27

He finished saying that, “If City Council cannot get the Aiken Corporation under control, it should be dissolved.”27

It’s been over two decades since the early lessons of the Aiken Corporation’s so-called Amentum Model went unheeded; it’s been over one decade since the lessons of the Railroad Depot project went unheeded.

The year is 2023, and we’re seven months into the latest Aiken Corporation project — a 3-story Savannah River National Lab complex that the Aiken Corporation is proposing to build on Newberry Street a block north of the Amentum building. Questions have already been raised about the Aiken Corporations’s financial and management acumen and lack of accountability. Promised deadlines have come and gone, and taxpayers are left wondering what was bought with the $250,000 awarded to the Aiken Corporation seven months ago.

Here, it must be emphasized that Aiken Corporation members are  neither elected by voters, nor appointed by elected officials, yet they have been given immense power over public resources. Elected officials no longer serve on the Aiken Corporation board, and there is no opportunity for public comment in Aiken Corporation meetings. What avenue can taxpayers pursue to hold the Aiken Corporation accountable with the power it holds with public resources?

The calls are ongoing for the City of Aiken to dissolve its relationship with the Aiken Corporation. In response, our City Council has been pressing harder still on the accelerator pedal, as if there is a hurry to get someplace before November.

The time for accountability is now — not some decades after the lessons from the latest corporate coup have been swept under the rug.

___________________


17. Daily, Karen, “Council Has Stage Fright – Community Playhouse seeks $1.5 million to finish theater,” Aiken Standard, February 9, 2002.
18. Lord, Phillip; Daily, Karen, “Playhouse Now Needs $1.1 million,” Aiken Standard, February 15, 2002.
19. Lord, Phillip, “Arts Center Debate Expected — Aiken City Council to Consider $935 loan to finish downtown theater,” Aiken Standard, March 10, 2002.
20. Daily, Karen, “Washington Center for the Performing Arts – Smith: ‘It’s still loosey-goosey. Theater funding moving ahead, confusion remains,” Aiken Standard, March 12, 2002.
21. Editorial: “Let’s learn from errors downtown,” Aiken Standard, March 13, 2002.
22. Wessinger, Tommy B., “Playhouse project needs independent audit,” Aiken Standard, April 5, 2002.
23. Daly, Karen, “Construction process at Washington Complex under review,” Aiken Standard, May 1, 2002.
24. City Council to Discuss Audit on Downtown Complex,” Aiken Standard, June 10, 2002.
25. Stoker, Jenne, “Depot Project a Boondoggle?” Aiken Standard, July 17, 2007.
26. Pate, Kathy, “Depot Project a D.C.-style Bailout,” Aiken Standard, August 23, 2010.
27. Dewar, Dick, “Aiken Corp. Needs to be More Accountable,” Aiken Standard, November 9, 2011.


Ninety-Seven Years Ago Today: The Lowman Lynchings

Most stories start at the beginning. A few are better told starting at the end.  The Lowman story almost defies such timelines and is perhaps best told starting somewhere in the middle, during the dark morning hours of Friday, October 8th, 1926.

It was between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. on October 8, 1926, when Damon Lowman — who had received, only hours earlier, a verdict of not guilty in the murder of the Aiken County sheriff —  was forcibly removed from the Aiken Jail on Chesterfield Street, along with his sister, Bertha, and his cousin, Clarence, both of whom were expected to be cleared the next day of the same charge. The three were then driven to a pine thicket several miles down the road, where they were shot and killed by a mob of men numbering from 17 to 2,000, depending upon which account you believe.

This horrific crime would undergo investigations by grand juries and by the governor’s office, as well as the NAACP and the New York World newspaper, whose findings were published in newspapers across the country, drawing the national spotlight and condemnation onto the town of Aiken. For a few months in 1926, it seemed rare justice might be served but, ultimately, it came to nothing. The questions stopped being asked, and the articles trickled to none. The expectations for justice disappeared entirely. In their place emerged a particular silence that persists to this day.

I didn’t learn about the story until 2004. I heard about it from my father during one of our many long conversations during that last year of his life. He had first learned about it during the 1980s through his work with Aiken’s NAACP, in which he was a long-time member.

In the course of his research into the story, my father had interviewed Lowman family acquaintances, through whom he learned the Lowman story, which began some 18 months before the lynchings. He put the story to paper, starting with these words:

On a sunny Saturday morning on April 25, 1925, there were several women and children in the extended Lowman family working about the yard and house of their Monetta home, variously involved in their daily chores — cooking the noonday meal, bathing the baby, making soap and sweeping the yard.  Within minutes, this pastoral scene would be violently disrupted.

