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Staff photo / R. Michael Semple
Warren Councilman Larry Larson, D-1st Ward, stands outside the former St. Joseph Riverside Hospital site on Tod Avenue NW on Thursday. The city is expecting a $2.5 million grant for asbestos abatement at the abandoned hospital, which will make it possible for it to be torn down, officials announced at an earlier news conference at city hall.
WARREN It’s been three decades coming, but Warren Mayor Doug Franklin says a northwest neighborhood blighted with the dangerous, decrepit “eyesore” of the former St. Joseph Riverside Hospital may see relief soon.
Franklin said he is confident a $2.5 million grant application for asbestos abatement at the hospital will be awarded next month. Franklin and several city officials and council members gathered Thursday afternoon on the steps of Warren City Hall, where council members signed a request-for-legislation document expected to be voted on Wednesday, authorizing the administration
Whatâs Driving You Crazy: Potholes, cracked pavement in Williamsburg Co.
Whatâs Driving You Crazy: Potholes, cracked pavement in Williamsburg Co. By Abbey O Brien | January 19, 2021 at 5:02 PM EST - Updated January 19 at 6:47 PM
KINGSTREE, S.C. (WCSC) - Work on a road South Carolina Department of Transportation engineers say is in âbad shapeâ is expected to start soon in Williamsburg County.
A Live 5 News viewer wrote in to ask about when SCDOT would fix the potholes and crumbling asphalt along Kindale Park Road and Pinckney Road. They also asked why part of the road is in good shape while the other part of the road is crumbling.