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Sunday alcohol sales underway

Some local restaurants are welcoming Sunday alcohol sales in Orangeburg County, saying it’s what customers wanted.

During Applebee’s first weekend of Sunday sales, “We did almost $1,000 more,” Associate Manager Jessica Ryant said.

Ryant said the revenue came solely from bar sales. She’s confident future Sundays will bring in even more as more people learn they can buy alcohol on Sundays.

“I think it’s going to keep a lot of people in town,” Ryant said.

Orangeburg County voters approved a referendum in November allowing Sunday alcohol sales in the county. About 63 percent of voters approved the change. Sales started earlier this month.

Restaurants, bars, hotels, gas stations and grocery stores countywide now have the ability to sell beer and wine on Sundays. Restaurants, bars and hotels can also seek additional permits to sell liquor by the drink.

The sale of hard liquor on Sunday via “red dot” stores remains illegal. Hard liquor is regulated under a separate state law and is not affected by the referendum.

Tony DeAloia, manager of Ruby Tuesday, has been pushing for Sunday sales in the county for several years now.

When the vote passed in the county, DeAloia said, “I was ecstatic.”

He’s grateful Orangeburg County Council members placed the decision in the hands of the citizens and offered them a vote. Ruby Tuesday begins its Sunday sales this weekend.

“It’ll definitely increase our business on Sundays,” DeAloia said. He added, “I won’t have people walking out.”

Businesses can seek the seven-day off-premise beer and wine permit, which allows establishments to sell beer and wine for off-premise consumption seven days a week and twenty-four hours a day.

Also available is the seven-day, on-premise beer and wine permit, which allows establishments to sell beer and wine on Sunday from midnight to 2 a.m., and then from 10 a.m. until 11:59 p.m. for on-premise consumption.

The Local Option Permit, which allows the sale of liquor on Sundays, includes a prerequisite requiring establishments to have a current valid business liquor by the drink or non-profit liquor by the drink license in good standing.

A 52-week permit costs a non-refundable $3,050. A weekly permit is available for $200, which is refunded if the application is denied.

To find out more about the different types of licenses available, visit dor.sc.gov/tax/abl.

Companies planning investments at $9.3M

Two companies are considering making a total investment of $9.3 million in Orangeburg County. They could bring 38 new jobs over a five-year period.

Orangeburg County Council gave first reading approval Monday to incentives for the companies.

Both companies are currently remaining anonymous under code names. The official names will be released upon third and final reading.

Project Omega promises an investment of $7 million and 28 new jobs. The company is planning to locate in Rowesville.

Orangeburg County Development Commission Executive Director Gregg Robinson said the project is agriculturally based. He declined any further comment on the company until final approval.

Project Prince, which will locate in the Orangeburg city limits, promises an investment of $2.3 million and 10 new jobs.

Robinson said the company is in the business services sector.

“It is an opportunity for new development,” Robinson said. “Every one of these (projects) has performance factors in order to get the fee-in-lieu. They have to commit to the capital in order to get the credit.”

The fee-in-lieu of taxes incentive allows industries to pay a fee based on a lower tax assessment than the standard 10.5 percent.

In other matters, Husqvarna, the county’s largest manufacturer, received final approval of a fee-in-lieu of taxes incentive for the company’s $69 million investment at its Old Elloree Road plant.

The fee-in-lieu taxes incentive was listed under the code name Project Leopard.

The company plans to invest $29 million in buildings and $40 million in other expenses, including equipment. The expansion will secure the previous promise of 25 new jobs first announced in May.

“This is a present fee-in-lieu that was put in place in 2013,” County Attorney Jerrod Anderson told council Monday.

The current fee-in-lieu has a 40 percent special source revenue credit incentive for 20 years on qualified expenditures.

Anderson said Husqvarna is asking for the incentive to increase to 50 percent for 30 years with the additional investment.

A SSRC reduces property taxes, but only for the purpose of reimbursing the business for certain investment/project costs.

“It is one of the most expensive buildings in our county,” Robinson said. “It is also the largest new construction of manufacturing and distribution in the entire Midlands.”

“It is about opening up floor space, bringing in new equipment and being more efficient,” Robinson concluded.

As part of the investment, the company has built a 513,000-square-foot distribution and warehouse facility.

