Showing posts with label policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label policy. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2011

Volunteer helps shape policy on Myrtle Beach's aesthetics

It all started more than a decade ago when Don Shanks noticed land near his Northwoods house in Myrtle Beach had been clear-cut to make way for a new restaurant.

Outraged, the retired teacher and school administrator from New Jersey went to City Hall aiming to keep the clear-cutting from happening again.

"I'm proactive when I see something that may be affecting people," Shanks said, sitting in the Northwoods house he's called home for 22 years. "I get involved."

He ended up on a committee that worked for more than three years to come up with tree protection regulations in Myrtle Beach, which sparked a two-decade "second career" of serving on Myrtle Beach boards that reached a pinnacle recently when he won a statewide planning award.

Shanks, who always wears shorts even if it's 20 degrees, was the first Myrtle Beach resident to bring home the South Carolina Chapter of the American Planning Association's Planning Advocate Award, given annually to one S.C. non-professional planner who has made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of quality planning.

"You just do what you have to do," said Shanks, who is chairman of Myrtle Beach's Planning Commission. "You don't give any second thought about any kind of honors or anything else."

Since getting involved with city committees in the mid-1990s, Shanks' volunteer work has helped shape policies for tree protection and landscaping, long-term planning, burying of overhead utility lines along 12 major roads, improving beach accesses and protecting neighborhoods - the interest that led him to City Hall all those years ago.

For seven years, he served on the city's Board of Zoning Appeals, which rules on appeals of administrative decisions about variances and special exceptions to city building rules. In the early 1990s, he served on an Horry County committee that developed a master plan to build parks and preserve open space.

Residents can credit Shanks with pushing for smaller signs along major roads such as Kings Highway to give them a neater appearance, preserving natural resources and improving quality of life, said Jack Walker, Myrtle Beach's planning director. Tourists can thank him for pushing for more greenery around hotels while accommodating the needs of an urban resort, he said.

"He's an advocate for a beautiful resort," Walker said.

Cities rely on volunteers to serve on planning commissions and give input on planning subjects, but it's hard to find residents such as Shanks who are dedicated to those tasks, Skip Grkovic, an official with the South Carolina planning association, said in prepared remarks when presenting Shanks the award.

"We all know how difficult it is to develop and maintain the active involvement and quality input of volunteers," Grkovic said then. "Myrtle Beach is fortunate."

Shanks stumbled into what he calls his "second career" of serving on Myrtle Beach boards after retiring here two decades ago, though this job comes with no paycheck but requires lots of reading and reviewing documents before the commission's monthly meetings. He's quick to credit city staff and fellow commission members with accomplishing the goals and admits it's a give and take to come up with the best solution.

"It's really not 'I', it's 'we,'" he said.

Shanks spends at least five or six hours a week on Planning Commission work, and that can swell to as many as 30 hours a week during busy times, Walker said. He has a diverse background that helps him rule on a variety of planning requests and issues, he said.

"He represents the epitome of what we'd like to see from our citizens," Walker said.

But Shanks also thinks about his Planning Commission role as he's driving around town, noticing that there's a lot of vacant commercial buildings along Kings Highway and making a mental note to brainstorm ways to lure action to those spots. That idea is being incorporated into updates to the city's comprehensive plan.

"I know he thinks about it all the time," Walker said.

Shanks turned to public service after working as a teacher, principal and superintendent, most of the years in New Jersey. He still hears from former students, whether because he has run into them in traffic in New Jersey or pulls a Christmas card from them out of the mailbox each year - small gestures that bring big smiles to Shanks' face.

Shanks' term as chairman of the city's Planning Commission expires in 2012. He hasn't decided whether he'll continue to serve, switch to another city committee or return to his real passion of teaching kids to read. He's worked nearly as hard on the city boards as he did as an educator.

"Retirement to me was a change in career," Shanks said.

He and his wife of 50 years, Susan, wanted to retire in different spots: He wanted to make Cape Cod home, she preferred Florida.

"So this was a compromise," he said, adding that the couple was happy with the choice. "It's not the golf. It's not the beach. It's not the shopping. It's the people."

But there's one statement the pair made when moving here that neither has lived up to.

"We said we are not going to get involved," Shanks said, "but we got involved."

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Inlet Square mall makes good on return policy

MURRELLS INLET -- The south end's new movie theater, bowling alley and game center are on track to debut in May at Inlet Square, and the mall's only food tenant is expected to open late this month as the once-struggling shopping center aims to re-energize.

