AdvertiseHereH

Five good things happening in our state — and why

Newspapers and the media are often accused of only reporting the bad things that happen — and there’s some truth in this. And it’s particularly easy to fall into this trap in South Carolina, where it seems that there is a lot more bad news than good.

8-6 Page 4A.inddWe all know the saying, “If it’s a list of bad things, S.C. is at the top, and on a list of good things, we’re at the bottom.”

As true as this may be, there are some good things that are happening in our state that have been generally overlooked by the media. Here are five of them, and though they may seem unrelated, I think there is a common message for us in all of these examples.

First, South Carolina ranks sixth in the country in the number of new businesses owned by women. In the last seven years, the number has increased a whopping 78 percent, a full 10 percent more than the national average. And, new businesses nationwide are being started by women at twice the rate they were just three years ago. Starting a business or non-profit group is an act of hope and optimism and the fact that so many women in our state now feel empowered to do so, is a very positive statement about our state. It hasn’t always been this way.

Second, our state’s colleges and universities have among the best online programs in the country — and it’s not just one or two schools. The U.S. News and World Report recently rated nearly a thousand online degree programs in six categories, and we should all be proud of what they found. The Medical University of South Carolina’s graduate nursing program was ranked second in the country and USC’s program was 16th. USC’s graduate education program was ranked 15th, USC Aiken was 84th and Francis Marion was 152nd. USC Aiken’s bachelor’s degree program was ranked 41st, Charleston Southern was 56th and Limestone was 93rd. USC’s graduate engineering program was ranked 36th. Remember, anything above a 100 ranking is in the top 10 percent nationally

Third, the incarceration rate for youth offenders has dropped 67 percent from 1997 to 2011; the decline put us in the top 10 nationally. And in a fourth related issue, our state prison recidivism rate is dropping — and dropping fast. The rate has dropped 18 percent in the last four years alone. These changes saved the state more than $5 million in 2013 alone, and more savings are on the way as a state prison in Columbia is closing later this year because of excess capacity.

Fifth, our state’s Apprentice Carolina program, run by the State’s Technical College System, has become not just a national but a global model. Since 2007, more than 10,000 trained apprentices have gone to work with 600 companies — all on a training budget of only $600,000 a year. The program is focused beyond just limited job skills to creating ‘apprentice scholars’ who learn not just skills for today but learning for a lifetime. One of the best programs has been at BMW and people have come from such places as South Africa, New Zealand, the UK and Canada to study our success.

Interesting, you say, but what do these have to do with each other? What’s the common thread?

The answer is they are all about results — and not ideology. Too often in our state, some people — especially the politicians making decisions — look at issues through the narrow distorting prism of ideology. On both the left and the right, they make choices and make judgments based on some standard of ideology purity and not based on measures of common sense effectiveness.

All of these success stories are about what works. Women start successful business and their profit or loss is not dependent on their gender. Online course are about the future and innovation, not about “how have we always done this?”

When we get past the shrill rhetoric of “lock ‘em up and throw away the key” and ask the basic question of “what works,” then we find a very different outcomes. And the apprenticeships are about a new creative public/private partnership; it’s ignores those ideologues that carp on about “wasteful government spending” or “private-sector corporate welfare.”

It’s about what works; what’s effective.

And all of us, including the media — especially the media — need to remember it is not always the voices that’s the loudest or the most extreme that have the best answer.

Phil Noble is a businessman in Charleston and President of the South Carolina New Democrats, a reform group founded by former Gov. Richard Riley to bring big change and real reform.