Friday, July 31, 2020

Take a Stand for A Better CHS Transit Plan - Aug. 2020

Bus Stop in Mt. Pleasant

The system has failed again. 350 years of instictive oppression has birthed another tool for stunting the hopes of the next generation of hard working people trapped in the SC Low-country while those in power cruise to another generation of undeserved power. 

A pathetic plan. 

After 25 years and over Ten million dollars in tax payer funded meetings and design, the plan for rapid transit from Summerville to Charleston which is emerging is utterly inadequate. Real rapid transit runs for only 11.5 miles of the system in dedicated bus lanes from Success street through N. Charleston before ending at I-26 & Highway 78. The proposed system is mostly buses running in regular traffic 5.4 miles from MUSC to Success St. In N. Charleston. From Charleston Southern University for 7.4 miles running in congested traffic to Summerville. 

Best Friends of Lowcountry Transit will begin outreach on August 7 and a series of 3 meetings beginning August 14 to change the way we plan transit and affordable housing in the Lowcountry. That will be the foundation for an educational and voter information effort that we'll carry through the elections in November and into a final push for the best possible transit plan for the Lowcountry to be funded by the US Government in January 2021 after the economy demands an multi trillion dollar infrastructure stimulus bill. The meeting schedule is at the end of this post. We will carry this effort through the pandemic, depression and near civil war. We are ready. Go get your boots, mask anddrum and join us. The future will be worth it. Our grandchildren will thank you.

The opportunity to bring the system into the city on the old railroad line beneath I26 has been abandoned to a park proposal which gives the rich a place to play while the people who wash their dishes and sweep their street wait in buses snarled in traffic on Meeting St. The promised additional bus services, including service to area beaches promised in the 2015 I26 Alt Study still aren’t running. This isn’t the system which can liberate Ladson, Lincolnville and Summerville from congestion and lost hours in the car. It won’t support the dense, walkable communities we need to provide affordable housing or a higher quality of life in North Charleston. It won’t reconnect downtown Charleston to the region. 

Not What Charleston County Was Promised

Chris Jackson sets up Tranist Planning activity
This isn't what the I26 Alt Study promised in 2015. It's not what we voted for. It's not what Charleston County shoppers been paying for since May 2017. This plan represents a decision by elected officials, hiding behind the Council of Government’s black box of non accountably, to build a system sure to fail so working people will continue to live lives so frustrated by the automobile and traffic that they will never present any threat to the aging and inadequate political power structure which is allowing our quality of life to erode. We must make our own plans. This is our last chance to build a landscape which can be a home tens of thousands of people who can create community rich in civic life, art and the type of transit which recovers time for family, community and citizenship. The coming federal stimulus bill will provide the funds to build the system right. 

We have to have the right plan in place to meet an upcoming multitrillion dollar emergency infrastructure bill sure to emerge after the November election. If all we have is an inferior plan, all they'll fund is an inferior system. 

For those who want it, a traditional car based suburban landscape will still cover most of the Lowcountry. Over 100 thousand new single family homes have already been permitted, mostly on dead end suburban streets hung on highways expected to receive over 3 billion dollars in planned expansions. It hasn't worked anywhere before and it will only result in worse congestion here. However, people will have a choice. If a live in and with your car, isolated by traffic is what you want, that will be available. 

Join us at one or more socially distanced meetings outdoors to begin planning the future. Let’s fashion an enforceable demand for what we need to build rapid transit which works from Summerville to the sea. Lets prepare to take that demand into demonstrations, government meetings and finally to the ballot box in November. We’ll lose the future we could have if this disastrous plan is adopted. 

Bring your mask, your own chair, hydration and a drum if you have one. Bring your neighbors if you can. 

After the meetings, We'll be contacting the elected officials on the COG Board to ask them to adopt a plan that meets the commitment made to voters and transit riders.

Three Meetings, Aug. 14 - 18 

 Please attend one of more of these three meetings. Each is slightly different in focus and activity. We welcome your input and suggestions. Bring maps and drawings if you can. Models are even better. 

Transit Outreach in N. Charleston with Jesse Williams
Outreach Begins August 7.
Help us reach our community. The COG is spending tens of thousands or taxpayer dollars to drown out objections to this plan with a professionally executred PR plan under a new PR director, in addition to two other paid staff. We'll push back on the ground. Intensive community outreach in support of these efforts begins in Charleston on Friday, August 7 and will continue through to Wed. August 19. If you would like to help as a grass roots communicator, put on your boots and your mask and contact Lowcountry Lightening Political Communications, LLC, 
  • Chris Jackson & Linda Saylor will be leading the effort in N. Charleston, Ladson, Lincolnville, Summerville and Berkeley County. 
  • William Hamilton & Donna Gill will be leading the effort in Charleston, East Cooper, and West Ashley. 
  • Millicent Middleton will be leading the effort on the Sea Islands and in Walterboro.
August 14, 2020, 6 to 8 pm Charleston- Grassroots Lowline Community Planning, Lowline Alternative Visioning. How can we save Charleston as a place to raise a family, be a citizen, create and enjoy life as a resident of modest means. Can Charleston be saved from becoming a playground for the tourist and the rich? If it can't be saved, how can we build access that is fair to the workers who can't afford to live there, but must work there? Congressman Joe Cunningham will have staff at this meeting. The skatepark was made with salvaged materials, upcycled into a beloved gathering place. What can we learn from that example? Huger Street Skate Park (700 feet North of Huger Street, under I26) Charleston, SC 29403  Facebook signup for Charleston Meeting. 

