Category Archives: April 2023

Question: Is Google Coming to Aiken County? Answer: Aiken County Council Can’t Say.

by Don Moniak

April 19, 2023

At its Tuesday, April 18th public meeting, Aiken County Council approved the third reading of two different ordinances related to Project Sabal and its undisclosed representative Starskey LLC—a project in Graniteville being touted as a $900 million investment with fifty new jobs: 

  • One ordinance to “Authorize The Execution And Delivery Of A Fee In Lieu Of Tax (1) (FILOT) And Incentive Agreement By And Between Aiken County, South Carolina And A Company Identified For The Time Being As Project Sabal (The “Company”).” (Pages 9-11 of Agenda Packet)
  • The other ordinance “to Develop A Jointly Owned and Operated Industrial/Business Park in Conjunction With Edgefield County.” The industrial park is described in an attachment, but Exhibit A which shows the property is left blank. (Pages 13-15 of Agenda Packet)

The ordinance states the project creates no financial liability for the county and that “the benefits of the Project are greater than the costs;” but no costs in the form of resource or environmental impacts are identified. Only the jobs and investment benefits are listed in the ordinance.

At the last public hearing on the matter four weeks ago, Chairman Gary Bunker declined to answer any questions about costs or even identify the industry involved.

For the final public hearing this week, Aiken-Edgefield Economic Development Partnership Director Will Williams was summoned to answer questions; and informed Council that the Project Sabal “Company,” Starskey LLC, represents a data collection company that is “still doing due diligence on whether they have enough (electrical) power” to establish a new facility in the Sage Mill Industrial Park area. 

So it could be Google, Meta/Facebook, Microsoft, or another major data collection company with nearly a billion dollars to spend. But a nondisclosure agreement prohibits Council from divulging the real company’s name at this time.

Starskey LLC’s agent is Corporation Service Company of Columbia (2), and its legal representative is Nexsen-Pruet of Columbia, a powerful firm which recently merged with Maynard Cooper and Gale to form one of the largest law companies in the Southeast. 

Starskey LLC, via Nexsen-Pruet,  purchased ~560 acres of land from Wyatt Real Estate Investment, LLC (Agent: Weldon Wyatt) in 2022 for $19,299,555.   The property consists of four contiguous parcels adjacent to Bridgestone’s Giant Tire plant to the east and Bettis Academy Road to the west; near the Edgefield County line in the Graniteville area.

Properties purchased by Starskey LLC in 2022

When asked how much electrical power is required, and how much water is necessary for the data collection center, Williams responded that 200 megawatts of electric capacity was needed, and that Aiken Electric Cooperative is working with the company to provide its power needs. 

As for the water issue, Williams did not offer hard data, stating only that “the company continues to reduce their water usage over time. In the process they have relocated a water line” in the Breezy Hill Water and Sewer District.

Because of the massive water demands at data centers, Google and other major tech companies are working to reduce water usage at their water-intensive data centers.  At their Douglas Georgia data center Google boasts “we’ve designed an innovative reuse water system to use recycled water for 100% of our cooling needs.” And at their Berkeley County, South Carolina data center rainwater is reportedly collected as a water source for their cooling system.  Williams provided no details of any water conservation measures being proposed at this site.

Aiken County’s deal has similarities to the investments Google has made at its sprawling Berkeley County, South Carolina data center operations since 2007.  For example, Google’s $500 million investment in Berkeley County in 2014 involved: 

  • A great deal of secrecy including nondisclosure agreements for elected officials. 
  • A holding company called Maguro Enterprises, whose agent was also Corporation Service Company of Columbia; and who paid $17 million for property in Berkeley County.

The latter by itself might not mean much, as Corporation Service Company (2) is the listed agent for dozens of South Carolina LLCs. And it could be purely coincidental that Nexsen Pruit hired Berkeley County’s Attorney Nicole Ewing  in 2014, who had extensive experience navigating that county’s deal with Google.

But the nondisclosure agreement was a contributing cause to Councilman Kelly Mobley opting to vote no on the final reading, as he explained that:

“There is a non disclosure agreement. It is not fair for elected officials to not be able to tell our constituents who this is we are voting on.” 