Work on Frank Theatre and the adjacent Revolutions family entertainment center has started near Books-A-Million, where crews will build the 11-screen theater with stadium seating and a 23,593-square-foot bowling alley and game complex. The entertainment center, operated by Frank Theatres, will have 16 Brunswick lanes, arcade games and kids' rides.

The theater is a key component in the potential rebirth of the mall, which emerged from bankruptcy with new owners a year ago. They finished a renovation in the summer and are working to fill empty store spaces.

The mall's first food tenant in months, Chef Smitty's - which serves seafood, burgers and sandwiches and also operates at Coastal Grand Mall - is expected to bring life to the empty food court when it opens Chef Smitty's South in late December. Chef Smitty's Bistro, a sit-down restaurant with more upscale food and cocktails, will open at the mall in March.

"There's a lot of residents just waiting for this mall to happen," said Eric Smith, who owns Chef Smitty's with his son Gregg. "People have to go in there and get it started. So I figured I'd go in there and get it started."

Chef Smitty's South plans to open in the former Chick-fil-A space in the mall's empty food court, part of which has been consumed by the emerging entertainment complex.

Several seasonal and permanent stores have moved into the mall recently, including 20 Below clothing and accessories, Toy R Us Express, SoRea Designs jewelry, Ice Cream Truck and Myrtle Beach Golf Shop. Another store - Scrapbook Paper Garden, which has all things needed for scrapbooking - plans to open in January, mall General Manager Suzanne Oden said.

Some of the stores opened with a month-to-month lease, a way to let them try out the mall and sign on permanently if business meets expectations, Oden said.

"We are really making progress," she said.

Some shoppers and businesses said the theater and new food offerings should help jumpstart a revival for the mall - though it will have to work past the image it developed in the rough years.

"They've got a master challenge," said Sarah Beck of Surfside Beach, who was walking at the mall with her husband, Alan, last week. "We would be very happy to see the mall come to life again."

Myrtle Beach Golf Shop, which opened a 6,000-square-foot store across from Stein Mart on Thursday, wanted to "get in on the front end" of what store partner Chuck Hutchinson expects will be an increase in business once the theater opens.

The challenge will be persuading residents to give the mall another chance, he said. The mall went downhill after filing for bankruptcy, and the renovation stalled, leaving exposed ceilings, unfinished floors in spots and other signs of construction. Stores left and shoppers stopped coming to the handful of stores that remained.

The renovation, which added skylights, a new floor, outside signs and other features, was finished in August, and mall managers have since focused on filling the store spaces.

"You have to get past the reputation it had in the past," Hutchinson said.

The theater originally planned to open in early 2011, but that debut was pushed to May when Frank Theatres expanded the project by adding the bowling alley and game center, Oden said.

Mall officials say it will be worth the wait, adding an entertainment outlet not only for the mall but for the south end.

The closest theater for south end movie-goers is at The Market Common in Myrtle Beach.

"It is much needed," Oden said. "The south strand is in dire need."

Frank Theatres, which operates 27 theaters in the Carolinas and five other states, is in an expansion mode, with the Inlet Square theater, one of about nine new theaters in the works, according to the company's website. The chain is familiar with the area, with theaters in Conway and Shallotte, N.C.

Officials with the chain - which has headquarters in Jupiter, Fla., and Atlantic City, N.J. - could not be reached for comment.

The Inlet Square mall theater will have leather rocker seats and all-digital sound, with the entertainment complex boasting a Starlight Cafe serving beer and wine.

Store workers and the mall's manager say the theater is the key to luring more people - especially families - and getting the mall going again.

"Definitely it is going to kick start it," said Steven Schwartz, a worker in Books-A-Million.

Murrells Inlet resident Steve Welch, who was checking out the "Coming Soon" list of theater features posted on the temporary construction wall last week, is ready for the theater and the bowling alley.

Welch, like other mall walkers and shoppers, also wants food options added.

"I hope more businesses will come," he said.

Smith, aka Chef Smitty, anticipates the mall, which he says caters to locals, will be a major player again by summer or fall.

"Once this mall gets up, gets some national stores in there, this will be a nice, vibrant, community mall," he said. "Really, it's going to be a good place to be once it happens."

Residents such as the Becks of Surfside Beach are rooting for a mall where they shopped, walked and congregated regularly, then watched it spiral down. "We hope the mall makes it," Alan Beck said.

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