Friday, January 23, 2026
News
Oak Hill Drive Rezoning on Planning Commission Agenda Tonight
Though the current developer is suggesting housing on the property, the new designation would that allow mixed-use developments beyond traditional rules, encouraging integrated housing, while allowing retail, offices, and institutional uses, with a goal of promoting walkability and economic development, and requiring review for each project rather than rigid categories
Anderson Mayor’s Annual MLK Breakfast Friday
Anderson Mayor Terence Roberts will host the city’s 18th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on Friday, at the Civic Center of Anderson. The free, community-wide event invites residents to come together for a morning of reflection, unity, and celebration honoring Dr. King’s enduring legacy of justice, service, and equality. Doors open at 8 a.m., and breakfast will be served at 8:30 a.m.
City to Vote on Funding for Design of New Fire Station, Expanded Trail System
Council will also vote on awarding an engineering services contract to Bolton & Menk for a not-to-exceed amount of $384,000 for the Downtown Greenway Connection project. Design of the extension of the Whitner Creek Greenway from the south side of the Recreation Center at Bleckley Street south along Whitner Creek to its intersection with Tribble Street, then continuing to Downtown Anderson will also include intersection safety improvements at Tribble Street and Murray Avenue. Redesign sidewalks and right-of-way along Orr Street from Textile Point across Main Street to McDuffie Street, tying into downtown revitalization are also part of the proposal.
David Larson’s Contributions to Arts a Legacy that Will Endure
Under Larson’s stewardship, the arts division at Anderson University evolved into the South Carolina School of the Arts—accredited in theatre, art and design, and music simultaneously, a rare feat for a faith-based institution—encompassing 27 faculty, 340 students, and programs from musical theatre to graphic design.
2026 Upgrades Will Keep Green Pond a Lure to Anderson County
These gatherings fill hotels and diners, their $116 million legacy shielding locals from taking the bounty for granted— (“a lot of interest nationwide, but locally, people are sort of gotten immune,” according to Paul.) Expansion looms in 2026 with new launches and parking, a brief hiatus yielding amplified capacity.
Roads, Security, Top S.C. Rep. Don Chapman’s 2026 Priorities List
Chapman talks about the year ahead without flourish, in the clipped cadences of someone used to agendas and shop ledgers rather than stump speeches, and his priorities for 2026 sound less like slogans than like work orders. He wants workforce centers that are safe enough for tense conversations about jobs, a DOT that spends less time chasing its own paperwork, and a tax code that acknowledges the electric cars already gliding past the state’s gas pumps.
Last Local FM Station Hope to Expand Community Outreach, Service
Phillips said the combination of music, news, and real‑time weather alerts is meant to fill a void in local broadcasting and give Anderson County residents a station that reflects their own lives. With 94.9 WALH now audible across more of the county and WSAC on the way, he hopes listeners will come to see Anderson’s only local FM station as both a daily habit and a vital part of the area’s safety network.
After 30 Years,Tucker’s Restaurant Set to Close Doors Jan . 17
Owners Hamid and K.D. Mohsseni are retiring after more than 30 years as a community fixture which provided not only a blend of casual and upscale dining, but a familiar gathering place.
County Comprehensive Plan: a Quick Summary
The Population Element of the Comprehensive Plan analyzes historic and current population and demographic trends and provides reasonable population projections to help formulate policy decisions through the lifespan of the Plan.
Council Oks Comprehensive Plans, Allows Moratorium on Development to Expire
Anderson County Council kicked off the new year with an agenda focused squarely on growth and development Tuesday night, adopting an updated comprehensive plan and new communication measures designed to improve transparency between staff, council members, and the public.
New License Plates Brag About S.C. Role in Revolutionary War
Department of Motor Vehicles offices across the state began offering the commemorative plate last week as one of its two standard options, coinciding with this year’s 250th anniversary of the country’s founding.
The tag replaced the decade-old, blue-and-white plate with the state’s motto, “While I breathe, I hope,” printed above a Palmetto tree. Those license plates will remain valid until their expiration date, according to the DMV.