Mobley had, minutes before, offered the opinions that:

  • We can’t ignore the positive in the economic development, but with that said, we’re being asked to give and approve an unknown. What do we have? A real estate holding company that bought the property, rerouted a water main on Breezy Hill, but are still not willing to tell us who they are?” 
  • “I am concerned about the water, we do not know what percentage taken is going to be for water treatment , and we don’t know what the water usage is going to be.” 

Newly elected Councilman Mike Kellums also voted no, saying that “Council should know by the Third Reading what the project is by that time. I will be voting no tonight as well.” 

The final vote was 7-2, with Councilmembers in the majority offering some of the following supporting arguments: 

  • Phil Napier: “You can be assured that Breezy Hill (Water) has the capacity for water and sewer capacity if they say they do…These large corporations do not publicize their names while they are negotiating. This county needs more jobs. We can pull the plug if something comes up.”
  • Andrew Siders: “Aiken County is not putting one dollar towards this.” 
  • Gary Bunker: “This does not commit Aiken County to any costs. It is a Fee in Lieu of Taxes and not a liability.” 
  • Sandy Haskell: “They don’t want their competitors to know what they are up to.”

Councilmen Ron Felder, Willar Hightower, and Danny Feagin all voted yes without offering any insights into their vote.

Every Council member supported the project, but only two did not support the continued level of secrecy. The contradictory message from supporters of continued secrecy is that county taxpayers should rest assured there is ample water for the plant, and the county’s wastewater system can handle the outflow; yet nobody can say how much water is necessary and how much impact on county infrastructure there will be. 

Likewise, the “special source credits” mentioned 165 times in the 48-page Project Sabal FILOT agreement are never defined because they remain to be negotiated. While there is no liability incurred by Aiken County, the caveat for the special source credits is that future FILOT payments could be returned to the company, which could deprive the county of expected revenue. This stipulation is listed in capital letters on Page 12:

THE NEGOTIATED FILOT SPECIAL SOURCE CREDITS AUTHORIZED HEREIN SHALL NOT CONSTITUTE A GENERAL OBLIGATION OF THE COUNTY, BUT SHALL BE A LIMITED OBLIGATION OF THE COUNTY PAYABLE SOLELY FROM THE NEGOTIATED FILOT PAYMENTS RECEIVED BY THE COUNTY HEREUNDER WITH RESPECT TO THE PROJECT.”

The real details of the project’s costs and incentives might never be known. The Post and Courier reported in 2020 that in Berkeley County, the county keeps the financial incentives a tightly guarded secret. Google, and other tech companies, is also “very protective” of its water usage and has applied twice to increase the amount of water it pulls from nearby aquifers to supplement, if necessary, the four million gallons a day it uses to cool its data collection machines.

Footnotes: 

(1) Fee in Lieu of Taxes (FILOT)

The South Carolina Department of Revenue summarizes FILOT as:

“Industries that invest at least $2.5 million in South Carolina may negotiate for a fee-in-lieu of property taxes. This can result in a savings of about 40% on property taxes otherwise due for a project. Certain large investments may be able to further reduce their liability by negotiating the assessment ratio from 10.5% down to 6%. For large investments, the assessment ratio can be reduced down to 4%. The county and the industry may agree to either set the millage rate for the entire agreement period or have the millage change every five years in step with the average millage rate for the area where the project is located. Any personal property subject to the fee in lieu of property taxes depreciates in accordance with South Carolina law, while the real property is either set at cost for the life of the agreement or can be appraised every five years.

A fee in lieu of property taxes is granted by, and at the discretion of, the county where the project is located. The industry must make the $2.5 million investment over a five-year period to qualify. Large investment projects have eight years to meet their increased investment requirements. During this period, all property that is placed in service pursuant to the agreement is subject to a fee instead of ad valorem property taxes. A county may give the industry an additional five years to complete the project and place new property in service subject to the fee. A single piece of property can be subject to the fee for up to 40 years with the county’s consent. The total project can be subject to the fee for up to 50 years with the county’s consent.”

The FILOT rate for Project Sabal is listed as four percent.

