- Associated Press - Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Recent editorials from South Carolina newspapers:

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Dec. 12

The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg on a company tracking the spread of flu-like illness finding that South Carolina was the sickest state:

South Carolina this past week was the sickest state in the country with 4.3 percent of the population (about 176,300 people) experiencing flu-like symptoms, according to Kinsa, a company tracking where flu-like illness is spreading in real time with the help of its smart thermometers.

Kinsa has collected more than 10 million (anonymous) temperature readings (averaged 40,000 per day last flu season) and the Kinsa Insights team tracks outbreaks of the flu by studying aggregate data of where fever and other symptoms are popping up around the country.

Kinsa says its numbers are nearly perfectly aligned with the CDC’s influenza data over the past three years.

And the data show South Carolina is having a tough go in 2018. The number of illnesses represents an 89 increase over this time last year and a 12 percent increase over the previous week.

Charleston was the sickest city in the country with nearly 42,000 residents reporting flu-like symptoms. The national illness level was down about 4 percent from the previous week, but there remained over 9.5 million sick people.

Dr. Linda Bell, director of the Bureau of Communicable Disease Prevention and Control and state epidemiologist at the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, says each flu season is unique. The timing of the peak activity and how severe a season will be are hard to predict, making it very important to protect yourself against flu as early as possible.

“It is important to get vaccinated now,” Bell says.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and DHEC recommend that everyone 6 months old and older get a yearly flu vaccine. Even if you don’t have a regular health care provider, the vaccine is available in many settings. In addition to DHEC clinics, many local providers - including doctors’ offices, clinics, pharmacies, college health centers, schools and workplaces - now offer flu vaccines.

Online: https://thetandd.com/

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Dec. 9

The Post and Courier of Charleston on laws to help protect heirs’ properties, especially acquired land African-Americans have lost:

Until recently, black people who acquired land after the Civil War had been losing their properties at an alarming rate. They were preyed upon by swindlers who pitted family members against one another to force sales. Properties were sold on courthouse steps because of unpaid taxes. And confusion over deeds multiplied as land passed down through families.

But, thankfully, over the past few years several state laws have been passed to help protect heirs’ properties, among them the Clementa Pinckney Uniform Heirs Property Act, which went into effect last year.

Signed into law by former Gov. Nikki Haley, the legislation makes it easier for part-owners to buy out relatives and harder for individuals to force land sales without a fair-market appraisal to ensure heirs receive a fair price.

Though some nonprofits have sprung up to provide families with free legal aid in gaining titles to land, securing heirs’ properties can still be complicated and costly, and time can be an enemy. State lawmakers should consider further protections, perhaps even a legal “timeout” to enable extended families to build consensus and raise money when faced with an unwanted sale.

At the federal level, U.S. Sen. Tim Scott is co-sponsoring legislation to make it easier for farmers of heirs’ properties to get farm loans, crop insurance and disaster aid, as well as resolve ownership issues. Such a law would provide crucial assistance to heirs property owners who have been at the mercy of unfair laws and market forces beyond their control.

Traditionally, landowners bequeathed property only to their first-born sons to prevent estates from being divided. But just the opposite started happening across the American South during Reconstruction. Some early landowners mistakenly believed the land would be harder to sell if it were jointly owned. Property was passed informally generation to generation, wills and deeds were lost or never recorded and ownership of the land became more and more diffuse. For instance, a 40-acre property acquired in the 1870s could have 100 or more partial owners today.

By the 1920s or so, confusion over property taxes and other legal entanglements opened land to lien sales and, through a number of legal maneuvers, blacks started losing much of what their forefathers had worked so hard to buy. Sadly, those same trends have persisted for much of the past century, with the amount of land owned by African-Americans falling from around 15 million acres to about 2 million acres.

Through “partition sales,” speculators were able to buy out partial owners, then force the sale of entire tracts, often at rock-bottom prices. That shameful practice enabled straw men for real estate companies to assemble properties for resorts or housing developments. Consider that before about 1950, much of Hilton Head Island was owned by blacks, few of whom shared in the riches that flowed from its development as coastal properties skyrocketed in value.

As reported by The Post and Courier’s David Slade and Angie Jackson, the Charleston-based Center for Heirs’ Property Preservation estimates that more than 108,000 acres of heirs’ property remain in the 15 counties served by the nonprofit. The group helps families get free help in gaining clear titles and, in some cases, establish trusts or limited liability companies to control properties and keep them intact.

Extended families have to pull together to preserve their land. But lawmakers should give them the breathing room to make that happen. History has shown only outsiders profit from infighting and court-ordered sales.

Online: https://www.postandcourier.com/

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Dec. 11

The Post and Courier on two women who drowned while trapped in a sheriff’s van in Hurricane Florence’s aftermath:

It’s possible that the drowning of two women in an Horry County jail van in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in September could not have been prevented by any single law.

But the deaths of Nicolette Green and Wendy Newton resulted in no small part from the inadequate, half-hearted way in which South Carolina has for too long dealt with people suffering from mental health crises.

And state lawmakers, including Charleston Democratic Sen. Marlon Kimpson, are right to demand that reforms be considered in the upcoming legislative session.

Ms. Green and Ms. Newton, both of whom were residents of coastal towns affected by Hurricane Florence, had sought emergency mental health care and been committed by doctors for their own safety. Two sheriff’s deputies were asked to transport the patients to hospitals farther inland.

But the deputy driving the van with Ms. Green and Ms. Newton inside apparently drove around a barricade on Highway 76 that had been set up as a warning against dangerous flooding farther along the road.

Soon afterward, the deputy lost control of the vehicle, which was swept off the road and into a ditch against a guardrail, reportedly making it impossible to free the two women trapped inside. It took rescuers more than 24 hours to retrieve their bodies. Both deputies were fired.

The heartbreaking accident raises a number of concerns.

Law enforcement officers routinely transport mental health patients to treatment facilities. Most often, the process goes smoothly. And in the Charleston area at least, most officers are well-trained to deal with mental illness and respond appropriately.

But that’s not necessarily the case everywhere in South Carolina. A 2017 law requires that every law enforcement officer undergo education in “mental health or addictive disorders,” but the extensiveness of that training varies by agency.

Boosting mental illness education for police officers would help in a wide variety of situations - not just when transporting people to the hospital. Police officers are often the first responders for people dealing with psychiatric crises. Proper preparation could save lives.

Mr. Kimpson and other lawmakers on a state Senate subcommittee investigating the drowning are also considering making it easier for family members to transport mental health patients, which may make sense in some circumstances.

It’s still not entirely clear why Ms. Green and Ms. Newton were transported such a substantial distance - reportedly from Conway and Loris to Darlington, or well over an hour’s drive even in optimal conditions - in the immediate aftermath of a deadly hurricane.

But one likely contributing factor is the scarcity of in-patient mental health facilities in much of South Carolina.

The state’s roughly 1,800 in-patient treatment beds - about one for every 2,700 residents - are mostly in or near larger cities, making it difficult for people in rural areas to seek treatment. Expanding access to telemedicine and equipping smaller facilities to handle emergency psychiatric care could help ease that disparity.

There’s also the obvious concern that two experienced law enforcement officers apparently ignored obvious warnings about hazardous flooding, risking their own lives and the lives of two passengers. Clearly, that cannot be allowed to happen again.

Online: https://www.postandcourier.com/

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