My father did fine justice to the story but was limited by the information available to him. Five years after his death, I found myself returning to the story, taking his draft and building on it. I wish he’d lived long enough to read the scholarly account by historian Elizabeth Robeson, who is, today, the consummate authority on this history. Or the stories written by Pam Durban. I know he would have been gratified.

Elizabeth Robeson’s work can be found in the chapter titled, “An Ominous Defiance,” in the 2008 book, “Toward the Meeting of the Waters: Currents in the Civil Rights Movement of South Carolina during the Twentieth Century,” available for purchase at USC Press. “An Ominous Defiance,” can be read here in Google Books.

A 2014 Bernice Bennet interview at Blog Talk Radio with Elizabeth Robeson and Patricia Lowman Pryor, granddaughter to Bertha Lowman, gives further detail to the background of the story including the histories leading up to and following the triple lynchings.

Aiken native Pam Durban, winner of the Lillian Smith Book Award, brought perspective to other characters in the Lowman story through her novel, “The Tree of Forgetfulness,” a compelling read that can be purchased at any major bookseller, including Barnes and Noble. Pam Durban also has a short piece titled, “A Southern Story” on this history that is worthy of finding.

Today, some ninety-seven years later, the Lowman family is remembered with the ongoing hope of establishing support for placing a historic marker at the site of the former jail on the grounds of the Aiken County Courthouse: a physical piece of evidence to say that, yes, this history was important and, yes, these three human souls remain worthy of our honor and remembrance.

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Cast Your Vote in the County Council District 8 Special Election this October: What You Need to Know

To confirm your voter registration, precinct, and county council seat number CLICK HERE.

NOTE: Be sure to confirm your polling location per the chart, (further down the page), as a few precincts have been combined for this special election.

James Hankinson (R)
P.K. Hightower (D)

EARLY VOTING
Early voting for County Council District 8 special election began Monday, October 2 and will continue through Friday, October 13, weekdays only, from 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

PRIMARY DAY VOTING
Primary Election Day is on Tuesday, October 17, 2023 from 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.

EARLY VOTING
MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13

The Aiken County Government Center
Suite 1200

1930 University Parkway
Aiken, SC 29801

SPECIAL ELECTION DAY VOTING
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17

NOTE:

  • Aiken No. 2 and Six Points have been combined.
  • Couchton and Levels 72 have been combined.

Highlighting indicates combined precincts.

For info on precincts and other voter-related issues, call the Aiken County Department of Registration and Elections at 803-642-2028.

The Aiken Chronicles welcome questions on the election/voting process and will do our best to find answers. Please, no back and forth debates on national politics and issues. Many thanks. 🌿

The Amentum Model: A Corporate Coup


Corporate Coup:
Part Two in a Three-Part Story

1998-1999: The Playhouse Considers a Move
2000-2001: The Amentum Model: “Corporate Coup”
NEXT: 2002: The Amentum Model: “Loosey Goosey”

The super-sized January 28, 2000 Aiken Standard headline was subtitled, “Government Services picks Aiken for HQ” — a development that signaled a paradigm shift in the Playhouse project. Newberry Hall had been the site of an announcement that day, “sure to keep area economic development officials and downtown business owners grinning for months.”11

According to the article, Morrison Knudsen Government Services Group, (GSG) “decided to locate its corporate headquarters in downtown Aiken.” The new building was to be located on Newberry Street at the site of the Mark II theater and other properties purchased six months earlier by the City. 

Governor Jim Hodges, Mayor Cavanaugh and other dignitaries were on hand for the occasion. Governor Hodges said “Today’s announcement reaffirms the long-standing partnership between Westinghouse and the Aiken community… and strengthens that commitment to economic development.” 11

Mayor Cavanaugh said, “It’s a great time here for Aiken,”11 and expressed hope that folks attending meetings and conferences would be inspired to move to Aiken. 

Morrison Knudsen GSG was holder of a number of defense contracts, including the Westinghouse Savannah River Co. contract. Morrison Knudsen GSG’s new corporate headquarters was estimated to cost $3 million dollars and would share the building space with the Aiken Community Playhouse. The expected move-in date was spring 2001. The GSG side of the building was to be funded through private sources, and the playhouse side through public funding. The City of Aiken, (owner of the property) and the Aiken Corporation were to oversee the work, including both the construction and design stages, which were slated to begin immediately. 

Below the fold on the front page with this January 28, 2000 headline was a smaller headline, that read, “Sharing the Stage,” which described the building that would house the new Morrison Knudsen GSG headquarters. Designed by McDonald Law, the structure was described as a “two story brick structure comprised of two 18,000 square foot facilities joined by a 2,500 square foot, two-story lobby and courtyard.” At the top of the article was an architectural rendering of the building that exists there today. 

