Category: Business

  • BAR approves COA for The Park complex

    The Park senior apartment complex proposed to be located next to the IGA received final approval Monday evening from the Board of Architectural Review for a Certificate of Appropriateness.

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Board of Architectural Review spent much of Monday evening’s meeting negotiating with a representative of the Prestwick Company on lighting, landscaping, fencing, business connectivity and more associated with the apartment complex proposed next to the IGA.

    After much discussion and several adjustments to the planned facility, the board voted 4-0 to approve a Certificate of Appropriateness for The Park apartment complex.

    It was the BAR’s second meeting with Prestwick representatives who initially proposed a long three-story building that BAR members felt looked plain and institutional.

    While the board approved the color scheme and materials of the building, they were concerned about its placement and design. They also asked for a fence and berm along the northern boundary behind both Zaxby’s and the proposed Starbucks coffee shop that face Blythewood Road. And they asked that paths be provided for the apartment tenants to be able to walk to the IGA stores and perhaps to the Blythewood Road businesses.

    Prestwick came back Monday evening with an L-shaped building and a 20-foot landscape buffer along the northern boundary instead of the 10-foot required buffer.

    “We bought an additional 10 feet of land from the landowners that will allow us to keep a 20-foot buffer of natural trees that you see from Blythewood Road,” Devin Blankenship, senior development manager for Prestwick, told the board.

    Blankenship suggested that with the 20-foot buffer, a fence and berm would no longer be needed. And he said he could not create a path to promote connective foot traffic to an area not designed for traffic.

    “If I create a path onto an existing road [the IGA parking lot] without a sidewalk connection, I’m encouraging our tenants to use that path onto a traffic area we don’t have access to,” Blankenship said. “It’s all legal jargon, but it’s a liability for us unless we have a proper access easement and crosswalk on to an existing sidewalk.”

    “That was part of the reason for the fence as well,” the board’s architectural advisor Ralph Walden added. “It would discourage people from walking through those sites.”

    Blankenship argued that the 20-foot buffer would act as a deterrent to walking through.

    “People will create a path,” McLean said. “It would be an advantage to the apartment complex and to the businesses as well [to have a path]. It’s an issue that at some point in time is going to have to be addressed.” McLean went on to point out, “If you’re not going to have access, then you need to stop access. That’s where the fence comes in, maybe a coated chain link fence that’s a nice neutral color that you won’t see in that wooded buffer.”

    “I think that’s how you solve that issue,” board member Alan George said.

    McLean suggested a coated four-foot chain link fence, but he said he would also like to see the town do something to encourage connectivity.

    Addressing the lighting on the property, the board’s architectural advisor, Ralph Walden, suggested the developer pull the lighting back from the edge of the property into the interior parking area.

    McLean made a motion to approve the site plan as presented in the new and final L-shaped rendering with a 20-foot buffer.

    “I’m also going to include a four-foot chain link fence along the northern border and require the lighting be brought back to the center of the parking lot,” McLean said. “I would also like to see the town do something to encourage connectivity with this, and I guess it can’t be part of the motion, but I think that burden lies with the town to some degree to give connectivity for these folks [tenants] to the businesses and the town, specifically, the IGA and back to Blythewood Road.”

    The board voted unanimously for the motion.

  • MLILY to expand workforce by 35%

    WINNSBORO – Seven months after the official opening of its vertically integrated factory in Winnsboro, mattress manufacturer MLILY USA is expanding again and looking to grow its workforce by 35 percent to fill a third shift and increase its production to more than 6,000 units a day.

     The company opened the 650,000-square-foot facility in December and since then has seen demand for its products soar.

    Today, MLILY is manufacturing 2,000 mattresses a day with two shifts and 185 employees at its Winnsboro facility, and the company is forecasting demand will top 6,000 by the end of the August. At that time, the company expects to be at full employment with 250 workers.

