COLUMBIA - Gov. Mark Sanford will not
close the Governor's Mansion this year, thanks to cost-cutting and
$100,000 in private donations.
"My wife tells me we have enough money to cross the bridge," said
Sanford, who last week threatened to close the mansion because its
budget had been nearly exhausted.
To reduce costs, the Sanfords have cut some full-time positions,
in favor of part-time help, and are now hosting more official guests
for breakfast, a cheaper alternative to dinner and drinks.
Sanford said he and his wife, Jenny, have appreciated the gifts
ranging from $10 checks from retirees to grits for the rest of the
year from the Adluh Flour Co. to $5,000 gifts from businesses.
"We've been dealt a number of poor hands, whether it's the budget
overall or the Governor's Mansion scenario," Sanford said.
Sanford said he was glad to have been spared "a choice I didn't
want to make."
Sanford had considered closing the public areas of the mansion
through June 30, the end of the fiscal year. The Republican governor
said his predecessor, Democrat Jim Hodges, spent almost all the
money allocated for personnel, food and supplies.
Hodges has said the mansion is chronically short on funding and
governors traditionally transfer money from other accounts under
their control to cover costs. Sanford refused to move money from
other programs, such as foster care management, to cover the
mansion's day-to-day costs.
Through Monday, a private Mansion Fund had raised $100,000 from
individuals and companies to shore up the mansion's budget.
Jenny Sanford, who as first lady runs the mansion, estimates she
will need $20,000 more to make budget through the end of the year.
The Sanfords made their payroll Saturday for the 11-employee staff,
but Jenny Sanford said they will be relying on private donations to
make the next payday, March 1, and pay further expenses, including
food.
Jenny Sanford convened the first meeting of the new Mansion
Commission on Monday morning with a tour of the mansion, the Lace
and Boylston houses on the complex and the icy 9.5-acre mansion
gardens.
The governor appoints commissioners to oversee mansion
operations. Three of the seven commissioners, including the first
lady, are newly appointed.
The commission gave its approval for re-opening the Lace and
Boylston houses and gardens to rent for private functions.
Jenny Sanford said she hopes reopening the houses will make the
entire complex more visible to the public and will raise money.
The mansion commission discussed other ideas for raising or
saving money. They include:
Holding a designer showcase, asking decorators to take on the
design of rooms in the Boylston and Lace Houses and charging
admission for touring them.
Hosting a contest between garden clubs.
Bringing state prison inmates back to work in the mansion. Hodges
quit using the trustees after guards were charged with allowing
inmates to have sex on the mansion grounds.