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  • BHS standouts compete at Nike Outdoor Nationals

    Blythewood girls competed in five relay events. Their top finish was third in the 1000 Spring Medley. | Photos: Backdawg Photog

    EUGENE, OR – After a strong finish at the 2021 State Finals, Blythewood track and field standouts took to Eugene, Oregon for the Outdoor Nationals, presented by Nike.

    Arianna Williams and Randy Kelly, who each won individual 5A State Titles titles at the end of the 2021 high school season. Briana Green, who took second at state in long jump, also competed in an individual event at the Outdoor Nationals.

    Williams had the highest individual finish of the three Blythewood competitors. She placed eighth out of 24 runners in the 400 meter championships with a time of 55.08. The top finisher, Aaliyah Butler, finished at 53.48. Williams claimed the 2021 state title in the 400 meter dash. She topped her previous personal record of 55.13 at the Outdoor Nationals.

    Randy Kelly

    Kelly finished 10th out of 20 in the high jump finals with at the 6-06.25 mark. His personal record of 6-10 was set at the 2021 state finals when he claimed the individual title.

    Green finished 28th out of 33 in long jump at 5.35m.

    Blythewood’s 1000 Sprint Medley Relay team of Green, Hailey Duncan, Williams and LaTavia Bracey-Ransom had Blythewood’s highest finish at the Outdoor Nationals. They finished third with a time of 2:15.87, just under five seconds out from the first place spot.

    Green

    Green, Williams, Bracey-Ransom and Duncan also competed in the 4×100 meter relay and placed fifth at 48.69.

    Blythewood runners finished seventh in the 800 Sprint Medley Championship with a time of 1:53.87. Katuria Glover, Duncan, Bracey-Ransom and Mallorie Hogue competed.

    The girls 4×200 relay of Glover, Green, Makeshira Brown and Duncan had a time of 1:45.15 for a seventh place finish.

    The girls relay of Monica Joy, Bracey-Ransom, Glover and Williams placed eighth in the 4×400 meter event with a 3:58.12 finish.

    Also this summer, Kelly placed first in high jump (6-08.75) at the USA Track and Field SC Association Championships in Columbia June 25-27. 

    Williams
  • Griffins prep for season

    Photos: Anthony Montgomery

    HOPKINS – Fairfield Central competed in the Lower Richland 7-on-7 Diamond Shootout last Wednesday.

    The Griffins are set to begin the 2021 season at Blythewood High School on Aug. 20 and will host their first home game of the season on Aug. 27 against Lancaster.

  • Hunter announces $10k grant for town

    BLYTHEWOOD – After Ashley Hunter, owner and CEO of MPA Strategies, announced Monday night during council meeting that she has obtained a grant for the town, the audience and council burst into applause.

    Mayor Bryan Franklin, who has been critical of Hunter and her marketing firm, joined his fellow council members Monday night in lauding Hunter’s initial efforts and quick results.

    “The intent was that we pay for services with grants that come to the town,” Franklin said. “It’s well worth the investment,” he said. “What we pay for services and you double or triple that in grants every year, is obviously a good investment for this town. And I’m proud of making progress in that regard.”

    During opening remarks by council members, Councilman Larry Griffin said that since he didn’t see anything on the agenda about a progress report from MPA Strategies’ marketing work for the town, he wanted to yield his time to Hunter so she could update council on her work.

    “I’m very excited to announce that we’ve been awarded a grant from International Paper.” That grant will go to the Doko Meadows Park Foundation, Hunter said. “I’ve also been spending time meeting with various nonprofits, associations and corporate teams about reserving this beautiful space (the Manor). Lots of people are asking for proposals so I’ve been working closely with Carroll [Williamson] on this.

    “We’ve also had great success on social media,” she said. “The town’s engagement has more than tripled on Instagram. I’m very excited about working with Blythewood – lots of good news. This first round of funding for the grant automatically makes us [eligible] for the second round as well,” she said. “So it will be a two-part pot of funding for our park here in Blythewood.”

    The grant funds will be used to support the upfitting, security and beautification of and around the trailway at Doko Meadows Park where the new StoryWalk interactive literacy program was just opened.

    Additionally, Hunts’ State and Frink nonprofit Foundation awarded the Town $1000.00 for their 10-4-10 initiative honoring MPA Strategies’ 10th year in business. The Foundation will award ten $1000.00 donations to programs and charities in the Midlands that have a positive impact on their communities. Blythewood’s is the second of the ten checks to be awarded.

    Hunter, who owns and operates both MPA Strategies and the State and Frink Foundation, stated she is excited to see the Town’s vision for this wonderful park area for children and families to read and play come to fruition.

    The Foundation’s $1000 grant is being donated for benches and play equipment throughout and around the StoryWalk exhibit in Doko Park, Hunter said.

