South Carolina Statutes

§ 1-15-10 — Commission created; appointment, qualifications and terms of members; vacancies.

South Carolina § 1-15-10
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 1ADMINISTRATION OF THE GOVERNMENT
Ch. 15COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN

This text of South Carolina § 1-15-10 (Commission created; appointment, qualifications and terms of members; vacancies.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 1-15-10 (2026).

Text

There is created a Commission on Women to be composed of sixteen members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate from among persons with a competency in the area of public affairs and women's activities. One member must be appointed from each congressional district and the remaining members from the State at large. The commission must be under and a part of the Department of Administration. Members of the commission shall serve for terms of four years and until their successors are appointed and qualify, except of those members first appointed after the expansion of the commission to fifteen members, two members shall serve a term of one year, two members shall serve a term of two years, two members shall serve a term of three years, and two members shall serve

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Legislative History

HISTORY: 1962 Code SECTION 9-451; 1970 (56) 2321; 1978 Act No. 591, SECTION 1; 1993 Act No. 181, SECTION 8; 2008 Act No. 249, SECTION 1, eff upon approval (became law without the Governor's signature on June 5, 2008); 2012 Act No. 279, SECTION 2, eff June 26, 2012; 2014 Act No. 121 (S.22), Pt V, SECTION 7.F, eff July 1, 2015. Editor's Note 2012 Act No. 279, SECTION 33, provides as follows: "Due to the congressional redistricting, any person elected or appointed to serve, or serving, as a member of any board, commission, or committee to represent a congressional district, whose residency is transferred to another district by a change in the composition of the district, may serve, or continue to serve, the term of office for which he was elected or appointed; however, the appointing or electing authority shall appoint or elect an additional member on that board, commission, or committee from the district which loses a resident member as a result of the transfer to serve until the term of the transferred member expires. When a vacancy occurs in the district to which a member has been transferred, the vacancy must not be filled until the full term of the transferred member expires. Further, the inability to hold an election or to make an appointment due to judicial review of the congressional districts does not constitute a vacancy." Effect of Amendment The 2008 amendment rewrote this section. The 2012 amendment substituted "sixteen" for "fifteen"; inserted "The member first appointed from the Seventh Congressional District after the expansion of the commission to sixteen members shall serve a four-year term."; and, made other, nonsubstantive, changes. 2014 Act No. 121, SECTION 7.F, in the third sentence, substituted "Department of Administration" for "Office of the Governor".

Nearby Sections

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Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 1-15-10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/15/1-15-10.