Skylyn talks transit in 29403
Tuesday, Aug 18, 2020, 6 – 8 PM Summerville, Ladson & Lincolnville
Meeting Design Life Outside the Car. Making Highway 78 & Ladson work as a new and risign tranist enabled community, Connecting the Fairgrounds and Flea Market, Summerville as a transit empowered regional social and civic hub. Lincolnville Town Hall Picnic Shelter 141 W Broad St, Lincolnville, SC 29485 Facebook signup for Summerville, Ladson, Lincolnville Meeting.

Thursday, Aug 20, 6-8 pm North Charleston Meeting Envision New Community, Safe, Walkable, Affordable. a future for North Charleston rising as other places sink beneath the sea. At the Workshops at Howard Heights 1886 Riverview Ave. North Charleston SC (1/2 block west of Spruill Ave on Riverview)  Facebook signup for N. Charleston Meeting. 

More information


We've been blogging and organizing about these issues for over 9 years and working on it intensely since 2016. This blog contains most of our important communications.

You can reach William Hamilton at (843) 870-5299 or wjhamilton29464@gmail.com

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Black Rides Matter- Together We Go Forward!


Fighting for Better Transit on Folly Rd.
Fight for Better Lowcountry Transit before July 10.

In 2016, black voters in Charleston County delivered the margin of victory in the vote for the half penny sales tax. They were promised a rapid transit system to serve their communities in our urban core and improved bus service all the way to area beaches. They agreed to pay for this with a regressive sales tax, the burden of which falls most heavily upon the poor, disabled and elderly. Four years later, the promised improvements to bus service made in the half million dollar 2015 I26 alt study haven’t materialized. Over 40 million dollars of current transit funding has been diverted to a “Pay Go” plan for road construction, an interest free loan from transit riders to privileged drivers.

Six miles of the planned rapid transit line on highway 78 have been downgraded to in traffic operation. In Charleston a 1.5 mile abandoned railroad line will be wasted on a yuppie puppie partially privatized dog walking park with cafĂ©’s for tourists and the rich while transit struggles to move on Meeting street. A Lincolnville resident will lose an hour a day sitting on a system which wasn’t what they were promised, voted for, or have paid for. The resulting system will be a waste of over 300 million dollars, not rapid, not a system and barely transit.

We have until July 10. Join us in the fight for transit which liberates us from the suffocating oppression of the automobile. Force our leaders to build a safe, reliable, fast transit system from Summerville to the Sea.

Summerville, Ladson, Lincolnville and Sangaree should Demand:

See our detailed Memo on BRT issues in this area- Summerville to the Sea

1. Rapid transit operation in dedicated lanes on Highway 78 from River’s Ave to Downtown Summerville.

2. Safe, comfortable, lighted stops which can be reached safely from the side of the road.

3. A system which can complete the trip from Line Street in downtown Charleston to downtown Summerville in 59 minutes.

4. Service all the way to Hutchison Square in Downtown Summerville with a sheltered stop in the business district near there.

5. Connecting Service in downtown Charleston at a safe, comfortable station hub on Line Street which connects to Folly Beach and the Isle of Palms.

North Charleston Should Demand:

Children in N. Charleston building a model transit system.

1. Affordable housing walkable connected to major stops in and around the old Navy Hospital and other locations.

2.  Improved bus service throughout N. Charleston, including half hour frequencies on major routes as called for by the Charleston Area Justice Ministry.

3. Build “Complete streets” through N. Charleston so riders can reach transit safely on foot, by connecting bus or by bike. Delay construction of a wider I-526 until after improved transit is constructed and operating.

Charleston, James Island, Mt. Pleasant and West Ashley should demand:

1. The BRT should operate on the abandoned railroad line into the city out of congested traffic to Line Street, through and as part of the Lowline Park System and include space therein for high quality stops and a regional transit hub at Line Street. Read our position on how the Lowline park system should be built to accommodate and be more successful with transit. 

2. Reliable and efficient service on the BRT and regular bus lines to allow the working people of Charleston to access employment without having to pay the city’s exploitive rents or struggle with downtown’s declining quality of ordinary life for working people.

3. Transit service prioritized over car traffic be established and maintained to the beaches at both Folly and Isle of Palms.

4. A memorial to Civil Rights and Transit Hero Mary Bowers and others who forced integration of Charleston’s streetcars in 1867. Read our Reconstruction Transit Equity history.

5. Planning for a coastal transit line along Highway 17 to begin immediately with operations to commence no later than June 1, 2025 from Awendaw to Red Top.

Act Now, Before July 10

· Go to our online version of this page for links, background and organizing tools at .

1- Contact us: 
www.blfltransit.com
wjhamilton29464@gmail.com or
Phone 
(843) 870-5299

2- Make your priorities known during the BCD COG’s Online Meeting until July 10, 2020. 

3- Copy your statements to our public blog post comment pages, this page is best. See below.

4- Join us on our Zoom Conferences Monday, July 6 and Wednesday, July 8 at 9 pm

Monday, July 6 at 9 pm.

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 827 4002 1976
Password: 666375
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Topic: Black Rides Matter Together We Go Forward CHS Wed. July 8

Time: Jul 8, 2020 09:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)


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