CCSD leaders ask for community help in improving literacy, math, and college and career readiness
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCBD)– Charleston County School District is working to tackle issues like attendance, homelessness and immigration policy. Wednesday night, CCSD held a community meeting with the superintendent and school board leaders. Superintendent Anita Huggins said poverty is the number one barrier to students learning, and the district is working to improve that. She wants to close the historical achievement gap between students.
'We are working really hard to close the achievement gap. Data suggests nationally a gap exists between black and brown children and their white peers. First and foremost, we're making sure kids have access to high quality materials in the classroom, high viable curricula across the system were always making sure to progress monitor, assess students and give feedback and providing the necessary wrap around to ensure students that come to school not ready can quickly catch up,' said Anita Huggins, the CCSD superintendent.
Her three goals are to improve literacy, math, and college and career readiness. She called on community leaders and pastors for their support in learning outside the classroom.
'At our church we're looking to do some literacy. We just obtained our nonprofit 501 C-3, and we're looking to partner with the school district and do some things with the Union Heights community and surrounding areas,' said Clifford H. Brown, a pastor at Unity Missionary Church in North Charleston
'The dialogue was awesome because it gives the church and the school system the opportunity to come together to see how we can help and benefit our children,' said Timothy R. Simmons, a pastor with the Oak Grove Missionary Church in North Charleston.
Other issues addressed were homelessness and absences. The district said chronic absenteeism affects students learning and they need to address the barriers causing students to miss school. They are working on family outreach and support to help students attend class.
School leaders also revealed 453 students in the district are currently experiencing homelessness. They say when a student has a consistent place to come home to they are more likely to be able to go to class.
As for immigration policy, Superintendent Anita Huggins says students can feel safe in their schools.'We're working closely with local law enforcement and the sheriff to ensure our schools are safe places for all our children, so we want to encourage families to send their children to school where they are safe,' said Huggins.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Berkeley County Coroner's Office holding funeral for unidentified remains
BERKELEY COUNTY, S.C. (WCBD) – The Berkeley County Coroner's Office is burying the remains of an unidentified individual found at Santee Cooper and another unidentified person who died in the College Park Road area. The private burial will take place at the Berkeley Memorial Gardens Cemetery on Friday at 11:30 a.m. 'Hundreds of hours have been invested by the coroner's office, sheriff's office, and Santee Cooper law enforcement in an attempt to identify these decedents,' Coroner Darnell Hartwell said. 'Autopsies, dental examinations, fingerprints, DNA, genetic genealogy and a facial artist have all been utilized in trying to identify both decedents.' Coroner Hartwell added that both deaths are being investigated as suspicious. The Berkeley County Supervisor and Berkeley County Council assisted with providing funding for the burial. Remains found at Santee Cooper Authorities received a 911 call on Sunday, June 2, about possible human remains found at the Santee Cooper Cross Generating Station Coal Yard. The coroner's office responded to the scene. The remains were recovered with the help of Santee Cooper employees, Berkeley County deputies, Berkeley County Emergency Management and the local fire department. Those remains were later determined to be human. An autopsy was performed on June 6, but the manner of death has not been released. College Park Road death On Sept. 29, 2023, responders were called to a scene in the College Park Road area of Summerville regarding a deceased male. The coroner's office said that the man could have frequented the area and the Red Oak Circle neighborhood in Summerville. Officials believe the man is Hispanic or Native American, between 45-70 years old, when he died with gray hair. He was about five feet six inches tall and weighed between 155 to 175 pounds. When found, he wore a maroon University of South Carolina baseball hat and eyeglasses. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Isle of Palms considering restrictions on shore-based shark fishing
ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCBD) – A Lowcountry beach community is considering implementing new regulations on recreational fishing that would prevent anglers from intentionally trying to catch sharks. The discussion comes after an Isle of Palms resident raised safety concerns about a commercial shark fishing business operating from the beach near their home. 'If you're attracting larger sharks from offshore, bringing them in where it's a threat possibly to swimmers and surfers, I think that's something we definitely ought to look at,' Councilman Rusty Streetman said during a Public Safety Committee meeting last month. Current city law prohibits commercial activity on the beach, but nothing in the code specifically stops someone from recreationally fishing for sharks or other species in the surf, according to Isle of Palms Police Chief Kevin Cornett. As shore-based shark fishing becomes increasingly popular along the coast, city councilmembers are now looking at ways to curb the potentially dangerous activity. 'Shark fishing has a long and checkered history off the South Carolina coast,' Councilman Blair Hahn wrote in a June 9 message to News 2. 'It has been made in Horry County and many coastal communities for decades. For multiple reasons, the IOP never addressed this practice…I believe the time has come to do so.' The practice involves releasing chum into the water from a structure like a pier to attract sharks closer to the shore, sometimes with the help of drones or kayaks. Anglers then use heavy rods and other specialized gear to reel them in. 'We currently have multiple individuals that set up between 47th and 50th Avenue, paddle ten-pound-plus hunks of meat 200 yards offshore and set large steel J hooks,' Hahn said. He explained that an underwater ridge about one mile offshore, called the 'bump,' has become a hotspot for sharks and other large fish such as tarpons that feed on shrimp, noting that tiger sharks, bull sharks, and even Great Whites have been tracked in the area. 'Bringing these predators to shore, especially after making them angry and hungry, is an exceptionally bad idea,' Hahn said. 'I have watched individuals drag shark through surf, past multiple individuals swimming in the ocean on multiple occasions. Shark bites are bad on many levels. Obviously, shark bites create life-threatening injuries. In addition, shark bites tax our EMS services and have a chilling effect on tourism.' These techniques not only increase the likelihood of an unwanted interaction between sharks and swimmers, but the use of larger fishing gear also presents safety risks to those enjoying other activities on the water. 'The last thing we want is a kid to get stuck on a hook, and depending on what they're fishing for, could dictate how big that hook is,' Chief Cornett said during a June 3 committee meeting. The proposed restrictions would be modeled after ordinances and guidelines already in place in other parts of the state, including Seabrook Island and Horry County, according to officials. Southern Shrimp Alliance study reveals a majority of Charleston-area restaurants serve imported shrimp While the specifics are being worked out, the ordinance would generally prohibit someone from intentionally fishing for sharks and require that they be immediately released if caught – an extension of a state law that already mandates catch-and-release for certain species. Chumming with raw meat or fish parts, excluding poultry products, within a certain distance of the beach and using certain equipment like drones and trot lines would also be prohibited. 'You're not going to take feed, dead fish, and others and put it in the water,' said Councilman John Bogosian, who chairs the Public Safety Committee. 'That's specifically attracting sharks, and that activity shouldn't be legal.' Still, Bogosian questioned how the rules would be enforced given that recreational fishermen do not usually know what they will catch when casting a line. 'If you put it in there that fishing for shark is illegal, to me it's unenforceable unless someone says, 'Yeah, I'm fishing for shark,'' he said. Cornett acknowledged that enforcing a shark fishing ban would be challenging overall, but certain acts like chumming would be 'easy to verify.' The issue is expected to go back before the committee in July for further discussion. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Man sentenced to life in prison for murder of North Charleston motel owner
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCBD) – A man with a history of violent crimes was sentenced to life in prison without parole Tuesday for murdering a North Charleston motel owner in 2022. Honorable Roger Young handed down to the sentence to Darnell Dwayne Brown after he was convicted of murdering Jagdishbhai Patel on June 25, 2022. At the time of the execution, Brown had been in the custody of the SC Department of Corrections four months earlier after serving time for two armed robberies. 'Mr. Patel brought his family to the United States to pursue the American dream of becoming a citizen and owning a small business. He did both by the book, only to be executed by a home-grown murderer,' Ninth Circuit Solicitor Scarlett Wilson said. Patel was murdered at his business, the Charleston Heights Motel, according to the solicitor's office. Evidence presented in court revealed surveillance from a nearby residence showed the killer wearing the same clothes as Brown was shown wearing a short time afterward. Brown was also found less than two-tenths of a mile away from the crime scene with a backpack, motel registration, key card, and gloves that tested positive for gunshot residue. Authorities found Brown about 50 yards from a .38 special revolver that housed fired casings. Investigators matched a fired bulled to the revolver found next to Brown. The solicitor's office also said Brown made incriminating statements to North Charleston detectives. 'We are grateful to the Patel family for their sincere and incredible strength in the face of this unnecessary violence,' said Assistant Solicitor Lemuel Zeigler. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.