Grand Strand residents have a lot of good ideas on how the
accountability of S.C. government might be improved. But the
administration of Gov. Mark Sanford apparently doesn't want to hear
them.
If that weren't true, Sanford's accountability czar, Columbia
attorney Ken Wingate, would have scheduled one of this month's six
public hearings on government accountability somewhere on the Grand
Strand. Instead, Strand residents wanting to influence Sanford's
massive government-reform efforts will have to travel more than 70
miles to Florence on Aug. 26 or more than 100 miles to Charleston on
Aug. 28 to be heard. Few, we predict, will make that effort.
There are now more than a quarter million South Carolinians in
Horry and Georgetown counties. But Wingate and his commission
apparently still see our community as a politically insignificant
backwater with residents whose views aren't worth soliciting.
What we have here is the latest manifestation of a wearisome
attitude. The Strand, over the past 20 years, has grown one of South
Carolina's most dynamic, entrepreneurial economies. But because
residents did this mostly with tourism and related leisure-based
businesses, persons of influence in the state's older - and, dare we
say it, stodgier - precincts tend to regard the Strand as
inconsequential, frivolous and brash.
There's a strong whiff of hypocrisy in this attitude. Public
entities, including state government, are more than happy to mine
the Strand for tax money to support public programs - money that
local folks are generally willing to provide as long as our
community gets some respect for the integral role it plays in the
S.C. economy.
Politicians running for statewide office stop here often when
their campaign coffers need refilling. Wingate himself, as a
long-shot GOP candidate for governor last year, had no trouble
finding his way here and professing concern for Strand needs.
Are we hollering too loudly about this? Possibly. But the Strand
deserves better from the Sanford administration and the state's
political leadership. Until that is forthcoming, there's no
percentage in suffering these indignities quietly.