S.C. Rate Price Request Could Hike Duke Energy Electric Bills for Upstate
If approved by the state Public Service Commission, residential customers who use 1,000 kilowatt-hours a month — considered the industry standard — would see another $20 tacked on to their current monthly bill, Dominion’s regulatory manager John Raftery told the SC Daily Gazette. That would take average bills from about $157 a month to just shy of $177, starting in July 2026.
Governor Asks for Extra $1.1B for S.C. Roads
Revenue estimates updated in November provided the Legislature nearly $2.5 billion in additional money to spend in the fiscal year starting July 1. That breaks down to $1.7 billion in unspent reserves and above-expectation tax collections so far this year — meant for one-time expenses — and $734 million from continued economic growth available for ongoing expenses, according to the state Board of Economic Advisors.
County to Consider Subdivision Moratorium, Comprehensive Plan
The agenda’s most forward-looking item, though, sit at second reading: Part I of the 2026 Comprehensive Plan, timed to the county’s 2026 bicentennial and written in the wonkish cadences of planners who have spent a year counting rooftops and traffic counts. The plan, covering population, housing, land use, community facilities, and a priority investment element, is framed as both birthday toast and warning label—acknowledging that Anderson, now over 220,000 residents strong and pressed by spillover from Greenville, must decide, quickly, whether it wants to be a diffuse exurban blur or something more deliberately arranged.
Museum Perfect Choice to Guide County’s Bicentennial Celebrations
This year will mark a remarkable milestone as Anderson County celebrates its 200th birthday, with the Anderson County Museum rightly at the helm of the commemorations. A downtown parade, a new book chronicling the county’s story, and special programs will unfold under its watchful eye, a fitting role for what has been called the finest museum in the state
Editorial: Watchful, But Positive Observer’s Approach to Local News
In a county where every pothole, rezoning, and rumor can metastasize in a Facebook thread by lunchtime, the paper has chosen to tell a different kind of story: one that begins with the assumption that most of the people in charge are actually trying to do the right thing.
Here’s the Annual Request for Community Support of The Anderson Observer
Local journalism does not disappear all at once. It disappears when the last reporter decides it isn’t worth sitting through another three‑hour meeting, when the last advertiser decides to spend that budget somewhere else, when the last reader assumes someone else is paying attention. In Anderson County, that hasn’t happened yet. The Anderson Observer is still watching. If you want it to keep watching—for the next election, the next controversial rezoning, the next kid from down the street who does something extraordinary—now is the time to help.
Politics 2025: Voters Choose New Mayors, Overwhelming Reject New Tax for Roads
Taken together, the results paint a picture of an electorate that is willing to swap out leaders in some corners of the county while keeping steady hands in others, skeptical of broad new taxes but open to targeted land‑use rules that promise more control over what gets built where. In a year defined by debates over roads, rooftops and who benefits from Anderson County’s rapid growth, November’s ballots offered one of the clearest statements yet of how local voters want to shape the next chapter.
2025 a Masterpiece for County Art Community
Anderson County’s arts community in 2025 did not announce itself with the fanfare of a single gala or a marquee import but gathered force through the quiet accumulation of spotlights and strung lights, juried scrutiny and midnight rehearsals—a year in which small stages in Pelzer and Federal Street theaters hosted Motown heat waves and Hufflepuff redemption arcs, drawing crowds who might otherwise have streamed Netflix into the humid Upstate night.
City of Anderson 2025 Shines with Updated Parks, Workforce Housing, Comprehensive Planning
Through it all ran the steady hum of planning: a new twenty-year comprehensive plan’s first reading in March, annexations, a sales-tax push for roads, Main Street’s long-awaited repave after utility digs, and AnMed’s Windsor Place medical complex, which stirred murmurs of a health system’s outsized footprint amid national accolades. Mayor Terence Roberts framed 2025 as the year projects became amenities, hospitality taxes hitting $5 million to fuel it all. In a city threading growth’s needle—enough to hold its workers, its walkers, its weekend revelers—Anderson’s story felt less like headlines than the incremental accrual of a place finally breathing easier.