Biographical Information
name
Angela L Aiken
campaign phone number
864-325-8440
1. What experiences qualify you to represent your constituents on County Council?
My name is Angela Aiken, and I am the bridge that reconnects people to their government.
My qualifications are rooted in lived experience and a lifelong commitment to fighting for people who have been overlooked and excluded. As a certified Phlebotomist and Echocardiograph Technician, I have spent my career serving people with compassion and integrity. I am also among the first graduates of the Environmental Justice Academy in Greenville County.
I have served on the board and as spokesperson for the New Washington Heights Neighborhood Association, worked alongside G.O.A.L.S. for Justice, led the Latch Key Kids Organization providing mentorship and meals for children, and partnered with Sustaining Way on food access. My advocacy has brought me before County Council, City Council, and public agencies as a voice for the people.
I live by the words of Vincent Coe: "The opposite of justice is poverty." I am here to ensure every person feels seen, heard, supported, and respected.
2. What do you believe are the most important issues facing our county? How would you address them?
The most pressing issues facing Greenville County are ones I have not read about in a policy brief, I have lived them: public health, public safety, affordable housing, and access to public transportation.
In the 1980s, I watched neighbors die from cancer while oil tanks sat in our community and DHEC never responded. Clean air, clean soil, and safe water are rights, not privileges. I will push for environmental accountability.
Forty-three years ago, I requested a speed bump and a "Blind Child" sign on my street. It has never been addressed. Every neighborhood deserves safe, equitable infrastructure.
Affordable housing and transit are equally urgent. Growth in Greenville County must be equitable growth, and I am committed to ensuring no one
3. What steps should County Council take to address the availability of affordable and workforce housing?
County Council must take a comprehensive approach addressing the full pipeline, from unlocking underutilized land assets to creating financing pathways and building a local ecosystem of mission-aligned developers. Council needs policy frameworks that recognize the full spectrum of housing need, from workforce families to residents in recovery.
Greenville County already has the raw ingredients: faith institutions sitting on developable land, federal funding tools that remain underutilized, and a growing community of local advocates. What's missing is a coordinated strategy that pulls these resources together.
Any housing initiative must be developed with community stakeholders and designed to drive wealth into existing neighborhoods, not extract it. We have seen too many times what happens when developers enter under the banner of affordable housing but leave residents with less. That cycle ends with intentional policy and genuine accountability.
4. What will you advocate for in the county's transportation improvement plans?
Greenville County's transportation plans cannot be developed in isolation from our affordable housing strategy, the two are inseparable.
Working families placed in affordable housing beyond the reach of reliable transit and safe pedestrian infrastructure have not been given a real opportunity, they have simply been relocated. Effective transportation planning must prioritize direct connections between where families live and where they need to go: grocery stores, pharmacies, hospitals, social services, and employment corridors.
What's needed is a coordinated framework that treats transit access as concurrent with housing investment, not an afterthought, and ensures transportation dollars produce equitable outcomes countywide.