Category Archives: Letters

Perspectives on Safety and Security in South Carolina Schools

By Dan Reider

August 18, 2025

As we head towards the start of another school year, we are excited for the children who will be attending those schools. Although not all schools are to the level we would like for them to be for our children – facilities, teachers, programs- most offer a great environment for learning, socializing, nutrition, athletics, and a wide variety of programs and clubs. With the start of the school year, there is also some anxiety felt by the parents with school age kids.

Security in schools has gotten to be a greater concern seemingly each year. In recent years we hear more about school shootings. While any school shooting is horrible, the news just seemed to make it appear so much worse and so much more prevalent than it really was in our schools. In actuality, school shootings are in the news more because they are actually occurring more frequently then in past years. In 2024 there were more than 80 school shootings and more than 800,000 violent incidents in schools in the United States.

It was more than a decade ago when I and fellow school designers (architects and engineers) had discussions related to school security and whether or not K-12 schools were headed towards being constructed more and more like a correctional facility- not to keep bad people in but to keep bad people out. It did not matter whether we were working on school projects in Aiken County, Greenville County, Horry County or wherever, the conversations regarding school security were all the same.

At that time, schools were being designed with some security features such as school security cameras and more schools include a school resource officer (SRO) to help with any safety issues within the school or on school grounds. Then we started to see metal detectors at entrances to high schools. Now we see metal detectors installed in middle schools and even some elementary schools. Other changes were being made including security cameras on buses, automatic locking entrance doors and the students participating in intruder alert drills.

In more recent times, schools have been adding automatic locking doors on classrooms, auditoriums, cafeterias, libraries and really any place where students could gather. More schools have decided that automatic locking doors were not sufficiently secure and the doors must be bulletproof with bulletproof glass. Students are also being asked to report any suspicious activities observed or in emails or texts.

Our vision years ago about schools becoming mini correctional facilities from a construction standpoint is about there. About the only things missing are that the buses are not bulletproof and the schools do not have fencing with barb wire around the entire school Although it is my sincere hope that we will not ever be seeing such things, I am not willing to bet on it. It makes me and others sad that we have gotten to where this is where we might be headed.

 As a child going to the schools in the 60s and 70s, I don’t think us students or our parents had anywhere near the safety concerns students and parents now have. Is there any chance that we as a society can ever go back to those days? What would have to change to make schools a safe place as they were in this country for so many decades without having to basically fortify them with so many safety features as we are now doing? What does this say about the direction we are headed as a society?

Dan Reider is a Mechanical Engineer who has designed schools for 40 years in South Carolina.


Whose Community is Aiken, Anyway?

Here we go again.

The front page article in the Aiken Standard’s December 7 and 8, 2024 edition declares: “Design board makes Aiken less attractive to developers, Realtor says.” (For added perspective, see the Aiken Standard’s May 25, 2024 editorial column, “Aiken is growing, and that growth should be monitored.”)

Should Aiken cater to developers and rely on them to define Aiken’s vision, or should developers adhere to Aiken’s requirements? Many developers doing business in Aiken are not local; they come and go. The Aiken community does not come and go. Who but the City should set equitable residential and commercial development goals, aspirations, and guidelines throughout the entirety of Aiken’s incorporated area?

Special municipalities will always attract developer interest, enabling the communities to move forward in a way of their choosing. Mediocre municipalities with questionable architectural and zoning practices give substantial leeway to developers; which makes it hard to maintain or enhance a community’s distinctiveness. Does Aiken want to take the high road or the low road?

Rather surprisingly, our community chose not to re-elect an incumbent mayor in November 2023, with the community having considered the actual consequences of doing business as usual in Aiken. It is foolhardy to believe that developer-driven commercial sprawl and the clandestine manner in which some of the City’s related application and approval process takes place, were not factors in the election.

Having worked for a developer, I know they seek to fast-track their projects as quickly and with as little interference from the public as possible. Developers aggressively seek substantial profits, and that is legal. They also seek to minimize risk, which, too, is legal if done in a way that does not violate ordinances and victimize others – especially sitting residents.

Is it a bad thing for developers not to have virtual carte blanche for their projects in Aiken? Could there be benefit in developer perception that Aiken is being selective? Is it wrong not to prefer still more gas stations with convenience stores, car washes, dollar stores, and mattress stores populating the City? While not supporting undue delay of process, if that is what is happening, could it be the Aiken Design Review Board is just doing its job?

Whose community is Aiken, anyway?


Bill Reichardt,
Aiken, SC

Ed. Notes:

— The above letter was also submitted to “The Aiken Standard.”
— The comments in question by a local commercial real estate agent were made at the December 5, 2024 Design Review Board meeting. The commentary began at the 44:30 mark of the livestreamed video.
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Aiken Election Board: Incompetence or Malfeasance?