    “As the bedding industry continues its rebound, we are seeing significant growth and expect that growth to continue as more and more retailers and mattress suppliers are looking to fill their product list with mattresses made in the U.S.,” said Stephen Chen, president of MLILY USA. “As retail reopens from the countrywide shutdown due to COVID-19, and fears of supply chain disruptions continue to grow, we are filling the need for a number of leading retailers, as well as meeting the demand for private label contract manufacturers, that are looking for domestic supply partners,” Chen said.

    MLILY is looking for a variety of skilled workers to fill a number of positions, including jobs on the production lines, in the warehouse, sewing and factory supervisory jobs.

    The company, which is currently running multiple production lines in the facility, recently installed its first robotics machines for added production and has completed its automated racking system in the factory’s foam pouring area for foam storage.

    “The excitement over our growth, both within the factory and the Winnsboro community, is palpable,” said Chad Reinsel, director of manufacturing. “We expect the demand for our products to continue to grow, which allows us to continue to invest in the community and its residents.”

    The company manufactures its wide range of mattresses and pillows in the factory, including the Ego, Wellflex, Mprove and Dreamer lines. All of the mattresses from the factory are roll-packed.

    MLILY USA’s parent company Healthcare Co., Ltd. invested nearly $50 million in the former Mack Truck plant that had been dormant for nine years after Guardian Building Products left the community. In addition to producing mattresses for retailers throughout North America, the MLILY factory manufacturers springs and proprietary memory foam used in its mattresses.

    Based in Knoxville, Tennessee, MLILY USA’s mattresses, pillows and sleep accessories are manufactured in state-of-the-art factories around the world, including China, Thailand, Serbia and Winnsboro that span more than 6 million square feet. With products sold worldwide.

  • Windermere golf course tax sale set for July 6

    BLYTHEWOOD – Last summer, there appeared to be new hope that the financially troubled Windermere golf course and country club, situated in the heart of LongCreek Plantation subdivision, would be purchased and flourish.

    This summer is a different story. Next week, the golf course, club house and 80 acres of undeveloped land will be up for auction in a tax sale at the Richland County Courthouse.

    According to LongCreek Plantation Property Owners Association (LCPPOA) president Rob Szwec, Windermere POA members were notified via email last week by the LCPPOA that the foreclosure sale is to take place on Monday and that the LCPPOA will not be participating in the auction.

    The Windermere Club and golf course are owned by John T. Bakhaus, Fairways Development, LLC, et al.

    A potential buyer, L&J Acquisitions of Snellville, Georgia, announced plans last August to rename the club to The Blythewood Country Club and launched extensive improvements to the golf course and club house.

    “We’re going to bring this Pete Dye course back to its former glory,” new club manager Fred Layman, told club members during an open house at the club at the time.

    By September, however, the sale was on pause and eventually failed to materialize.

    The foreclosure follows on the heels of the sale of the Golf Course of South Carolina last year to E-Capital, a Texas investment firm that had the property rezoned for hundreds of homes. While the firm’s attorney Robert Fuller told council that E-Capital plans to flip the property, the zoning for homes would follow the sale to a developer.

    The sale was opposed by the majority of homeowners in the adjacent Crickentree neighborhood who accused their Richland County Council representative, Joyce Dickerson, of backing the developer. Dickerson was defeated last month in her bid for a fourth term.

    The Windermere Club, golf course and Windermere communities lie in Richland County Councilman Calvin ‘Chip’ Jackson’s district. Jackson told The Voice that he would not like to see the outcome of unhappy homeowners in the Windermere communities as he saw in Crickentree and is hopeful that something good happens before time runs out.

    “I believe that the beauty and quality of life that the golf course provides for its members, community residents and neighboring communities is absolutely essential,” Jackson said. “The attention to green space and protecting the surrounding natural environment is what makes this area special.  I applaud the work of the Home Owner’s Association, the Conservation Commission, and the Soil and Water District, for working together to preserve this community. And I would fully support any efforts to maintain this standard and hope it remains that way in the future for this community.”