In between his terms on County Council and his election as County Council Chairman, Gary Bunker was a popular columnist for the Aiken Standard. in his columns he routinely described Fee in Lieu of Taxes as an industrial tax incentives. In 2013 he wrote that South Carolina’s tax structure: 

Encourages retirees to settle here, who benefit from low property taxes. Their limited retirement income isn’t greatly penalized by the high income tax.  Conversely, this tax structure is hard on businesses and manufacturing. It encourages fee-in-lieu of tax agreements and special source revenue credits to get around high property tax rates on large industrial developments. In essence, the left hand must undo the damage caused by the right.” 

(2) In a typical loop for shell companies, Corporation Service Company’s listed agent is United States Corporation Company; and the latter’s listed agent is Corporation Service Company. 

Starskey LLC was registered as an LLC in Delaware on March 7, 2021, and in South Carolina on October 24, 2022 prior to its December 7, 2022 property purchase. All that is public are the names of the registered agent:

Homes Demolished under DEMO 200

by Don Moniak
April 17, 2023
(Updated May 3, 2023).

(Cross-posted at Schofield Community Association)

Aiken City Council is meeting on Monday, April 17th to discuss the DEMO 200 program. Anybody reading materials from the meeting agenda packet might conclude the homes in question are always burned-out, unsalvageable, dilapidated eyesores that are a blight upon on the neighbors.

But in general, this is not the case. Photos from Google Earth Street Views shows that many, if not most, of the DEMO 200 homes were not unsalvageable, and were not blighted eyesores—at least not any more than other neighborhood homes.

Following are eight of the last eleven known properties in the DEMO 200 program, which is addressed in more depth in “City of Aiken Demolition Index.”. Every lot is currently vacant. The City of Aiken has been unable to answer the basic question of how many lots have been redeveloped during the course of the program—-similar to the lack of
tracking of city property sales and purchases.

Even if the homes need demolition, the fact remains that property owners are paying only $200 to have homes demolished, while the city pays anywhere from $5500 to $21,000, depending on the difficulty of
the demolition.

Another unstated advantage for program participants is a substantially reduced tax rate, as property owners will no longer pay tax on the improvement value, only on the land value. Property owners paying only $200 for demolition can realize profits two to four times that much in reduced property taxes in the first year alone.

____________________________


1. 140 Sumer Street, NE, (below) adjacent to Stoney-Gallman Public Housing. The permit application was filed on July 7, 2021. The permit information shows a demolition cost, shown as “valuation in city records, of $6,500; equalling a $6300 subsidy. County records showed a $29,950 improvement value in 2021. The owner’s property tax bill was reduced from $350 in prior to the demolition to $192 after demolition.

____________________________

2. 108 Kershaw Street, NE. (Below) Building permit Application 21-818, dated June 8, 2021, showed a demolition cost $6500, a $6300 subsidy. Aiken County records show an improvement value of $37,710 prior to the demolition. The difference in taxes between the property alone and the improvement + property has yet to be determined.

____________________________

3. 223 Kershaw Street, NE. (Below) Building permit Application 22-324, dated October 7, 2021, showed a demolition cost of $21,000 (1) County records showed an improvement valuation of $26,080. Three photos are shown, the top one from Google Earth, the middle and the bottom from April 17th City Council agenda packet that shows the back of the building in disrepair, and the 2020 photo from a neighboring property from the Aiken County Assessor.

From April 17, 2023 Aiken City Council Agenda Packet.
217 Kershaw St, NE (Above) with 223 Kershaw NE in the background, from 2020 Aiken County Assessor’s photo.

____________________________

4. 435 Horry Street, NE. (Below) Building permit application 22-326, dated October 7, 2021, showed a “valuation”/demolition cost of $6350, a $6150 dollar subsidy. County Records show an appraised market valuatue of $11,540 prior to demolition. The lot is currently vacant.

____________________________

5. 523 Horry Street, NE. (Below) Building permit application 22-335, dated December 15, 2021, showed a “valuation”/demolition cost of $6250; a $6050 subsidy. Aiken County records reported an improvement value in 2020 of $47,400 and in 2021 of $13,180. The tax bill before demolition was $614. The Tax bill after demolition was $211. Demolishing the building created a $203 profit for the property owner in the first year, and $403 in profits for each following year. The lot is currently vacant.

