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Bluffton interim town manager Marshall resigns

Bluffton interim town manager Marshall resigns Bluffton Today Bluffton Town Council accepted interim town manager Scott Marshall’s resignation at its Tuesday meeting.  Mayor Lisa Sulka said council had received a resignation letter from Marshall, who was hired as deputy town manager in 2015, after it returned from a closed executive session to discuss personnel. Marshall s last day with the town will be June 4.  “You’ve really kept our ship going,” Sulka told Marshall.  Marshall was appointed interim town manager in January after Marc Orlando was hired as the new town manager on Hilton Head Island.  The town said April 26 that council was offering the Bluffton town manager job to Easley city administrator Stephen Steese. Sulka said Steese has accepted the job and council is waiting on a final contract to review at a workshop this month.

Mayor: Bluffton narrows town manager search to 16 candidates

Mayor: Bluffton narrows town manager search to 16 candidates Bluffton Today Bluffton Town Council has narrowed its search for a new town manager to 16 from an initial group of more than 60 candidates, Mayor Lisa Sulka said.  Council contracted Columbia search firm Find Great People on Jan. 20 for an initial retainer fee of $1,500, according to town documents.  The search began 16 days after former town manager Marc Orlando officially resigned Jan. 4. Orlando accepted the same role with the town of Hilton Head Island.   Scott Marshall, formerly deputy town manager, has served as interim town manager since January.  A contract between the town and Find Great People indicates that if the search is successful, the firm would make 20 percent of what the town pays its hire, less the initial $1,500. 

Commissioners accuse former S C agency director of mishandling sexual harassment matter

Commissioners accuse former S.C. agency director of mishandling sexual harassment matter During a meeting that was only accessible to the public through an audio stream, DDSN Commissioner Stephanie Rawlinson read a letter that is expected to be sent to former state director Mary Poole. (Source: SC.gov) By Jared Kofsky | March 1, 2021 at 9:06 PM EST - Updated March 5 at 1:40 PM CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) - For the first time since firing the agency’s state director, the commission of the South Carolina Department of Disabilities and Special Needs publicly addressed their decision on Monday. During a meeting that was only accessible to the public through an audio stream, DDSN Commissioner Stephanie Rawlinson read a letter that is expected to be sent to former state director Mary Poole.

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