Realtors break ground for future headquarters
BY LAURA LEWIS, Staff writer
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For Sale By Owner - Offered at $250,000 - will pay 1 year POA dues and closing cost.
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BY LAURA LEWIS, Staff writer
Real Estate Web Site Hosting -
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By Jenny Burns - The Sun News
Brunswick County Real Estate Affiliates
Ocean Isle Beach Real Estate
Brunswick County Commercial Real Estate
Ocean Isle Beach Rentals
Brunswick County New Communities
Brunswick County Beacon-BY LAURA LEWIS, Staff writer
SHALLOTTE, N.C. | If sunny skies and warming spring temperatures lured Brunswick County residents out of their homes Tuesday, it must have directed them to beaches and golf courses.
They weren't stampeding polling places.
Less than 10 percent of the county's approximately 60,000 registered voters stopped at one of the county's 23 precincts on primary day 2006, leaving some poll workers bored and others rearranging church schedules and talking about how they quit smoking.
Seven-year-old Sarah Hughes - who sings professionally at area churches - charmed a few voters and poll workers as she belted out gospels in the parking lot of the Waccamaw precinct. But her appearance was impromptu while a relative voted.
"Too many people take for granted the right and privilege to choose our government," said Marj Macy of the Village at Calabash, who voted at the Calabash Fire Department despite suffering from a degenerating disc. "I think people need to realize that we the people are the government."
Those who did vote apparently chose, among others, political newcomer Bill Fairley over longtime Republican activist and Brunswick school board Vice Chairman Shirley Babson in the 8th District state Senate race.
Fairley had a commanding lead over Babson at press time with five precincts left to report.
All results are unofficial until votes are canvassed, which will be Tuesday in Brunswick County. If any runoff or other second votes are necessary, they will be held May 30.
"I'm itching to get to the November election," said Fairley, who will face incumbent Democratic Sen. R.C. Soles in the general election. "I'm satisfied we have a vision for the area that's not shared by R.C. Soles and I'm looking forward to talking with the voters about it."
Fairley beat Babson by nearly 3 to 1 in Columbus County and had a more than 4 to 1 lead in Pender County voting with just two precincts left to report.
Turnout was light in all three counties, according to elections officials.
Pearly Vereen, former chairman of the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners, who sat outside the Waccamaw precinct Tuesday afternoon, said he thinks voters don't vote because they feel their votes don't count. That's not always been the case, he said, recalling elections that were decided by just a few votes.
John Matthews and Doerthe Needham, two Carolina Shores residents who voted at the Calabash Fire Department, said they get most of the information on candidates from the newspaper and decide from that who will get their votes.
"I try to read as much as I can," said Needham, a former teacher who called voting a privilege.
Brunswick County Real Estate
By Bonnie Eksten
posted on 3/19/06 10:18
Sales of existing homes in Brunswick County fell in January after closing out the year on an upswing.BY CAROL TRAPANI, Staff writer Brunswick Beacon
By Janelle Frost
This artice is interesting mainly because it shows how Ocean Isle Beach Real Estate and sorrounding Coastal North Carolina Real Estate is exploding all around Brunswick County.
The Little River residents used to take two trips a year.
"There's no reason to go anywhere," said James Neely, who has lived in Horry County for 23 years.
The North Strand is "exploding" with restaurants, shopping stores and people, said 66-year-old Neely, who is a mortgage broker and real estate agent.
Neely, like so many other longtime residents and visitors, has seen the Grand Strand area increasingly grow over the years. And that growth is becoming even more evident on the north end.
From North Myrtle Beach and outlying areas to the state line, the increase in families is bringing in more housing and commercial developments but is also putting pressure on the schools and roads in the area, causing the need to improve and expand them.
By 2010, officials expect the population along the North Strand to increase to 36,696 - a 31.2 percent increase from 2000.
Therefore, North Strand leaders are looking to bring in more businesses, hospital facilities, roads, schools and recreation centers to help keep up with the increasing growth.
The price tag - to build more schools and roads - can easily get up to hundreds of millions of dollars, including a $240 million bond referendum approved by voters in 2004 to renovate and build Horry County schools throughout the county.