  • Local small businesses face COVID-19

    RND restaurant owner Crystal Paulk delivers a family meal curbside to Dominique Gladden. | Contributed

    BLYTHEWOOD – The social restrictions that come with the Covid-19 pandemic have presented a real challenge for our local small businesses in Blythewood and Fairfield County. But they’ve also presented new opportunities that are likely to impact how these businesses operate even after it’s over.

    “We’re trying to be innovative and creative, and each and every day utilizing curbside dining. We’re doing a lot of takeout. We’ve now gone into delivery,” says Crystal Paulk, whose family owns The Restaurant Next Door (RND) and The Donut Guy in Winnsboro.

    “Were doing like everybody else is doing: sanitizing, sanitizing, sanitizing,” she says. “And we’re staying prayerful, hopeful, and optimistic.”

    At her restaurant, Paulk says, revenue is down about 60 percent since the appearance of the virus prompted government-mandated shutdowns of restaurant dining rooms and other businesses in an effort to slow its spread. But she’s working to make up lost ground by helping to meet needs that have arisen in the era of social distancing.

    For example, she’s put together a meal prep menu aimed at seniors who are staying home to avoid getting sick but may not want to eat microwave meals – and families who are feeling stressed by trying to balance all the changes that have come to their lives in recent days.

    The put-together meals, she says, provide the right quantity of ingredients to make the desired portion size – without a trip to the grocery store or the ahead-of-time work, like marinating meat and vegetables, already done. The concept is similar to that of online meal kits – except that it’s local, and the prices reflect that.

    “It’s just one area,” she says, “that we can try and help in a little way.”

    Blythewood business owners – like Carla Lomas, who owns Bloomin’ Bean Coffee Bar and Blythewood Gloriosa Florist; and Scottie Opolyn, who owns Scottie’s Café & Grill – say that for them too, staying open is about continuing to serve the community.

    Blythewood Pharmacy clerk/technician Arran Montgomery, assisting customers curbside, gloved and masked. | Barbara Ball

    Though the flower shop, coffee shop, and restaurant are closed to the public, Lomas says she’s still doing business by curbside pickup and delivery, handling orders through the phone and computer.

    Scotties is open as well for takeout and curbside pickup. Plus, because a number of people show up to pick up orders at meal time, Scottie has tables and chairs set up outside his restaurant for spaced seating for those waiting on orders.

    Fairfield’s boutiques like Over the Top and Shades of Blue have closed their stores for the most part but are stepping up their online and Facebook sales.

    “We’re posting a lot more items on Facebook, 40 or so at a time,” Robbie Martin, owner of Shades of Blue in Winnsboro and Bella and Blue in Ridgeway, said. ”While we don’t have online ordering as such, we offer shipping and are constantly updating our Facebook posts. Our customers can look through our posts and call the store, pay over the phone and pick it up or we’ll be happy to bring it curbside for pickup. It’s not just about shopping,” Martin said. “It’s about therapy.

    “We just want everyone to be safe right now,” she said. “And we want our customers’ shopping experiences to be safe and enjoyable.”

    Phyllis Gutierrez, store manager at Over the Top Boutique in Ridgeway said the store has long had online shopping at www.overthetopridgeway.com, but is offering other online shopping experiences as well.

    “We also post items on Instagram and Facebook that may or may not be on our website,” Gutierrez said. “We offer home drop offs when possible, phone sales, mail and curbside pickup.”

    The store will also start offering private appointments at the store on Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    “We are cleaning and wiping down the shop after each customer and providing hand sanitizer for customers while in the shop,” Guiterrez said.

     Everyone, it seems, is trying to muddle through the situation together – and sometimes even businesses of a similar type land on different answers to the question of what to do in the face of Covid-19: try to stay open, or close completely?

    For Robert and Bobbie Pemberton, whose Oldies and Goodies antique and consignment shop is one of several new businesses in downtown Winnsboro, have made the difficult decision to close temporarily, at least through the end of March.