Husqvarna’s plant now has six production lines for the manufacture of riding lawnmowers, zero-turn lawnmowers, tillers and similar products.

Its Orangeburg operations will exceed 1.9 million square feet once the new facility is complete. The addition will include automation to transfer the finished products from the plant’s assembly lines to the new distribution center.

The company will have an open house of its new building in the middle of January, Robinson said.

Also in the meeting, council approved incentives for four solar farm prospects.

Third readings of incentives for two solar farms, Peony Solar LLC and Magnolia Solar LLC, were approved.

Peony Solar LLC is promising a $42.9 million investment. No new jobs are involved in the investment.

Anderson said it is locating off of Highway 33 in Springfield.

The company will pay taxes annually in the amount of $67,000 over a 30-year term.

“Is this absolutely going to happen or this is something they hope to be able to put together?” Councilman Clyde Livingston said.

“This is, from what I understand, it’s a hope to put it together,” Anderson said.

Magnolia Solar LLC promises another $46.2 million. No new jobs are involved in the investment.

The facility will be located at 283 Juniper Street in Neeses.

Council also approved second reading for incentives for a company currently operating as Project Springfield.

The company promises a minimum investment of $10 million.

It will be located off of Highway 39. Anderson said a more exact location will be given during third reading.

Another $87.5 million is being promised by a fourth solar power company.

Council approved first reading of an incentive for a company operating as Project Palmetto Plains.

Council was presented with an inducement resolution and ordinance to approve a fee agreement for the company.

Anderson said it plans to locate along Weathers Farms’ property outside of Bowman.

In other business:

• Council approved a $5.6 million project with the Piedmont Company for development of the Department of Social Services Building.

“I’d like to state my support for the DSS building, although I have severe reservations,” Councilman Clyde Livingston said.

Livingston said he disagreed with the process that was used to get only one proposal.

“I think if things had been more competitive, then possibly we could’ve gotten a better price,” he said.

“I thought we had done our due diligence on this project,” Councilman Willie B. Owens said. “I believe if we could get it any cheaper, we would have.”

Councilwoman Janie Cooper-Smith agreed, adding, “We don’t need to wait to look for another location.”

Council had previously expressed concerns about the proposed cost of the project, which was in the $7 million to $8 million range. Council asked county administration to see if there were ways to reduce the cost.

The proposed DSS building will be located on St. Matthews Road near The Technology Center. The building will be about 29,000 square feet.

The S.C. Department of Health and Human Services issued a report in 2014 citing a number of problems at the current facility.

The report said the building has interior and exterior problems including malfunctioning heating, ventilation and air conditioning units.

• Council approved third reading of an ordinance changing a fee-in-lieu of taxes incentive for SI Group’s Cannon Bridge Road plant. SI Group purchased the facility from Albemarle Corp.

“They have a different business model than the original Albemarle and with that they have a more aggressive depreciation schedule,” Anderson said. “They’re asking that the present fee-in-lieu be amended so that the minimum capital investment is moved from $65 million to $55.”

He added that SI Group also found it made $26.3 million in investments that qualify under the present fee-in-lieu.

• Council approved second reading of a rezoning of five acres of property owned by Elizabeth Felder at the intersection of Binnicker Bridge Road and Bamberg Road from rural community to commercial general.

The owner plans to have a boat dealership and sporting goods store on the property.

The parcel of land is located next to Wayne’s Auto.

• Council approved $325,843.75 for several 911 upgrades.

• Council approved the low bid of $133,958 from National Power in Raleigh, N.C. for generators and transfer switches.

• A $672,750 contract was approved with Alabama-based Quality Correctional Healthcare for inmate healthcare.

The current healthcare company plans to leave on Dec. 27.

• Council approved Strickland Electronic Recycling of Orangeburg to handle the collection and disposal of E-waste at 24 cents per pound.

Hitt: S.C. economic development pipeline ‘strong’

On the day state and local officials celebrated China Jushi’s plans to invest $300 million and create 400 jobs in Richland County, about 70 miles to the north CompuCom Systems announced it was investing $41 million and creating 1,500 jobs at its new global headquarters in Lancaster County.