"We're set up to meet the challenge," said Ed Prince, chairman of the North Myrtle Beach Chamber of Commerce. "We're increasing services to accommodate more people that come to live here and continue to expand schools and roads. As the area continues to grow, it makes us make sure we continue to increase infrastructures," Prince said.
Brad Dean, president of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce, said the North Strand is poised to escalate over the next 10 to 15 years. That growth would affect the entire Grand Strand, which also is growing at a fast pace, he said.
"Tourists that come here don't see county and city lines," Dean said. "The more roads and accessibility to flying in we have, the more it's going to increase growth along the entire Strand."
North Strand's northern neighbor, Brunswick County, N.C., is growing with people without the corresponding support services, so far. Businesspeople in the North Strand are stepping up to provide that. Also, businesses along the Grand Strand are expanding into Brunswick County, N.C. officials say.
But they expect businesses in Brunswick County to catch up with population growth within the next few years. They say new commercial developments are already coming in.
A shot in the arm
As housing and businesses expand in the North Strand, growth puts pressure on roads and schools. Also, health officials are trying to increase health services to help families from western Horry County to North Myrtle Beach into Brunswick and southern Columbus counties.
New roads such as S.C. 31, known as the Carolina Bays Parkway, and the planned Main Street Connector, as well as improvements to U.S. 17, are seen as assets to the area as they improve traffic flow, alleviate congested roads and give motorists the ability to bypass areas such as Little River to get to their destination.
In 2004, more than 75,000 cars traveled on average per day on some roads along the north end, according to officials.
The connector, also known as the North Myrtle Beach Connector, will begin at Main Street in North Myrtle Beach and cross U.S. 17 and the Intracoastal Waterway to tie in with S.C. 31. It will then extend to S.C. 90. The $70 million project is expected to be completed by 2009.
"The roads being built have enhanced the interconnectivity between the areas," Dean said. "S.C. 31 now connects the North Strand to the South Strand, which has opened business opportunities along the entire Strand and allows people to travel more freely," he said.
"The Main Street Connector also will be a tremendous shot in the arm for the economy," he said.
Soaring student growth
By 2010, the North Myrtle Beach schools, which serve the most rapidly developing part of the North Strand, could add 1,755 students. If classrooms generally have 25 students, that's an additional 70 classes of children.
Horry County Schools is in the midst of a building project that includes construction of six schools, and 20 additions and renovations to existing schools by 2010.
At the North Myrtle Beach primary, elementary, middle and high schools, a total of 5,163 students are expected to enroll by 2010, compared with a total of 4,315 students last year and 3,408 in 2000, said Joe Burch, planning coordinator for the Horry County Schools district.
Kids are learning in portable classrooms as the system attempts to renovate and expand permanent buildings to keep up with the growth. Officials say that because there will continue to be pressure on the facilities with extra students, the portables will always be needed as they continue to accommodate students.
Another classroom section and multipurpose gymnasium were added to the North Myrtle Beach High School, and a new North Myrtle Beach Elementary School was built on Highway 57 about three years ago. Plans call for additions and renovations to the middle, primary and intermediate schools, with construction beginning this summer on the primary and middle schools.
"We're growing faster than we can keep up with it," Burch said, "but we will continue to find ways to alleviate [overcrowding] and provide the education that people expect from us."
Meeting health care needs
As more retirees and young families are moving into the area, health officials are also trying to meet all of the health care needs of the community.
People look for access to quality health care, said Tim Browne, chief executive officer of Loris Healthcare System.
Currently, Loris Healthcare officials are looking to add 50 beds at Seacoast Medical Center, as well as to bring a radiation oncology center into North Myrtle Beach in partnership with McLeod Regional Medical Center in Florence.
The only radiation oncology center in Horry County is on 48th Avenue North in Myrtle Beach. Officials say their vision is to expand services and have them closer to home.
Browne said people have been able to access great health care at Seacoast since the medical center has been open for the past five and a half years, and that the addition of beds there would allow people to be able to spend the night if needed. Currently, the medical center is outpatient.
Neely, who lives near Seacoast, said he hopes to get the addition, instead of having to go all the way to Myrtle Beach to the hospital.
