From Petition to Power: Westminster's Leadership Debate Returns
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Westminster's mayor delegates power to a non‑resident administrator who sets high PMPA electric rates. Echoing Susan Ramey's 2017 petition, residents again question transparency, accountability, and who truly represents them.

WESTMINSTER, S.C. - SCaroNews -- Westminster, SC — Nearly a decade ago, former City Councilwoman Susan Ramey ignited controversy when she clashed with Mayor Brian Ramey over transparency, electric rates, and alleged "backroom deals." A petition circulated by residents demanded the mayor's removal, naming Susan Ramey as a potential acting mayor. Though the effort failed, it exposed deep divisions in Westminster's civic life.

Today, those divisions echo loudly as Mayor Brian Ramey continues to delegate authority to City Administrator Kevin Bronson, a non-resident earning $142,000 annually. Bronson oversees critical decisions—including Westminster's participation in the Piedmont Municipal Power Agency (PMPA)—that directly raise residents' electric bills to 16.5¢ per kilowatt hour, among the highest in South Carolina. Yet Bronson himself does not live under the policies he enforces.

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🔑 Why This Matters
  • History Repeats: Susan Ramey's petition warned of decisions made without transparency or accountability. Today, residents face the same concern—outsiders making choices that insiders must live with.
  • Rates & Responsibility: PMPA contracts continue to drive rate hikes, echoing the very utility disputes that fueled Susan Ramey's clashes with the mayor.
  • Representation at Risk: With the mayor delegating authority and the administrator living elsewhere, Westminster residents ask: who truly represents us?

A National Mirror

Westminster's story is more than small-town drama. It reflects a national question:
  • Should local leaders be required to live under the policies they enforce?
  • Can towns heal from old divisions while facing new economic pressures?
  • How do communities balance ceremonial leadership with professional administration in 2025?

Closing Note

The Susan Ramey petition may belong to the past, but its themes—transparency, accountability, and representation—are alive today. As Westminster confronts rising utility costs and questions of governance, the town's leadership saga invites outsiders to ask: what happens when history repeats itself in America's small towns?

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Source: Clarity Media
Filed Under: Government

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