____________________________

6. 1549 Wyman Street. (Below) This home in Crosland Park is the only photo provided in the April 17th meeting agenda packet that can be verified in County Records. The building permit information from September 21, 2021 shows a “evaluation” of $6,250, another $6,050 subsidy. The Aiken County records showed an improvement value of only $4,050. The lot is vacant.

From Aiken County Assessor’s Office

____________________________


7. 327 Chesterfield Street NE. (Below) As reported in “City of Aiken Demolition Index,” A Chaplin and Sons Clearing demolition permit reported a demolition cost/“valuation” of the property of $5250. The appraised value of the home reported by the Aiken County Assessor’s Office in 2022 was $57,132. It was demolished in early 2023.

Coupled with the property value of $22,000, this resulted in an tax assessment value of $4750 and a combined 2022 tax bill for both properties of $1101.05. The latest tax payment is not yet posted to the County data base; but the first year of profit from the reduced taxes could be 2-4 times the property owners $200 payment to the city.

In addition, the home to the right was also demolished under the program in the 2019-2021 time frame.

____________________________

8. Another home at 211 Fairfield Street (Below) was also demolished in 2022. Aiken County records show it was valued at $35,140. The property remains a vacant lot.

____________________________

Photos of several demolished homes are not available via Google Earth, but are worth mentioning:

  • 445 Horry Street NE had a demolition cost in the June 9, 2021 demolition permit of $8500, and a $29,230 improvement value in County Records.
  • 343 York Street North had a valuation/demolition cost in its October 7, 2021, demolition permit of only $6,750. It’s improvement value of $92,180 in Aiken County records was reported before a fire. The last reported tax payment in 2015, before the property was sold to Friendship Community Improvement Corporation, was $1016.96.

Compare these photographs to those found in City Council’s April 17th meeting agenda packet, which are all untitled, lacking addresses, and lacking in completeness. Half of the four structures shown to Council members and the public were destroyed by fire (below). Not a single photo of a sturdy, liveable and restorable home, like those shown above, was introduced into the public record by the City Manager’s office.

(Updated May 3, 2023 to reflect that “valuation” in City Records
is equal to demolition costs, not estimated value, which was not made clear in city records)

FOOTNOTE:

(1) When asked about the $21,000 “valuation,” City officials said that was the cost of the demolition, and it was greater due to structural complications.

The Year of the Wasps


I admit I was a little apprehensive when I first noticed the nest. After all, I had the safety of a wife and two young girls (six and eight years old at the time), not to mention my own well-being to think of. Had the wasps not chosen that particular location in the carport — directly above our entry door, and only a two-foot distance from my head — I might not have been concerned.

There were only three or so wasps on the nest the first day I noticed it. I sensed the wasps glaring menacingly as I approached the door, but they didn’t attack. I decided to let them be, thinking it might be a good learning opportunity for the girls.

I was able to identify the species as red paper wasps (Polistes carolina) and called the girls out to see. My lesson held their attention for about three minutes. My admonishment to not slam the screen door, lest they alarm the wasps, lasted a bit longer. They obeyed this directive for maybe a week, but then the novelty of the wasps faded, and my warnings were, for the most part, quickly forgotten.

Over the course of that Spring, I began to pay more attention to the comings and goings of wasps. Several times, I found them out at the clothesline, crawling on the clothespins. What the…? I learned that they were chewing on the weathered wood in order to create the “paper” to build their nest. Turns out that wasps chew on wood and stems, mixing the fibers with their saliva to create a waterproof paper suitable for nest-building. If you get a chance to study an old nest, you’ll notice the variations in color as the nest was built, each color layer deriving from the different woods used to make their nests.

My wife and I had planted some broccoli plants in a bed near the driveway that year. The struggle with cabbage worms was a constant. Forgoing insecticides, I went out each morning before work and picked off the worms. One morning, I watched as the wasps landed on the plants to drink the morning dew. One wasp, I noticed, crawled underneath a broccoli leaf and disappeared. After a short time, it reappeared at the edge of the leaf, carrying one of the cabbage worms, which it then ferried off toward the nest. Turns out, wasps are voracious hunters of caterpillars, aphids, beetle and housefly larvae, which they feed to their own “babies” in the nest. I was amazed!