One can only imagine the amount of work it must have taken behind the scenes over the prior six months to pull together this done deal. Taking center stage was the SRS contractor, whose move-in date was just over a year away.

February 9, 2000: Sub-Chapter S Corporation to own the Westinghouse side of the building

The Aiken Corporation board discussed several key issues in their February meeting, including:

  • The logistics of building ownership. Morrison Knudsen GSG, now referred to as Westinghouse, didn’t want to own the building, nor did the City, which desired the ability to collect taxes on the property.
  • The logistics of leasing the building and the impact that long-term leasing might have on the Aiken Corporation’s tax-exempt status.
  • The possibility of establishing a sub-chapter S-Corporation and revising the organization’s charter to address some of these issues.

Excerpts from the Aiken Corporation minutes 2/9/2000
(Click images to view full size)

March 7, 2000: Aiken Corporation to own the Westinghouse side of the building

The Aiken Corporation met on March 7. In the wake of City Council’s recent vote to sell approximately one half of the Newberry properties at cost to the Aiken Corporation, the board discussed their willingness to develop “the Westinghouse property,” the terms of the loan necessary to doing this, and the proposed leasing agreement with Westinghouse. A motion was made and approved to move forward with the development, ownership and leasing of the Westinghouse property in close cooperation with the City.

Buzz Rich was to develop a lease with Westinghouse and an agreement between the City of Aiken and the Aiken Corporation. Speed was of the essence, as Westinghouse desired occupying the facility by this same time next year.

The wisdom of establishing a subchapter S corporation was raised, and agreement was reached to seek a second opinion.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 3/7/2000
(Click image to view full size)

April 12, 2000: City of Aiken to own Westinghouse side of the building. Also: Project costs exceed original estimates.

Discussion in the April 2000 Aiken Corporation meeting focused on the the updated construction costs for the Playhouse, which had exceeded original estimates. Discussion ensued on additional funding sources.

It was also determined that, due to the requirement for a “firewall” to separate property owners, the Aiken Corporation would not own the Westinghouse building, after all, but would instead lease the property from the City and lease the building to Westinghouse.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 4/12/2000
(Click on image to view full size)

May 2, 2000 newspaper headline: “Westinghouse deal discussed by City Council”12

Aiken City Council held a special meeting to work out the logistics of the planned  home for Westinghouse and the Playhouse. Counsel passed two memorandums of understanding (MOUs) regarding the new building to be constructed where the “abandoned” Mark Twin Cinema and the Whittle Building currently stood. One MOU was to specify the role between the City and Aiken Corporation regarding ownership of the Westinghouse side of the building. 

The second MOU concerned the Playhouse side of the building. The shell of this portion of the building would be constructed by the City, but the Playhouse would be responsible for finishing the interior. The City’s expenses were not to exceed $1.5 million for the construction.

Importantly, the second MOU also addressed concerns over the Playhouse’s inability to raise sufficient funds to relocate. It was decided that, if the Playhouse didn’t have an operational theater in the new building by January 1, 2003, the city had the right to terminate the MOU and/or lease. 

Lease arrangements on the building were formalized. The City owned the land; the Aiken Corporation would hold the lease on the WGSG side of the building which it would, in turn, lease to WGSG; the City would lease the other side to the Aiken Community Playhouse for $1 per year. 

According to Aiken Corporation’s May 2000 meeting minutes, the organization entered into a MOU with Westinghouse for a 10-year lease. They agreed to form the Subchaper S Corporation, LED. This would resolve issues over activities that were not included in the Aiken Corporation’s charter and/or could threaten their tax-exempt status.

Excerpts from Aiken Corporation minutes May 10, 2000
(Click on image to view full size)

June 14, 2000: The $3.5 Million Westinghouse Property

Aiken Corporation was working on finalizing the MOU for a 99-year lease with the City of Aiken, with discussion and agreements being forged on costs for the mortgage, maintenance, and parking. All area banks, except Wachovia, signed a commitment letter for permanent financing for the Westinghouse building.

Motions were made and passed for Aiken Corporation to:

  • Purchase part of the lot with the blue house (on Chesterfield) for Westinghouse parking, with the cost of the land, demolition and paving to be rolled into the Westinghouse lease payment.
  • Purchase steel outside of the contract for General Contractor.
  • Enter into a circulated loan agreement with the City of Aiken for a mortgage of, at a maximum, $3,500,000 for the construction of the Westinghouse property .
  • Open a checking account for construction, plus another account for lease payments.