    “It’s not the ideal situation for us as a small business because we still have rent and utilities and things like that to pay, but we feel like if we just tighten our belts and stay in, maybe we will get through this faster,” Bobbie Pemberton says.

    Liz Humphries, owner of Blythewood Consignment, has kept her business open – mainly, she says, because even with 75 percent less traffic in her store, for those who have come in, the shop has met an important need.

    So far, she’s observed the significance of small businesses in a small town – even ones that some policymakers might deem non-essential.

    For example, there was a waitress in need of grocery money who came to pick up the check from items she’d sold through the consignment store. There was an older lady who just needed to get out of the house – and was able to come and shop after hours, when no one else was around.

    There were countless people who called looking for hand tools to plant their gardens, or household items like small appliances, because they wanted to avoid shopping with the crowds at big-box stores — and the greater risk of exposure to the virus.

    “It’s a surreal situation, and I’m just trying to be here,” Humphries says. “We’re wiping everything down, we’re cleaning stuff… I’ve never been in a situation like this before, so I really don’t know what to do except to stay positive, stay clean and just pray.”

    If the situation wears on, she says, consignment shops like hers may become an important income source for people whose income is disrupted. Already during the pandemic, she’s had some major drop-offs of furniture that people want to sell.

    But whatever is to come in the next weeks and months, she’s looking forward to the end of Covid-19 and social distancing that will eventually come – and what it will be like when everyone who’s been cooped up at home can come out and shop again.

    “It’ll be good when it’s over is all I can say,” she says. “If small businesses can just hang on, it’ll be good when it’s over.”


    See the growing list of Blythewood and Fairfield County small businesses with changes due to COVID-19.

    The Voice will continue to update cancellations and closings at blythewoodonline.com. To submit a closing or cancellation notice, email voice@blythewoodonline.com.

  • Sea Pro Boats expands to Fairfield County

    WINNSBORO – Another new company is coming to Fairfield County, bringing with it a $3 million investment and as many as 135 new jobs.

    Sea Pro Boats, LLC is expanding its South Carolina operations to Fairfield County and will be located in the former Fazio Building at 396 State Highway 34 East in Winnsboro.

    A saltwater fishing boat manufacturer has manufactured center console fishing boats for 30 years. The new facility will produce larger center console boats, greater than 24 feet in length, to its product line.

    The company’s expansion is expected to be completed by June 2020.

    The company will begin hiring after Jan. 2, and individuals interested in joining the Sea Pro Boats, LLC team should call Gallman Personnel Services at 803-772-8046.

  • MLILY hosts grand opening of factory in Fairfield

    Company Brings $50M Investment and 250 Jobs to Fairfield

    Cutting the ribbon for the grand opening of MLILY USA are, from left: Fairfield County Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport, Operations Manager Chad Reinsel, Winnsboro Mayor Roger Gaddy, Rep. Annie McDaniel, State Senator Mike Fanning, Chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd. James Ni, S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt, Fairfield County Council Chairman Neil Robinson, President of MLILY USA Stephen Chen and Suns Jian, president of Healthcare Co., Ltd.’s global sales and marketing. | Photos: Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – The grand opening last week of MLILY USA, Fairfield County’s new memory foam mattress factory, was an international event covered by Chinese television and newspapers as well as local and state media. MLILY is owned by Healthcare Co., Ltd., China’s largest mattres manufacturing company.

    Industry officials from China flew into the Fairfield County airport on Wednesday. On Thursday morning, they joined state and local government, business and industry leaders for the open house and ribbon cutting at MLILY’s renovated 650,000 square-foot manufacturing facility located at 1 MLILY Way just off Highway 321 in Winnsboro.

    S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt

    Prior to the ribbon cutting, there were comments by company officials as well as S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt and Fairfield County’s Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport. A tour of the facility, conducted by Chad Reinsel, operations manager, was followed by lunch.