One thing you’ll notice, if you spend much time watching wasps, is their frequent visits to flowers. It’s for the nectar, not pollen. In fact, some plants have actually evolved “extrafloral nectaries” — little nectar pockets at the stem joints — that serve to encourage visits from wasps, ants and ladybugs, which, in turn, repay their generous host by ridding it of pests. As a bonus, the vibration of the wasp on the flowers assists self-pollinating plants, such as beans, and can increase crop yields. Yet one more reason to welcome the wasps to your garden!

Between the clothespin chewing and the caterpillar catching, the wasp nest was becoming larger and larger. The population increased to ten… twenty…. thirty!  With the girls running wild, in and out of the house — repeatedly slamming the screen door in the process — there were times I gave serious thought to removing the nest. I didn’t take lightly the specter of thirty angry wasps. But they’d not once shown the least sign of aggression or even taking notice of our comings and goings. I let them be. Some studies have shown that wasps have the ability to recognize, not only each other’s faces, but human faces. Perhaps they learn over time, as we do, friend from foe. Paper wasps are not aggressive unless you threaten or attack their nest.

It has been quite a while since my “year of the wasps.” Those days and months, with their uncounted hundreds of screen door slams, passed without a single incident.

These days, when visiting my brother (who calls me “the wasp whisperer”) out on his screen porch, a wasp will frequently find its way inside and endlessly bob at the screen, trying to find its way out. In most cases, I am able to coax the wasp onto my fingers and safely transport it to freedom outside– no fly swatters or poisons needed. Of course, it helps to have the ability to recognize a very agitated wasp. Stay away from those! Still, I have never been stung in my rescue efforts. Whew! 

Wasps who are in flight about the yard and garden are away from their nest for a reason — and it’s not to sting or attack us. They’re busy seeking nectar, making paper, or hunting food for their young, Wasps are actually very gentle and essential creatures in our world and, like us all, just trying to survive.

Contributor Burt Glover became an accidental naturalist during his earliest childhood days exploring the dirt roads, backyards, polo field and barns of the Magnolia-Knox-Mead neighborhood of 1950s Aiken. Birds are his first love, and he can identify an impressive range by song alone. He asserts that he is an observer, not an expert, on the topics of his writings, which range from birds, box turtles, frogs and foraging, to wasps, weeds, weather and beyond

Spirit of Anti-Corruption Law “Under Siege”

A letter to Aiken City Council regarding ongoing ethics issues

The following letter was sent today, April 12, 2023, by Don Moniak to Aiken City Council and City Manager Stuart Bedenbaugh.

“Dear (Aiken City) Council, 

After Council cancelled the Second Reading to dissolve the AMDC on Monday night, April 10th, I submitted prepared, written comments regarding that agenda item during the non-agenda portion of the meeting. I will be providing these comments and other relevant documentation to the State Ethics Commission, and the comments are provided for your reading pleasure below this email. (1)

Mr. (Gary) Smith’s request for an informal opinion from the Ethics Commission was the stated reason for deferring the Second Reading to dissolve the AMDC.  As of yesterday the Commission had yet to receive any request for an informal opinion from City Attorney Gary Smith regarding the conflict of interest issues involving City Council members, the Aiken Corporation, and the transfer of Aiken Municipal Development Commission (AMDC) properties and assets to the City of Aiken that will occur after the AMDC founding ordinance is repealed. 

A path forward that better complies with promises made by Council on January 17th for a fresh start is clear: void the Aiken Corporation contract and thus eliminate the conflict of interest issue. The Aiken Corporation can then compete with other interested parties for an economic interest in the Pascalis properties. 

A request for an informal opinion on ethics law means the spirit of this anti-corruption statute is, arguably, already under siege. The last informal opinion request to the State Ethics Commission by Mr. Smith was in February 2021.  For anyone who has not seen that opinion, it is at this link. 