S.C. Commerce Secretary Bobby Hitt (center), listens to a speech along with Lt. Gov. Henry McMaster (left), and Nelson Lindsay, director of global business development at the state Commerce Department during the Dec. 8 groundbreaking for China Jushi’s new plant in Richland County. (Photo/Chuck Crumbo)

The next day, Germany-based Evonik Corp. announced a $120 million investment and creation of more than 50 jobs in Berkeley County.

Those deals are just part of what seems to be a cascade of more than 100 economic development projects that were announced in 2016 across the Palmetto State. Chances are there’ll be more next year.

“2017 is going to be a very strong year,” S.C. Commerce Secretary Bobby Hitt said in a recent interview with the Columbia Regional Business Report.

Business activity tends to slow down in years of U.S. presidential elections, Hitt said. But now that the election is history, companies can better plan their next moves. In addition, a rebounding economy is also causing a lift in activity.

Looking back at 2016, through Nov. 30 the Commerce Department had announced more than 105 economic development projects totaling $3.05 billion in capital investment and the creation of approximately 9,400 jobs, an agency spokesman said.

So far in December, a dozen projects totaling about $402 million in investment and 3,000 new jobs have been announced by Commerce.

“Right now, things are lifting fast,” Hitt said, noting that there has been a lot of activity and that the project pipeline for South Carolina appears strong.  “Business is brisk.”

Here’s a quick look at December’s deals:

Dec. 21 – Bintelli LLC, manufacturer and distributor of mopeds, scooters and electric vehicles, expansion of Charleston County operation, investment not disclosed, 23 jobs.

Dec. 20 – Labon, technical fiber and textile manufacturer, $3.1 million, 23 jobs, Orangeburg County.

Dec. 15 – Techtronic Industries, manufacturer of consumer, professional and industrial products, $75 million, 250 jobs, Anderson County.

Dec. 15 –  ProBrass Inc., startup manufacturer of rifle brass cartridge cases, $40 million, 47 jobs, Clarendon County.

Dec. 14 – MM Technics, metal stamping facility, $12.6 million, 65 jobs, Newberry County.

Dec. 14 – R+L Carriers, global logistics and shipping company, $7 million, 25 jobs, Hampton County.

Dec. 14 – PL Developments, manufacturer of pharmaceutical and consumer health care products, $45 million, 450 jobs, Greenville County.

Dec. 13 – Evonik Corp., chemical manufacturer, $120 million, 50 jobs, Berkeley County.

Dec. 8 – CompuCom Systems, technology infrastructure services, $41 million, 1,500 jobs, Lancaster County.

Dec. 7 – VELUX, manufacturer of skylights and roof windows, $4 million, 21 jobs, Greenwood County.

Dec. 6 – Magna International, automotive supplier, $29 million, 480 jobs, Spartanburg County.

Dec. 6 – B&W Fiberglass, advanced materials manufacturer, $5 million, 46 jobs, Greenville County.

Dec. 2 – Ortec, biomaterial and polymer technology company, $20 million, 60 jobs, Anderson County.

Here’s a twist: China brings textile jobs to USA

A Chinese fiber manufacturer is opening a plant in South Carolina, an investment that counters President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign criticism of Beijing for allegedly stealing American jobs.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, nominated by Trump to be the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, hailed the decision by Labon, a Shanghai-based company, to spend $3.1 million refurbishing a factory in Orangeburg, South Carolina.

“It’s special any time a company decides to invest in one of our rural counties because it drastically improves the lives of those in the area,” Haley said.

Hongxin Chen, general manager of Labon, said his firm is excited to be launching its first operation in the United States.

“Between the skilled workforce and friendly business climate, this decision was easy for us,” he said. “This development will allow us not only to accommodate our continued business growth, but to better serve our customers as well.”

The move by Labon is a rare counter to the outflow of textile jobs from the South in recent decades. It also offers a counter-narrative to Trump’s frequent lament that China is luring American firms with cheap labor and financial incentives.

Labon’s investment continues a trend that has seen China invest almost $100 billion in the United States since 2000, buying or supporting 1,900 companies in deals that have save or created almost 100,000 jobs.