    Barely a year ago, Fairfield County Council finalized an agreement with MLILY to bring a nearly $50 million investment into the county and restore the idle factory – previously owned by Mack Truck and later Guardian Building Products – to produce a line of sleep products for the U.S. market. In addition, the company announced it would hire 250 employees.

    So far, about 64 employees are already on the payroll.

    “And most of the folks hired so far are from this area,” Fairfield County Economic Development Director Ty Davenport told the 100 or so in attendance.

    Fairfield County Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport

    “We’re thrilled when the people who live here are the people working here. Revenue from this plant is going to flow to the town, the schools and will be used to further our county’s economic development,” Davenport said.

    “We’re going to see benefits from this plant for a long time. Things are looking up for Fairfield County. We already have other new industry coming in,” Davenport said. “We’re on a roll, and MLILY helped put us on that roll. I can’t thank you enough,” he told MLILY officials.

    Hitt said the open house marked a landmark day for Fairfield.

    “The Fairfield County government routinely works hard to make our community attractive to companies from all over the world,” Hitt said.

    Turning to Stephen Chen, Hitt continued, “Your investment in Fairfield reinforces that this is the business address, sitting right here above the state capital, in a very modern, progressive county.”

    Chen thanked Davenport, “for guiding the MLILY team through each step of the process to establish a factory in Winnsboro.”

    MLILY USA President Stephen Chen looks on as James Ni, Chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd. addresses those attending the open house.

    MLILY’s factory will supply the company’s North American retail customers with mattresses, pillows and toppers made in the U.S. – a shift in the mattress manufacturing business where many companies are looking at off-shore production to maintain costs.

    In addition to the general cleanup and renovation of the plant, which had been dormant for nine years, MLILY has installed equipment to manufacture, fabricate and distribute mattresses including springs, memory foam and other proprietary foams.

    “This is an exciting time for our company as we continue to grow in the United States. Our U.S. customers will now be able to get their products from Winnsboro, made by American workers,” James Ni, chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd., said, drawing a burst of applause from the audience.

    “The investment in this factory allows us to develop and supply MLILY products that appeal to U.S. consumers, and it provides us with the opportunity to expand our product reach in this country. I’m thankful to our leadership team and our employees for their work in getting this plant ready and operational, as well as to the local and state government officials who have welcomed us into the community,” Ni said. “We look forward to playing an important role in the community.”

    Ni is credited with not only building Healthcare Co., Ltd. into the largest mattress manufacturer in China, but expanding operations throughout Asia and Europe.

    Ni said he saw a huge opportunity in the United States. To that end, his company built a North American headquarters in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    “The company’s mattresses, pillows and sleep accessories are now all manufactured in state-of-the-art factories located in China, Thailand, Spain, Serbia and, now, Winnsboro,” Ni said, “The factories located in China span more than 6 million square feet.”

    Davenport emphasized that MLily’s economic impact on Fairfield County will be significant.

    “Two hundred fifty jobs will mean 250 families are better off. It’s a great thing for any community,” Davenport told The Voice, “but it’s a huge one for ours, so we’re very thankful for that. “It’s a great way to start the new year. I think it’ll be a good place for our residents to work.”

  • Burger King opening in Winnsboro

    WINNSBORO – A new Burger King is going up in Winnsboro and is expected to be open around Oct. 5.

    Located on the Bypass adjacent to KJ’s Food Mart, the 3,200 square-foot fast food restaurant will be the chain’s prototype store with a double drive-thru, according to Ben Wasser, Chief Operating Officer of Carolina Franchise Holdings out of Greenville.

    Wasser said the restaurant will be hiring the week before the opening.

    “So anyone interested in employment with us can email their inquiries to benjamin.fleming@carolinafh.com.

    “We’ll offer our regular menu and will also be featuring our new Impossible Whopper, with an all plant-based ‘meat’ patty,” Wasser said. “It’s a great, great product, and we hope everybody will stop in and try it. We’re looking forward to opening and serving the folks in Fairfield County.”

  • The deed is done – Doko Depot is sold!