In that request, Mr. Smith was very vague, referring only to the presence of a Council Member on the Board of a local bank that was building a new branch; and who was having work done on his home by the same builder.  There is a vague reference to the “The builder is purchasing a property in the City and it is anticipated that he will have to bring this property before City Council for approval of a zoning change and/or other matters.”

The Ethics Commission was unequivocal in its assessment that “the Council Member should recuse himself from any matter in which the builder has an economic interest.” 

Why Mr. Smith had to write in a hypothetical manner for a real issue would be up to him to explain. But since that was his approach, and the Ethics Commission was not provided any more concrete information, please correct me if I am wrong about stating the conflict of interest opinion involved Councilman Woltz. Here are the facts supporting that conclusion: 

1. The only bank (constructing) a new branch at that time was Carolina Coastal Bank, at its new 322 Richland Avenue West location. Councilman Woltz is on its Board of Directors, identified as owner of Precision Tune of Aiken. (SRP was also reconstructing a branch, but no Council members are on that Board). 

2. According to the city building permit, WTC of Aiken, LLC (Agent: Ray Massey) was the owner of the building, although it had sold the property to Coastal Carolina in April of 2020.  Tom Wyatt signed the deed at closing on behalf of WTC of Aiken,  and Mr. Smith’s partner Attorney Mary Guynn signed as closing attorney.  

As you all know, “WTC” stands for Weldon (Wyatt), Tom (Wyatt), and Chip (Thomas Goforth), and is routinely used by the Wyatt family for individual investment and development LLCs. There are more than forty different WTCs associated with the Wyatts that are registered in South Carolina.

For example, WTC Laurens, LLC (agent Thomas Goforth) purchased the former City of Aiken municipal office building on Laurens Street in 2020. Weldon Wyatt himself signed the deed when WTC Laurens (re)sold the parking lot portion of that property to R&O LLC (Agent Rick Osbon) in May 2021. This is all amply documented in The Cleaners: How Aiken City Council Got Taken to the Cleaners by the Wyatt Family. 

3. WTC Investments, LLC (Agent Ray Massey) was purchasing a property in the city at the time of Mr. Smith’s request for an ethics opinion: the “Anderson Property” (Newberry Hall) and “Shah Property,” (which actually consists of six properties) that are now officially owned by the AMDC. While WTC Investments never purchased those properties, it did assign the Purchase and Sale (PSA) agreements to the Aiken Chamber of Commerce, which in turn assigned the PSAs to the Aiken Municipal Development Commission.  

 WTC Investments business, in the form of the $10 million general obligation bond ordinance for “Parkway District” properties, did indirectly come before Council in August 2021. The bond money was used to pay for properties for which WTC Investments signed the original contracts.  Council decided to pay off that bond on Monday night, the final step in a deal initiated by Weldon Wyatt’s WTC Investments in cooperation with the City’s Economic Development department and the AMDC. 

So you can see the last request by Mr. Smith to the Ethics Commission for informal opinion has now opened up a new line of inquiry that keeps the dark grey skies over the Pascalis project, and the residual AMDC properties that Council is desperately trying to transfer to the City of Aiken. 

Will this latest request by Mr. Smith illuminate this latest ethical quandary through specificity and clarity, or be phrased in a hypothetical manner that functions to obfuscate the situation? 

Thank You, 

Donald Moniak
Contributor at: aikenchronicles.com

From Ethics Commission letter relating an informal opinion to City of Aiken Attorney Gary Smith





(1) Comments regarding AMDC properties and assets submitted in writing to City Council during the Monday, April 10th Council Meeting

1. The language in SC Ethics Law is quite clear: “No public official, public member, or public employee may knowingly use his official office, membership, or employment to obtain an economic interest for himself, a family member, an individual with whom he is associated, or a business with which he is associated.” And, No public official, public member, or public employee may make, participate in making, or in any way attempt to use his office, membership, or employment to influence a governmental decision in which he, a family member, an individual with whom he is associated, or a business with which he is associated has an economic interest. A public official, public member, or public employee who, in the discharge of his official responsibilities, is required to take an action or make a decision which affects an economic interest of himself, a family member, an individual with whom he is associated, or a business with which he is associated shall recuse themselves.”