Excerpts from Aiken Corporation minutes 6/14/2000
(Click image to view full size)

June 29, 2000 headline: “Building set to begin for new ACP location.”13

The low bid for the construction had been submitted by local contractor H.G. Reynolds. The demolition of the Newberry Street buildings was scheduled for July, pending the signing of the final lease agreements. The winner of the contract was to build the shell of the building, and complete the interior on the Westinghouse Government Services Group (WGSG) side of the building. The “up fitting” of the playhouse side would be determined at the conclusion of the ACP’s 2001 fundraising campaign. 

July 12, 2000 headline: “Contributions pouring in for ACP campaign”14

With the demolition of the Mark II Theater and the next door Whittle bulding underway, donations began pouring into the Aiken Community Playhouse, which was tasked with raising $1.2 million to move into the building. Bechtel Savannah River and Weldon Wyatt each pledged $50,000, and Westinghouse pledged $400,000 to the campaign. The Subchapter S Corporation, LED, was now a major player in the Westinghouse project.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 7/12/2000
(Click image for full-size view)

August 8, 2000: “Groundbreaking for ACP complex to be held Aug 21.”15

Ground was broken for what was now being described as a $6 million dollar project. Mayor Cavanaugh, called the project “the most diverse and most interesting public private partnership in perhaps the history of Aiken.”

It was thought that the visibility of the playhouse would be boosted by the presence and shared lobby with the SRS contractor, whose name had recently morphed again, this time from “Westinghouse GSG” to “Washington Government.”

The Playhouse had so far raised $250,000 to fund their half of the two-story building. By April 2001, the earlier-quoted $1.2 necessary to fund their half of the building would jump to $1.6 million.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 8/9/2000
(Click image for full-size view)

August 2000-December 2001

For the following 18 months, from August 2000 onward, the hardworking playhouse group would hold numerous fundraisers and benefits, which included joint efforts with the larger community. With the help of the equestrian community, the playhouse held a series of benefits, including polo matches, a carriage parade, and a dinner dance. A champagne brunch was held at Whitney Field and Ford Conger Field.

The Women of Woodside held a garden party and a home tour. Numerous Aiken homes were opened to tour and events to benefit the playhouse, including Joyce Cottage and Nancy Wilds’ 18th century Zahara Plantation. In May 2001, a large donation by Mr. and Mrs. R. Dale Phelon put the fundraiser over the $1 million mark. The new auditorium was to be named in their honor. A “design house event” was held in a Kalmia Hills home in September 2001 to benefit the playhouse. During the December 2001 holidays, the playhouse held a dinner theater benefit.

Various excerpts from Aiken Corporation minutes16 during construction provide a glimpse into the scramble of activities between financing, fundraising, leasing agreements, and creating parking spaces for what was now being called “The Washington Group/Playhouse.”

Two Asides: Willow Run and the Railroad Depot

Among the items of interest in the 2000-2001 Aiken Corporation minutes was the Aiken Corporation’s purchase of the “Willow Run” property on Beaufort Street to build a spec building — a private-public development project that promised to lure industry to the site. The spec building was completed in 2003. Afterward, it stood unoccupied and unsold for almost 20 years before the property finally sold, and the building was demolished. The year is 2023. A readily-accessed financial accounting of this venture, from start to finish, should be made available to the public.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 10/10/2001
(Click image for full-size view)

Also among the 2000-2001 Aiken Corporation minutes were ongoing, early negotiations with Friends of the Railroad Depot regarding the “reconstruction” of a railroad depot on the grounds of the former Southern Railway passenger station that the City demolished in 1954. The Railroad Depot would finally be constructed in 2008-2010, drawing even more controversy then the Washington Group/Playhouse project.

Excerpt from Aiken Corporation minutes 11/8/2000
(Click image for full-size view)

A Mammoth Yard Sale

In late January 2002, the Aiken Community Playhouse capped off their 18-month fundraising efforts with a “mammoth yard sale.” Two weeks later, the Aiken Corporation’s chickens would come home to roost.

Next: The Amentum Model: “Loosey Goosey”

11. Burton, Adam, “Corporate Coup,” Aiken Standard, January 28, 2000.
12. Burton, Adam, “Westinghouse Deal Discussed by City CouncilAiken Standard, May 2, 2000
13. Burton, Adam, “Building Set to Begin for New ACP Location,” Aiken Standard, June 29, 2000
14. Burton, Adam, “Contributions Pouring in for ACP Campaign,” Aiken Standard, July 12, 2000
15. Burton, Adam, “Groundbreaking for ACP Complex to Be Held Aug 21,” Aiken Standard, August 8, 2000.
16: Excerpts (below) from various Aiken Corporation minutes from Nov 2000-Dec 2001. Click to view full size.