    Doko Depot

    BLYTHEWOOD – Approximately seven years after council voted in August, 2012, to pursue an economic development project that was characterized as the site where a replica of the town’s original train depot would be built, it appears that the disposition of that replica, the Doko Depot spec building, which sits across from Town Hall, has been sold – finally – but not without one more hitch.

    During last week’s regular monthly meeting, council was asked to authorize an amendment to the sales ordinance to reduce the purchase price of the building.

    “I would ask that you amend the contract at the request of the purchaser to an amount of $305,000 for expenses the purchaser has incurred over the last several months due to the delay of closing,” the town’s Economic Development consultant Ed Parler said, addressing council.

    That delay was due to the discovery about two years ago that the deed to the property was not clear despite the fact that the Town had paid $34,492.80 to two legal firms – Parker Poe and Winters Law Firm – for the initial legal work on the depot project. Satisfying that deed ended up costing the town another $39,922.07 ($14,639.26 to Callison Tigh law firm and $25,000 to Margaret DuBard who previously owned a portion of the property where the Depot sits).

    The total cost of the project, $469,908.52, includes the $74,132.06 in legal fees plus $147,872.50 in miscellaneous expenses including financing costs, architectural costs and other expenses incurred by the Town in the fiscal year prior to construction.

    In an interview with The Voice on Tuesday, Mayor J. Michael Ross said he was not happy with how much the Town had to pay to satisfy the deed for the depot.

    “There’s a reason why we’re where we are,” Ross said. “I’m not sure how much of those legal expenses for the deed we can recover or if we will recover them at all,” Ross said. “But we [council] are going to discuss it in executive session at the next meeting.”

    The project was originally funded through two grants totaling $456,881 from Fairfield Electric Cooperative as part of a franchise fee credit that is awarded for economic development purposes to governments and other institutions and nonprofits. Those grants plus the reduced sale price of $305,000 will leave the town with a net profit of $144,099.98 from the project.

    “When the project began, the town committed to build a building for a specific client, a restauranteur who was going to occupy the building,” Parler told council last week. “This deal didn’t go forward, so council elected to build a spec building and put it out for purchase.”

    The building was constructed and, after myriad delays, Don Russo, owner of Freeway Music, agreed almost two years ago to purchase the building for his own business on one end and a restaurant on the other when it was discovered the deed was not clear.  

    “The town has not lost any money with this transaction,” Parler assured council. “The $456,881 used toward building the depot was grant money.”

    “I would say the end result, again, is an economic development project that started with some scars and might end with one,” Ross said. “The end result, though, is that the town benefits with close to $150,000 and the people get a great music school/performers and another local restaurant.  Not all loss!”

    After an executive session to discuss the matter, council voted unanimously to approve the reduction in sales price from $325,000 to $305,000. 

  • New Owners – New Club: Introducing the Blythewood Country Club

    Photos: Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – The new Blythewood Country Club open house on Friday welcomed an outdoor patio full of guests to the new look of the former Windermere Club.

    Fred Layman, the club’s manager, introduced Jorge Martinez, the president and Principle Partner, COO David Biscan and other principles of the new venture.

    Guests enjoyed live music and complimentary hamburgers, hot dogs and wine on the patio overlooking the lake. The club offered special rates on Friday for golfers and tours of the new 3,000 square-foot state-of-the-art fitness center that also overlooks the lake.

    The Pete Dye golf course and the dining facilities are open to the public.

    For membership information or to tour the renovated facility, call Layman at 786-6088.

  • Cutting the Ribbon

    BLYTHEWOOD – Mayor J. Michael Ross, center assisted by Theresa and Rich McKendrick cut the ribbon Friday for their new consignment shop, 212 Main Consignment, in Blythewood.

    Holding the ribbon at left is the co-owner of the building, Duane Walker. At right is Kristen Bennini, former owner of Bits & Pieces at the same location. Blythewood Town Councilman Malcolm Gordge is holding the ribbon on the right.