SC 8-13-700 states
The key word here is economic interest, which is defined as: 
an interest distinct from that of the general public in a purchase, sale, lease, contract, option, or other transaction or arrangement involving property or services in which a public official, public member, or public employee may gain an economic benefit of fifty dollars or more.” Ethics Laws are anti-corruption laws, just like fire codes are fire prevention measures. 

2. Members of this Aiken City Council have recused themselves for reasons as varied as

a. Working in a building next door. 
b. Owning property on the same street.
c. Having a “friendly competitor”

d. Being the Council liason to a non profit group during disbursement of City funds to non profit groups. 
e. for belonging to the Kiwanis Club, although this appears to have been a joke. 
f. being related to somebody who had a conflict. 

That is a short list. 

City Attorney Gary Smith recused himself in October 2021  because a partner in his law firm was involved in the closing of a real estate deal on the property in question. This same recusal was made for the Rutland Avenue Aiken Village development in late 2022. 

Councilmembers Lessie Price and Gail Diggs properly recused themselves from the Aiken Corporation contract vote on March 13 because they are on the board of the Aiken Corporation. 

These are examples of good governance. 

3. On both February 8 and March 8 of this year, the Aiken Corporation Executive Committee voted to pursue an economic interest in AMDC property that was paid for with city funds, and which will soon become city property.  The contract between the Aiken Corporation and the City of Aiken creates a two-fold economic interest for the Aiken Corporation: 

a. Up to $250,000 as the Developer in the Pre-Development stage of the proposed SRNL project. 

b. As much as $500,000 to $600,000 a year in rental income from SRNL or other third parties on City property leased by the Aiken Corporation. 

There can be no doubt these are economic interests. 

Resignation from the Board of Directors of the Aiken Corporation does not erase the act of having voted for the contract, and having served on the Aiken Corporation until now. 

Resignation from the Board only confirms that a conflict of interest was present during the first reading. 

4. At the March 13th AMDC meeting, these conflicts of interest, which are real and not potential, caused this Council, as AMDC, to avoid voting on the resolution to transfer AMDC properties and assets to the City. City Attorney Smith offered the ordinance at issue today as an alternative and an end run around that vote. The purpose of this vote today is not just to dissolve the AMDC. The greater purpose is to transfer the properties.

5. City Attorney Smith is also in an ethical bind here, because his law firm was involved from the very beginning in obtaining properties that ultimately became AMDC properties: 

a. Members of the firm were paid an unknown sum, at least $6000, to negotiate and prepare PSAs on behalf of Weldon Wyatt’s WTC Investments. Wyatt’s development firm GAC was the first Pascalis developer. 

b. Attorney Ray Massey led an investment group that purchased properties in the Alley that were in the first Pascalis project, and property on Newbery Street that were a part of both projects.

c. SMBGM was the escrow agent for the WTC PSAs with the Shah and Andersons. 

d. Attorney Mary Guynn was paid through the city’s contract with Mr Smith to conduct the title search, and worked with Mr Smith on the property assignment to the Chamber of Commerce. 

e. Ray Massey and his “group,” as Tim O’Briant callled them, recruited developers for the second project, and Massey submitted a proposal on SMBGM Letterhead. 

f. Gary Smith prepared the city ordinance authorizing the bond, and signed the legal opinion validating the bond issuance. 

g. Ray Massey signed the PSA between RPM and the AMDC.

According to Tim O’Briant, this PSA is still exempt from FOIA disclosure because the city’s position is that until the deed is executed and the AMDC does not own the property, any release of information can provide a competitive advantage. 

So once again, the only ethical path forward is to render the Aiken Corporation contract null and void, put forth a redevelopment plan, hold a real public hearing on the Pascalis properties, and start anew. 

Thank You,

Donald Moniak

The Old Aiken County Hospital: Demolition by Neglect?

The dead trees and falling limbs in the front of the old Aiken County Hospital set the tone for what lies beyond.
Standing in the shade of the magnolia trees in the parking lot of the old AIken County Hospital, it is easy to see why this old building is on the National Register of Historic Places. Less easy to see is why this venerable old structure is being neglected to ruin.