Guest Editorial
by Peter DeLorme
October 16, 2024

In the first week of October, Ms. Maria Sullivan of Aiken had a letter printed in the Aiken Standard. It praised the Aiken County Board of Elections for its quick action during the first week of August when it appointed to the Elections Office Interim Director Ms. Judy Justice, and Interim Assistant Director Ms. Amy Nichols. These appointments were triggered by the resignations of the Elections Office’s Director Cynthia Holland in May, and Assistant Director Michael Bond in July. The interim employees were to fill the management void until a new Director was hired.

Ms. Sullivan’s letter went on to lament the sudden dismissal of those same interim employees and to complain about the makeup of the committee that had conducted the search for a new Director.

First, let’s look at what really happened with the flawed appointments of the interim employees, and how they relate to the statement “someone did something they should not have done” made recently by the Board’s Chair Ms. Blanche Wimberly.

Early in her interim tenure Ms. Justice relayed to me two important pieces of information. One was that both she and Interim Assistant Director Nichols had been simultaneously appointed by the Board. The other was that she had no input into the decision to appoint Ms. Nichols.

SC Law grants the Elections Board the authority, in a public meeting, to appoint the Director. It grants to the Director the authority to select and manage the Office staff, which includes the Assistant Director. Clearly, the Board should not have appointed the Interim Assistant Director, nor should the Interim Director have been appointed in a non-public Board meeting.

The State Elections Commission (SEC), in relation to these Board actions, has stated “We have had conversations with multiple people in Aiken County about this issue but have not heard a consistent story of how these hirings were made by the board.” What does it say about our Elections Board that its members cannot explain to the SEC how the interim employees were lawfully appointed?

Second, Ms. Sullivan comments that the interim employees were abruptly terminated and there was not a suitable transition period.

Remember, these were interim appointments.  It is not surprising that Ms. Justice was replaced immediately upon the hiring of a permanent Director.  

I am similarly not surprised that Ms. Nichols was not retained. In one of her Facebook posts, she wrote: “Yet (sic), the election was manipulated in two critical ways: First, the government dishonestly used the coronavirus pandemic to make wholesale changes to our voting rules that made it easier for Democrats to amass ballots.”  Posts such as this made her unsuitable for a management position in the non-partisan office charged with conducting our elections.   

Were the interim appointments made so quickly that there was no proper vetting of the candidates?  It would be useful to know who proposed this person be hired and appointed.

As it relates to the abrupt termination of the interim employees by the new Director, the SEC also referenced the SC Code of Laws, writing:

“Once hired, it would be the responsibility of the director to hire and manage all subordinate office staff, which would include the position of assistant director (see SC Code of laws Section 7-5-10 (B)).”

This statement clearly puts into the hands of the Director the ability/responsibility to terminate (or to use Ms. Sullivans term, ‘fire’) Elections Office employees.

It is clear from an article printed in the Aiken Standard on Sept. 18 that the decisions on the terminations were properly made by the new Director, Ms. Dana Burden. As to whether or not there was sufficient turnover, what took place during the transition were personnel matters, so it is unlikely we will ever know what turnover, if any, took place.

It is commendable and important that the Board was supporting Ms. Burden as she considered whether or not to retain the interim employees and that she was given that leeway by the board. That is a good start to a new era in which there needs to be more cooperation and trust between the Board and the Director.

Third, in the middle of her letter complaining about how the recent transitions took place, Ms. Sullivan brought up old news about the make-up of the committee performing the search for the new Director. Her implication was that Ms. Wimberly acted improperly when she did not appoint to the committee Ms. Lori Boddy, who was the only Board officer not so appointed. Why this was improper, or how this presumed appointment failure negatively impacted the search was not explained. Nor was it explained how this presumed failure related to the hiring or firing of the interim employees.

There has been turnover and irregular activity in the Election office the last few months, but a visit to the Elections Office will show that preparations and training for the election are well underway. 

Unfortunately there are still unfilled 300 of the needed 900+ Clerk and Poll Manager positions.   All civic-minded citizens are urged to sign up NOW, and to say YES when contacted by the County elections office, to work the polls.   Yes, it is a long, long, day, but it provides a very satisfying experience.


A Letter from the Preservation Foundation of Aiken’s on the Application for Demolition of the Hitchcock Stables

Preservation Foundation of Aiken
P. O. Box 3087
Aiken, SC 29802

August 5, 2024

Ms. Faith Hawks, Chair and
Members of the Board
City of Aiken Design Review Board
111 Chesterfield Street
Aiken, SC 29801

VIA EMAIL

Re: Application for Demolition of the Hitchcock Stables

Ladies and Gentlemen:

The Preservation Foundation of Aiken (PFA) is a charitable foundation whose express purpose is to help preserve the history and architecture of Aiken. PFA opposes the application to demolish the historically important Hitchcock Stables (the “Stables”). The Stables are very significant in the history of Aiken. Mr. and Mrs. Hitchcock were the founders of the Aiken Winter Colony, a foundational period in the history of Aiken. Horses were of paramount importance to the Winter Colony, especially the Hitchcock family, and the Stables were at the center of this activity.