  • MUSC to purchase Fairfield’s ER

    WINNSBORO – The Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) announced last Friday it will purchase Fairfield’s Providence free standing emergency room along with three Midlands-area hospitals and other hospitals in the state.

    The purchase, approved by Medical University Hospital Authority Board of Trustees during June’s regular board meeting, will also include Providence Health hospitals, KershawHealth, which are currently owned by LifePoint Health, as well as affiliated physician practice locations serving communities in the Midlands.

    Terms of the transaction have not yet been disclosed.

    Fairfield County Interim Administrator Brad Caulder told The Voice that the county has not yet received any confirmation about the sale of the ER.

    On April 9, 2021, PRISMA announced the termination of its own planned purchase of the ER.

    Fairfield County has a significant investment in the Providence-Fairfield ER. The county has agreed to pay $10 million to Providence over 10 years to be used for operation of the ER as well as $4 million the county had been required to escrow as assurance those ten $1 million payments would be made.

    “The county’s agreement with Providence includes negotiated terms of providing care to the citizens, keeping the ER open, indigent care issues and other things,” then-County Attorney Tommy Morgan said last year.

  • No bidders for construction of new Lake Wateree fire station

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – The new fire station that’s planned near Lake Wateree came out of its initial bid process with disappointing results: Not a single company bid on the project.

    Fairfield County Fire Chief Jason Pope says he isn’t sure why no bids came in, but the details of the design and the surprising recent increase in the price of construction materials may have been factors.

    His plan is to redesign the project with the goal of making it simpler and, perhaps, easier to bid on.

    We didn’t have anyone really call us or say why they didn’t bid.

    Jason Pope, Director
    Fairfield County Fire Service

    “As to the exact reason I couldn’t tell you. We didn’t have anybody really call us and tell us why they would or would not bid,” Pope told the Fairfield County Council at Monday night’s meeting. “However, what I can tell you is that our plan going forward [is that] we’re going to revisit the architectural drawings… and we’re going to make it a little bit simpler.”

    Then, he explained in an interview Tuesday, they will actively seek bidders.

    Given the high price of lumber, he says he’s not sure if the building can still be constructed for the budgeted $375,000, which was approved by the council in February. But he won’t know until he gets some bids.

    “That’s definitely going to be a challenge,” he says of current building material costs, which he’s been told make the cost of constructing a building with wood comparable to the cost of a metal building.

    “We put this bid package together last fall, and then the money was approved in February of this year, and during that time is when the lumber price spike happened, and so we’re not sure how that’s going to affect it,” he says.

    “What we budgeted for the building – the price is going to be higher than that obviously, but without getting bids you don’t know what it’s going to be.”

    If the bids come in a lot higher than expected, he says, then the county will have to consider its options – whether that means allocating more funding, delaying the project, or further simplifying the design to cut costs. But first, they need some bids.

    “We want the fire station built,” Pope says. “It’s going to help protect the citizens and the residents of the county, so we’re going to do everything we can to get it built.”

    The new fire station would be the 15th in the county’s mostly-volunteer system, which staffs five stations during business hours and relies on volunteers to cover the rest of the time and the rest of the county.

    Pope says new volunteer firefighters are always welcome; the number today – roughly 165 countywide – is slightly more than half of what it was 25 years ago.

    When the county’s volunteer fire departments opened beginning 50 years ago in 1971, he says, they relied on a strong base of community support. A decade ago, in 2011, the independent departments were consolidated under the county fire service as a core function of local government.

    The new fire station, a project initiated and pushed into reality by former County Councilman Jimmy Ray Douglas, is to be built on River Road between the Lake Wateree Presbyterian Church and the recycling center.

    The plan includes four bays to house a fire truck, tanker, boat, and EMS vehicle, as well as restrooms, showers, a kitchen, and living quarters to accommodate firefighters who might man the facility in the future.

    Originally proposed in 2007, the project began in earnest about four years ago, Pope says. It took roughly two years for the county to obtain the 2.4-acre site to build it on, and site work has been completed by county public works employees; it’s now ready for the building.

    In the area where it is to be located, Pope says, there are approximately 300 homes that are currently more than five road miles from the nearest fire station – a distance that means homeowners have increased insurance premiums and, more importantly, increased risk in the event of a fire.

    “This fire station will put fire trucks in their back yard available to respond,” Pope says, “and it will significantly reduce their homeowners’ insurance.”

  • Take-Back Day draws crowd from Ridgeway community

    Photos provided by Behavioral Health

    RIDGEWAY – Behavioral Health’s Community Take Back Day at Rufus Belton Park on Saturday, June 26 brought over 75 attendees from the community. The family friendly event featured bounce houses, free hotdogs, raffles, bingo, face painting and more.

    The sheriff, council leaders, school officials and Fairfield County residents participated in the 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. event which was sponsored by the Fairfield CountyFairfield Opioid Response Team, the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office, WDPS, Fairfield Behavioral Health Services and Serve & Connect.

