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IOP city leaders to find alternatives for public beach parking problem | News Radio 94 3 WSC

|February 2, 2021 at 8:02 PM EST - Updated February 2 at 11:14 PM ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCSC) - Isle of Palms city leaders say they will work with the state department of transportation to create more public parking for nonresidents. The decision came after SCDOT’S Secretary of Transportation Christy Hall sent the mayor and council members a letter about public parking restrictions. In that letter, Hall said they plan on revoking the city’s beach parking plan which restricts parking access to a lot of people who don’t live on the island. “I am of the opinion that the 2015 plan has improperly designated a significant number of state-owned highway right of ways as ‘resident only parking’ potentially denying non-residents their constitutional guaranty of equality and privilege,” Hall said in the letter.

MUSC faculties urging minority communities to take COVID-19 vaccine | 103 5 WEZL

By |January 14, 2021 at 9:03 PM EST - Updated January 15 at 4:09 AM CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) - As thousands of people across the state are signing up to get a COVID-19 vaccine, health professionals at the Medical University of South Carolina are urging communities of color to do the same. MUSC’s Black and Hispanic/Latino faculty have sent out arelease detailing why minority communities in South Carolina and across the nation should take the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as they are able to schedule an appointment. Datafrom the state’s department of health and environmental control shows that the virus impacts the Black, Hispanic, and Latino population at disproportioned rates.

MUSC faculties urging minority communities to take COVID-19 vaccine | News Radio 94 3 WSC

By |January 14, 2021 at 9:03 PM EST - Updated January 15 at 4:09 AM CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) - As thousands of people across the state are signing up to get a COVID-19 vaccine, health professionals at the Medical University of South Carolina are urging communities of color to do the same. MUSC’s Black and Hispanic/Latino faculty have sent out arelease detailing why minority communities in South Carolina and across the nation should take the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as they are able to schedule an appointment. Datafrom the state’s department of health and environmental control shows that the virus impacts the Black, Hispanic, and Latino population at disproportioned rates.

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