"All ZIP codes in and around Seacoast are growing at a fast rate," Browne said. "Our strategy is to make sure we have two strong hospital services to accommodate people from the coast all the way to Loris and Brunswick."
Brunswick County officials say they understand why some facilities or businesses along the North Strand are attracting Brunswick residents because the area does not have some of the same types of facilities and because they are closer and more convenient to go to than in other areas.
However, "that's changing some as we have growth," said Tripp Sloane, president of Sloane Realty in Ocean Isle Beach, N.C. "We have a lot of residential growth in the area, eventually competition will come in. Commercial growth always follows residential growth," Sloane said.
The area has already started on some commercial growth. For example, there's a new Food Lion between Calabash, N.C., and the state line, with retail stores in the shopping strip, Sloane said.
He said the area is also bringing in a Lowe's to the entrance at Ocean Isle Beach, and that there are parcels for restaurants, retail stores and office space.
"It will probably be 3 to 5 years before Brunswick can be considered on the same playing field as North Myrtle Beach," Sloane said. "It may be longer."
N.C. officials are optimistic that the population growth will continue to increase opportunities for businesses to come.
Brunswick County has seen a 14 percent population growth since 2000, officials said.
Population growth is drawing developers to build a 107,000-square-foot sports complex along the North Strand on S.C. 90, which could be finished this summer.
The complex will include an indoor hockey rink, as well as soccer, volleyball, basketball and dodgeball courts. It will also have a Gymnastics and More and eateries, including a sports pub and grill for the family.
The developers say the growth in Little River, North Myrtle Beach and Brunswick County adds to the reasons the private business partners find the area exciting.
"People will drive 30 to 50 minutes to go to a facility that has the sports they are looking for," said David Frost, general manager of SportsZone, which will be part of the sports complex. "There's no other sports facility like this in the area."
Associated Press
North Carolina is one of 18 states that allows billboard owners to cut down publicly owned trees to keep their signs in view. But the billboard industry says the laws are still too restrictive, and allow some signs to become overgrown.
"It's a real problem," said Paul Hickman, general manager for Fairway Outdoor Advertising in eastern North Carolina. "If you can't be seen, you're out of business."
State laws and regulations restrict what can be cut and order the sign owners to pay for trees they remove. The industry wants the state to ease the rules governing the number and size of trees that can be cut, and lower the cost.
In presentations to committees of the General Assembly and the State Board of Transportation, the North Carolina Outdoor Advertising Association asked that the clearing zone be extended from 250 feet of roadside to 500 feet.
It also wants reconsideration of rules that bar cutting of some larger trees and that set a high price for the tree clearing.
"If it was a legally erected billboard, we would like to clear it out," association executive director Tony L. Adams said. "That's what we're asking for."
DOT administrators said they are still studying whether the tree-cutting rules need to be changed. A DOT "focus group" of government, environmentalist and industry representatives failed to resolve the issue after a year of talks.
A similar effort nearly a decade ago took nearly five years to resolve, and this time it doesn't look any easier. Environmentalists promise a fight, saying billboard companies already have generous access to their audience on the highways.
"What is an individual business compared to the rights of the community?" said Lois Nixon of Scenic North Carolina. "Who else claims a right to cut down trees on public property?"
The organization is the state affiliate of a national group that wants strict enforcement of outdoor advertising and highway beautification laws.
In 1993, the state Court of Appeals ruled that it found no convincing argument that billboards have a right to be seen. The court also said billboard owners are not owed compensation if governments plant trees on public land that obscure billboards.
The ruling also applies to trees that grow naturally on the rights of way - the publicly owned strips of land on either side of highways.
Charles Floyd, a former University of Georgia professor of real estate who now lives in western North Carolina, fought the tree-cutting permit system that was put in place in North Carolina in 2000.
He said billboard companies are already getting visual access to highways and that access is probably too generous.
"Billboards are not a use of the land but of the highway," Floyd said. "And billboards are the only business that uses the highways and makes money from them without paying for them."
Hickman said concerns are overstated.
"Trees are probably our most easily renewable resource," he said.