IT’S SPECIAL ANY TIME A COMPANY DECIDES TO INVEST IN ONE OF OUR RURAL COUNTIES BECAUSE IT DRASTICALLY IMPROVES THE LIVES OF THOSE IN THE AREA.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, nominated by President-elect Trump as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations

The 15,700-square-foot plant in Orangeburg is expected to employ 23 people when it opens next month. In a sign of how the internet is breaking down boundaries and shrinking distances, Labon is accepting applications at an email address, yxl@lbang.com.

With a population of just under 14,000, Orangeburg is the capital of the South Carolina county by the same name. It is 75 miles northwest of Charleston, a larger and more cosmopolitan ocean city that’s a major tourist draw.

One of the possible pitfalls for Labon is a potential review by a secretive multi-agency federal panel called the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. It’s comprised of senior representatives from the Pentagon, the Commerce Department, the State Department, the Treasury Department, the Justice Department and other top agencies.

CFIUS, as the committee is known, vets dozens of purchases of and investments in American companies by foreign firms for conceivable national security risks ranging from access to sensitive technology or information to proximity to critical infrastructure.

Among other Chinese deals, CFIUS early last year approved the sale of New York’s fabled Waldorf Astoria hotel, which serves as the home-away-from-home for visiting presidents and other dignitaries, to the Anbang Insurance Group in Beijing, one of China’s biggest insurance firms.

Ironically, the hotel contains the residence of the United States’ chief UN envoy, so Haley will live there when the international assembly is in session if the Senate confirms her nomination.

While CFIUS normally doesn’t investigate foreign “greenfields” investments where the purchaser is building from scratch instead of buying an existing company, the Labon factory’s proximity to major military facilities could draw scrutiny.

Joint Base Charleston, 67 miles east of the new factory, is a sprawling, almost 21,000-acre complex run by the U.S. Air Force but also including Army, Navy, Marines and Coast Guard facilities. It is home to the 628th Air Base Wing and other units that provide critical airlift of troops, military equipment and medical supplies around the globe.

$100 billion The amount of money China has invested in the United States since 2000

The base also subleases 231 acres to a broad range of key federal agencies, among them the State Department, the Homeland Security Department, Customs and Border Protection, the Food and Drug Administration, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Just to the east of Joint Base Charleston, 60 miles from Orangeburg in Goose Creek, South Carolina, is a still-more sensitive military facility. The Naval Nuclear Power Training Command produces the commanders and captains who helm the nation’s fleet of nuclear-powered and ballistic-missile submarines.

Labon specializes in the research, development and manufacture of technical fibers and textiles for use in sealants, hand-protectors, flame retardants and other products.

Haley has built a national reputation for helping bring companies to South Carolina, partly through tax breaks that some have criticized as a form of corporate welfare.

At a White House ceremony in January 2012, President Barack Obama praised business leaders from South Carolina and other states for keeping jobs in the country.

“You heard of outsourcing,” Obama said then. “Well, these companies are in-sourcing. These companies are choosing to invest in the one country with the most productive workers, the best universities, and the most creative and innovative entrepreneurs in the world.”

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has been among the most outspoken critics of China for devaluing its currency, which he and others say helps it draw jobs from the United States.

Led by Graham, fellow Republican Jeff Sessions of Alabama, Trump’s nominee to be attorney general, and Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the Senate in 2011 passed a bill imposing trade sanctions on China. The House had approved a similar measure a year earlier, but that was in a different session of Congress, so no legislation ever reached Obama’s desk.
Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article122046589.html#storylink=cpy

Solar beginning to power growth in South Carolina

South Carolina ranked ninth among states in terms of solar photovoltaic installations in the second quarter of 2016. It’s a huge jump from its 36th position in 2015.

The ranking comes from GTM Research and the Solar Energy Industries Association’s quarterly U.S. Solar Market Insight. California was far and away the top state for installations. North Carolina ranked second and Georgia was 11th.

In the first half of 2016, solar accounted for 26 percent of all new electric generating capacity brought on-line in the U.S., according to the report.

Several solar-related economic development announcements have been made by the S.C. Department of Commerce in the past year. They include:

In addition, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has lauded the ReGenesis Project in Spartanburg, where the cleanup of Superfund sites has led to community revitalization projects. There, a former landfill is being converted into a 12,000-panel solar farm.

The solar farm “will bring jobs and a source of clean energy that will power almost 500 homes in the surrounding neighborhood,” according to an EPA news release.