  • Report: Man runs over wife with truck

    WINNSBORO – A Winnsboro man facing domestic violence charges was arrested on Friday night after a three-hour standoff at his home near The Strawberry Patch convenience store with Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputies.

    Truesdale

    Jeffrey Truesdale, 55, was charged with Domestic Violence of a High and Aggravated Nature following an incident that occurred on June 18, according to authorities.

    According to an incident report, the sheriff’s office received a phone call from an anonymous caller that there was a man allegedly beating a woman in the parking lot of the behavioral health center in Winnsboro.

    While on the phone with a dispatcher, the caller reported that the man left the parking lot with the woman in a white Chevy Silverado and was heading southbound on US highway 321.

    The dispatcher, according to the incident report, was able to identify the suspect as possibly being Truesdale, who deputies were already familiar with. The responding deputy reportedly drove to Truesdale’s last known residence where he observed a vehicle matching the caller’s description backing into the driveway of a home on Oak Street Extension and a female laying on the ground near the truck.

    The deputy identified the victim as Truesdale’s wife and reported that she initially stated that she was alright, and that she had not meant to fall out of the truck. As other deputies arrived however, the deputy was able to separate the couple at which point the woman told the deputy that Jeffrey Truesdale had run her over with the truck.

    The woman was then transported to a local hospital where she received treatment for her injuries.

    On Friday, an arrest warrant was obtained for Jeffrey Truesdale in regards to the incident. According to Fairfield County authorities, it was in the attempt to serve the arrest warrant that Truesdale barricaded himself in his garage.

    “We called SLED (South Carolina Law Enforcement Division) to assist us. Another person was in the home and let us know that Truesdale was in the garage,” Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery told The Voice.

    The standoff began at 5 p.m., and according to Montgomery, at 8 p.m. deputies were able to enter the home through an unlocked door and arrested Truesdale without incident.

  • Woman trapped under car for hours

    Fairfield County first responders were able to dig a way out for the trapped woman. | William Ladd

    WINNSBORO –  When the Fairfield County Rescue Squad and Fire Service was dispatched to 141 State Highway 213 about 4:20 p.m., Saturday, June 20 they found an overturned vehicle and a 21-year-old Winnsboro woman trapped underneath it, three to four feet beneath the roadway.

    The woman was not restrained and had been ejected from the 2007 Nissan sedan, according to a Highway Patrol report. Rescuers said she had been trapped under the vehicle for several hours.

    After extricating the woman from underneath the vehicle, she was transported to the Providence/Fairfield Emergency Room on the Hwy  321 Bypass, about ½ mile away.

    There is no information about the woman’s injuries or the cause of the accident.

    The incident was investigated by the S.C. Highway Patrol.

    Contributed
  • Winnsboro man arrested after barricading himself in garage for hours

    WINNSBORO – A man charged with domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature, barricaded himself in a home near The Strawberry Patch convenience store for three hours Friday night before he was taken into custody by the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office.

    When Sheriff’s deputies approached a home on Oak Street Friday about 5 p.m., with an arrest warrant for Jeff Truesdale, 55, on the domestic violence charge, Truesdale barricaded himself in the garage, according to Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery.

    “We called SLED (South Carolina Law Enforcement Division) to assist us,” Montgomery said. “Another person was in the home and let us know that Truesdale was in the garage.”

    After deputies entered the home about 8 p.m., through an unlocked door, they were able to arrest Truesdale without incident.

    Truesdale eluded deputies on Friday, June 18, after he was involved in an altercation with a female when he allegedly struck her with a vehicle causing serious injury, Montgomery said.

    Truesdale remains in the detention center awaiting a bond hearing.

  • Drownings at Lake Monticello

    JENKINSVILLE – Two separate incidents at Lake Monticello last week resulted in the deaths of six-year-old Julian Thomas-Smith of Columbia and 19-year-old Jimmy Montufor of Charlotte.

    Around 9 p.m. on Monday, June 14, Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a report that a child had drowned at the Monticello Ball Park and bystanders were performing CPR.

    According to the incident report from the sheriff’s office, Thomas-Smith regained a pulse.  He was transported by EMS to Providence Fairfield Emergency Room and then to Prisma Health Richland, where he succumbed to his injuries on June 16.

    On Saturday, June 19, the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) responded to a request for assistance from the Fairfield County Fire Services at approximately 5 p.m. Witnesses reported that a male paddling on a kayak-style inflatable raft a short distance outside of the marked swimming area at the recreation area had fallen into the water, began struggling and disappeared.

    SCDRN and Fire Service divers searched until dark Saturday evening and resumed searching Sunday morning when they located the body of Montufor around 10 a.m.

    The incident is under investigation by SCDNR.