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Archive: 2025
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  • Lt. Col. Todd Mainwaring assumes command as the USACE Charleston District’s 91st District Engineer and commander

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Charleston District welcomed its 91st commander today at a change of command ceremony. Lieutenant Colonel Todd Mainwaring assumed command from Major Patrick Ripton during a ceremony officiated by Brigadier General Zachary Miller, commanding general, South Atlantic Division, USACE.
  • Media Advisory: Incoming USACE Charleston District leader assumes command July 11

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), Charleston District will welcome its incoming commander at a change of command ceremony. Lt. Col. Todd Mainwaring, the District’s 91st commander, will assume command from Major Patrick Ripton. The ceremony will be officiated by Brig. Gen. Zachary Miller, commanding general, South Atlantic Division, USACE.
  • Charleston District and City of Charleston Partner Together on Design and Construction of Stormwater Management Projects

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Charleston District, and the City of Charleston have partnered together to rehabilitate the city’s historic brick arch stormwater drainage system on the Charleston Peninsula and to support the design of the next phase of the Dupont-Wappoo Watershed Master Plan in West Ashley. This effort, authorized under a federal environmental infrastructure program, aims to improve stormwater management, enhance public safety, and strengthen the reliability of critical drainage systems in two of the city’s most flood-prone areas.
  • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers holding SC-22 Extension Public Meetings

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Charleston District invites the local media to attend a series of public meetings for the proposed South Carolina Highway 22 Extension Project (SC-22 Extension) in Horry County, South Carolina, May 12-15, 2025. Horry County has proposed to develop a new roadway that will provide the region with congestion relief, improved hurricane evacuation, and improved access to needed services east and west of the Waccamaw River.