The Hitchcocks were responsible for the creation of many traditions and institutions which remain foundational to Aiken’s identity today. They donated the Hitchcock Woods to the Hitchcock Foundation (now Hitchcock Woods Foundation). They were founders of the Palmetto Golf Club, the Aiken Preparatory School (now Mead Hall), the Aiken Hounds and the Aiken Horse Show. Both Mr. and Mrs. Hitchcock were avid polo players and promoters of the sport. Mr. Hitchcock was the Captain of the first international polo team and a member of the Polo Hall of Fame. Mr. Hitchcock, considered the father of American steeplechasing, owned and trained may successful steeplechasers. He was inducted into the United States Racing Hall of Fame. Their son, Thomas Hitchcock Jr. was one of the finest, if not the finest, polo player of his time.

The historic significance of the Stables is of further import because of its association with Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Bostwick. Mr. Bostwick was nationally and internationally known as a champion steeplechase rider and for his contributions to the sport of steeplechasing. He was the top steeple chase rider in America from 1928 to 1932 and again in 1941. He occasionally rode for Mr. Hitchcock. Six of his steeplechase horses won the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Steeplechase Horse of the Year. Mr. Bostwick was also an accomplished polo player (8 goals) and court tennis player. Mr. Bostwick was inducted into the United States Racing Hall of Fame and the Polo Hall of Fame. Mrs. Bostwick carried on Mrs. Hitchcock’s legacy by serving as Master of the Aiken Hounds.

The current demolition proposal ignores the historic importance of this structure to the early days of the Winter Colony and the sporting history of Aiken. To justify the proposed demolition of such an important historic structure there must be a showing of something more than financial gain for the current owners. Can the Stables be rehabilitated? Stabilized? Indeed, can the Stables be saved?

The owners clearly have failed to demonstrate that stabilization or rehabilitation of the Stables is not feasible. The engineering report they have submitted outlines some issues with the Stables but does not and cannot conclude that stabilization and rehabilitation are not feasible.

Therefore, we respectfully request that you deny the application because of the Stables’ importance to the history of Aiken and because the applicants have not demonstrated that stabilization and rehabilitation of the stables are not feasible.


Sincerely yours,
Lucy M. Knowles,
President Preservation Foundation of Aiken

Trash Can, Please?

by Jerry Lang of Clean Up Aiken!

September 21, 2023

Clean Up Aiken! is a grassroots group that began organizing cleanup campaigns and finding other solutions to our county’s litter problem in early 2021, and became a not for profit, 501(c)(3) business just one year later. We have been recognized for our efforts by the Aiken County Council and the county’s Keep Aiken County Beautiful campaign. Our Facebook group has 1,300 members and growing.  

Clean Up Aiken! presented an ongoing problem and offered one solution to Aiken City Council on February 13, 2023.  Out of 100 restaurants we surveyed in the City of Aiken that have take-out service,  only 33% of them had an outside trash receptacle. Now this may not seem like a big deal or a real problem, but we have picked up at least 2,008 bags of trash since 2021, and a large part of what we pick up are restaurant/fast food containers, cups, bags and so on.

Clean Up Aiken! learned that 2/3rds of restaurants with take-out service do not have an outdoor trash receptacle.


The opportunity and solution presented to the city council was very simple:  require all restaurants to have a “minimum” of one outside garbage receptacle on their property/patio and in a place so their customers don’t have to go back inside to dispose of their trash. All too often customers who use the drive-thru, or do carry-out,  eat in their vehicles and then toss their litter out the window because there isn’t a convenient disposal option.  It’s also amazing how many of our restaurants with outdoor patio space don’t have a disposal option outside, which forces responsible customers to go back inside to find a garbage can.

Since February 13th, I have sent three follow-up letters/emails to our Aiken City Manager. I also spoke a second time to City Council on September 11th, and still received no response. A few months ago, I was told this issue and our proposed solution was sent to Planning,  but we have had no follow up from this department either.

We have offered to work with the city on helping to write a simple ordinance, or work with them to give the Aiken restaurants a solution to help keep our roadways cleaner. Perhaps this “ask” of each restaurant could be part of their business license? 

Clean Up Aiken! is ready, willing and able to assist in finding solutions that will help to keep our roads and ditches cleaner.  While South Carolina is known as the state with the most litter, we want to make Aiken the exception, and would like to see participation by the city in helping us achieve many small solutions that can solve a larger problem.

Jerry Lang spoke to Aiken City Council at the 39:00 mark of the September 11, 2023, Aiken City Council meeting. 

The meeting minutes for his speech on February 13, 2023 read: