Category: Business

  • Holiday Marketplace in downtown Winnsboro

    WINNSBORO – It may be cold and rainy outside on Saturday, but it will be warm and fuzzy inside at Winnsboro’s annual Holiday Market Place featuring offerings of gifts, crafts, bakery confections and local farm produce – fruits, vegetables, meats, honey and more – from farmers and artisans of Winnsboro, Blythewood and Ridgeway.

    The holiday event, from 9 a.m. – 2 p.m., will be located in the enclosed ground floor of the Town Clock and across the street in the former Desportes Stables which has been newly renovated with a rustic, barn-like décor.

    “It’s a great place to find Christmas treasures, those special gifts not available in stores, and something for everyone on your list,” former President of the Fairfield Chamber of Commerce Terry Vickers said. “The products are unique and the prices are low,”

    Downtown merchants will also be offering their own Christmas surprises. Santa will be visiting in the shops and there will be refreshments and caroling.

    “It’s going to be a great day for shoppers,” Vickers said. “There will be so many wonderful items to choose from. Don’t let the weather stop you. You really won’t want to miss it.”

  • Voice designer named Best of Show for 7th year

    Ashley Ghere, designer for The Voice recently received the S.C Press Association’s Palmy award for Best of Show. The Press Association’s Executive Director Bill Rogers presented the award.

    BLYTHEWOOD/FAIRFIELD COUNTY – Ashley Ghere, ad designer for The Voice newspapers in Blythewood and Fairfield County, recently brought home the Best of Show award for her advertising designs for the seventh year in a row. For the last two years, her Best of Show awards were won for ads she created for Laura’s Tea Room in Ridgeway.

    Ghere received the state-wide Best of Show honor in the circulation category of ‘over 8,500.’ However, that ad also took first place in competition with both weekly and daily South Carolina newspapers with circulations ranging from ‘over 8,500’ to ‘25,000 and over’.

    Winning 11 other PALMY Awards in all from the S.C. Press Association for her year’s work, Ghere earned five first-place awards for ads for Prince House of Pizza (Restaurant category), Reese’s Plants (Holiday), Simply Town Boutique (Fashion), Big Grab Map (Events/Entertainment) and Laura’s Tea Room (1/2 page and larger).

    Ghere received two second-place awards for The Law Offices of Shannon Burnett (Professional) and Fireworks, Food & Music (Events/Entertainment).

    She won third-place awards for Cuttin’ Loose Hair Salon (Professional), Blythewood Dental (Health Services), Fairfield County Animal Shelter (Public Service) and ‘Grab the News on the Go’ (Newspaper Promotion).

    Her third place ad in the Newspaper Promotion category finished third behind the daily newspaper, The Post & Courier (first place), and the weekly Charleston City Paper (second place).

    “Ashley’s ads are obviously some of the most creative in the state – in both weekly and daily newspapers,” said Bill Rogers, Executive Director of the Press Association. “Creativity is so important to make ads work for the advertiser.”

    Congratulations to Ashley Ghere! Find out how good she can make your business look by calling 803-767-5711.

  • New industry could bring 200 jobs

    WINNSBORO – Hundreds of new jobs could be coming to Fairfield County in time for Christmas.

    But even if third reading of the economic development deal with the unnamed company isn’t finalized until early 2019, it won’t upset too many people.

    “We’re really excited about the prospect of this,” said County Council Chairman Billy Smith. “Nothing’s done until it’s done, but everything looks good. All indications are that we’re moving in a positive direction.”

    Council members voted 7-0 Monday night on first reading of an ordinance authorizing the county to enter into a fee in lieu of taxes and incentive agreement with the company.

    Smith said talks with the firm have been taking place for at least six months. While he said it’s still too soon to identify the industry or where it would be situated, Smith said the company is international.

    More importantly, the industrial prospect is expected to create 200 jobs and make a $30 million investment in Fairfield County. Smith said many of the jobs would be well-paying.

    “These jobs are going to be good, factory jobs,” Smith said. “We’re not talking about jobs that are paying $8 to $10 an hour. These are good, stable factory jobs, and that’s what we need.”

    The new firm comes as welcome news for Fairfield County, which has weathered some economic setbacks in recent years.

    Most notably, nuclear reactor construction on the failed VC Summer expansion project resulted in thousands of lost jobs.

    That’s on top of more lost jobs when the Winnsboro Wal-Mart closed in 2016.

    Fairfield County faced another scare this past summer, when Element Electronics announced plans to eliminate most of its workforce, citing tariffs the Trump Administration slapped on China, where some components of Element TVs are manufactured.

    Element reversed course in September when those components were removed from Trump’s tariff list. After turning that corner, Fairfield County is on the precipice of turning another.

    “We’ve kind of had a tough road, but we stuck to it,” Smith said. “This will put us in a much better position.”

  • New restaurant opens in Blythewood

    BLYTHEWOOD – McNulty’s Taproom opened on Nov. 3 with co-owner Larry Phillips and Mayor J. Michael Ross cutting the ribbon. New owners, Phillips and Michael Faulk, state the restaurant features lunch, dinner and 25 beers on tap. The restaurant features daily specials, including Taco Tuesday, Pasta Wednesday and Crab Leg Thursday. Shrimp, smoked wings, fried oysters and pizza are also on the menu. The restaurant is located at 420 McNulty Street, formerly occupied by The Nutty Squirrel. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/McNultysTaproom.

  • Grace Coffee FB post stirs up community

    BLYTHEWOOD – “The Town Government is shutting us down,” Matt Beyer, the owner of Grace Coffee posted on Facebook Thursday, Oct. 25. “Give the Mayor a call and let him know how the people of Blythewood feel about Grace Coffee,” Beyer posted along with Mayor J. Michael Ross’ personal cell phone number.

    “My cell phone immediately blew up with calls from angry people,” Ross said. “I was shocked that someone would post my cell on the internet without my permission, and then post that the Town had shut his business down. We didn’t even know he had moved until an electrician came to Town Hall to get a permit to install an electric pole on the Community Center property for Grace Coffee,” Ross said.

    “It is my understanding that Mr. Beyer left his current location in the parking lot of Bits and Pieces Consignment store after he chose not to sign a lease and start paying rent to the new owners,” Ross said. “That’s not the same thing as the Town shutting down his business. The move was between him and the property or store owners. We had nothing to do with it.”

    Beyer posted a video on Saturday backing off his initial post that the Town had shut him down.

    “The Town did not tell us to move off the Main Street property,” Beyer confirmed in the video. He said, however, that his comment about the Town shutting Grace Coffee down, was in reference to the Town not approving a permit for a new power pole at the Community Center property the day after he moved from Bits and Pieces.

    “The other way they shut us down is they are clinging to the ordinance that we are a temporary vendor but they treated us for the last two years as a permanent business that is non-conforming,” Beyer said.

    “Before he moved on Wednesday, Oct. 24, I think it was, we explained to him that if he moved, he would no longer be protected by the grandfather clause that Grace Coffee had enjoyed for the last two years,” Town Administrator Brian Cook told The Voice.

    “It’s as simple as that,” Ross said. “He is welcome to set up in town just like the peanut man and all the other vendors, but he will now have to move every night and live by the same rules the other temporary vendors live by,” Ross said. “Those vendors can’t have permanent gas, water and electrical hookups.”

    In an interview on Tuesday, Oct. 30, Beyer told the Voice that the Town has never told him that he was grandfathered in on that property and that he would no longer be grandfathered in if he moved. He said the town hall has never provided him documentation with that information.

    According to Kristen Benini, the current owner of Bits and Pieces Consignment, Beyer operated in the store’s parking lot rent free for the last two years, with free storage and utilities, paying electricity only when it spiked, and then only for the spike.

    “I don’t think it’s too much to ask for him to pay rent and utilities like every other business in town,” Benini said.

    “I wish Matt all the luck in the world, but I wish he had thought of the consequences of his actions before he pulled his coffee wagon off the lot where he was protected by a grandfather clause,” Ross said. “He has turned himself into a temporary vendor that has to operate under the regular vendor rules.”

    “We did not want to move,” Beyer posted on Facebook, “but there are new owners of Bits and Pieces Consignment, and they are not allowing us to be there anymore.”

    In an interview with The Voice, Beyer said Annette Wilson, the new owner, did push him off the property.

    Beyer said he received a rental agreement from the new owners Tuesday, Oct. 16.

    “But before I even got a chance to talk to them, Friday morning I got a text saying they wanted to retract it, that they didn’t want us there, so we needed to be out by Oct. 31,” Beyer said.

    Emails and texts obtained by The Voice from Wilson appear to contradict those claims.

    Wilson, who took ownership of Bits and Pieces on Nov. 1, said she met with the owners, renters and Beyer in late July to discuss the transition of ownership and that Beyer was told by the property owner at that time that he would be expected to begin paying rent under the new ownership.

    “Mr. Beyer and I discussed the contract for several weeks in phone conversations before we drew it up,” Wilson said. “I scheduled a meeting with Mr. Beyer on Oct. 4 to go over the rental agreement, but he cancelled the day before, saying he was too busy to meet.”

    After that, from Oct. 7 until Oct. 16, both parties say they exchanged emails and talked on the phone about the contract.

    “On Oct. 17, I emailed the contract to Mr. Beyer. He texted me that he received it and he asked me to remove the landscape clause. I told him I would. I then texted all involved (property owners, current renters and Beyer) to schedule a time for us all to meet and to finalize my lease agreement with Mr. Beyer,” Wilson said.

    “The earliest I can meet is Friday,” Beyer emailed back. “I will know my schedule better after tomorrow (Thursday). I will be back in touch.”

    “But we never heard anything else from him,” Wilson said.  “By Friday, when we hadn’t heard from him, and it was the second meeting he had missed to discuss or sign the lease agreement, I had to assume that he was not that interested. After all our communications, I felt he just kept putting us off. It was getting close to Nov. 1, and I didn’t have a signed agreement. So I emailed him what I thought was apparent, that this was not a good fit for either of us and I withdrew the lease,” Wilson said.

    “After our initial meeting in late July, I never was able to meet with him again,” Wilson said. “We never said to him that we did not want him there. We tried. We changed the lease to his specifications, everything. He could have stayed there. All he had to do was sign the lease. Even without signing it, he could have stayed until Oct. 31.”

    Beyer pulled up stakes on Wednesday, Oct. 24 according to Benini. He got permission from Larry Sharpe to set up on the Community Center, which Sharpe owns, that same day. But because his grandfathered status did not extend to that property, Beyer could not obtain a permit for an electrical pole because he was, at that point, a temporary vendor and no longer grandfathered as a permanent structure.

    On Wednesday, Oct. 31, Sharpe told The Voice that Beyer had informed him that he (Beyer) would be moving the coffee trailer that day.

    Beyer told The Voice on Oct. 30 that he did not know where he would set up next.

    “I’m not going to debate the town government, but I am going to allow the community to speak up and if they want us, the government has an opportunity to step in and ask, ‘How can we make this happen?’” Beyer said.

    History of Grandfathering

    When Grace Coffee rolled into town in December 2016, it was considered a mobile vendor. Beyer initially removed the trailer every night as he had agreed to do when he was allowed to set up shop. But as the business became successful, Beyer refused to remove the trailer at night.

    Next, Beyer wanted a Certificate of Appropriateness (COA) which is only given to brick and mortar buildings.

    The Board of Architectural Review (BAR) met on April 17, 2017 to consider Grace Coffee’s request for a COA for its location in the parking lot of 208 Main Street.

    Under what one board member described to The Voice as ‘pressure’ from Town Hall, the BAR reluctantly granted Grace Coffee a temporary COA for a period of one year. According to the Town’s former administrator, Gary Parker, the Town had no ordinance in place to address the vending stand, but the Town’s Planning Consultant (at that time) Michael Criss, who, during government meetings championed street vendors, interpreted it to be a structure.

    The temporary COA was intended to allow the Town time to review and create regulations to address vending stands.

    On April 24, an ordinance that superseded the temporary COA issued by the BAR a week earlier, made Grace Coffee a non-conforming use, Town Administrator Brian Cook wrote in a memo to the BAR. This also gave Grace Coffee the same zoning protections of brick and mortar buildings, something none of the other vendors enjoyed. But the non-conforming status was only applicable at the 208 Main Street address.

    “I really have a struggle with the fairness of this,” Jim McLean, Co-Chair of the BAR said at the time.  “Are the brick & mortar stores being undercut?  They have made a hard investment in the town and are abiding by the regulations and restrictions.  The caveat of unfair competition needs to be addressed.”

  • Rapha Wells cuts ribbon

    WINNSBORO – Owner of a new primary health clinic named Rapha Wells cut the ribbon during a grand opening ceremony Saturday.

    From left, front row, are: Chamber of Commerce Director Terry Vickers, Winnsboro Town Councilwoman Janice Bartell, Carol Williams, Jeffrey Williams and his daughter, Tabitha Williams (owner), the clinic’s physician Dr. Michael Jeremiah Gibson, office manager Lyeisha Hughes, School Board Trustees Darreyl Davis and Rev. Carl Jackson, County Councilmen Douglas Pauley and Neil Robinson and Chamber Administrative Assistant Susan Yenner.

    The clinic, which will open in early November, is located at 1013 Kincaid Bridge Road, Winnsboro.

  • Blythewood plant named industry week finalist

    BLYTHEWOOD – A Blythewood plant located in Carolina Pines industrial park, Intertape Polymer Group, has been named one of 12 Industry Week finalists for North America.

    “It’s the first time we entered and we’re a finalist,” Plant Manager Tyrone Javis said in an interview with The Voice. “And we’re expecting to win.”

    The Blythewood plant makes myriad general purpose and industrial grade tapes including duct tape, masking tape and flat back packaging tape as well as stencil tape for the monument industry.

    The original plant was located in Columbia on Shop Road dating back to the 1930s and officially moved to Blythewood in 2014. The company, which is headquartered in Sarasota, FL, is global with 22 plants.

    Of the 12 industries selected for the recognition, three are located in South Carolina – Boeing in Landis and another plant in Travelers Rest.

    To be considered for the recognition, Javis said the plant had to show three years of continuous improvement in growth within the organization.

    “They’ve asked us to follow up on a couple of action items and will do an onsite audit to confirm what we stated were our improvements,” Javis said. “It’s absolutely a big deal, and we’re excited about it.”

    A plant celebration will be held next week in recognition of the achievement.

    The top winner will be announced in the first quarter of 2019.

  • JWC head rebukes water authority

    JENKINSVILLE – It was another brief meeting of the Jenkinsville Water Company, but what was said afterwards is making waves.

    In a brief interview with The Voice following Monday’s meeting, JWC president Greg Ginyard voiced strong disapproval of a proposed water merger between the Town of Winnsboro and Fairfield County.

    “Why would we pay somebody to join a water authority when they don’t give us any information about it?” Ginyard said, walking to his car. “They ain’t told us what it’s going to be about, what it’s going to be. Nothing.”

    Billy Smith, chairman of Fairfield County Council, said the proposed water and sewer authority would primarily include the Town of Winnsboro and the county. There are no plans to absorb other water companies, including the JWC, Smith said.

    “The water authority doesn’t involve Jenkinsville,” he said. “As contemplated, right now it’s between Winnsboro and Fairfield County.”

    Smith acknowledged that generally speaking, a broader consolidation of water providers into one system could help lower water and sewer rates.

    But the chief motivation behind the current authority plan is to enhance the existing water and sewer system, he said.

    “You can pull your resources together and do more,” Smith said.

    At its July 23 meeting, the Fairfield County Council voted unanimously on a resolution authorizing the county to proceed with creating a joint water and sewer system. Ginyard attended the meeting.

    The resolution authorizes the county “to join with other political subdivisions in the joint system; and other matters related thereto.”

    Ginyard expressed skepticism about the water authority concept.

    “They said they wanted ‘X’ amount of dollars for you to join a water authority, but they [haven’t said] what it’s going do for you, how it’s going to help, what it’s going to do or anything else.”

    Smith said the authority wouldn’t generate any financial obligations on non-participants.

    “This is just the start,” he said. “This is going to be a decade-long endeavor.”

    As for transparency, the JWC has been dogged by that issue through the years.

    In April, after a lengthy executive session, the JWC board voted to accept “Item A,” “Item B” and “Item C” without defining what those items involved.

    After a lack of a quorum forced the JWC to cancel its August meeting, departing board members refused to release the agenda to the media, saying only Ginyard has that authority. Ginyard was among the board members absent from the August meeting.

    The JWC is also a defendant in a pending lawsuit that alleges violations of the state’s Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA.

  • BW Physical Therapy expands, touts local service

    The employees and friends of Blythewood Physical Therapy celebrated the office’s expansion with a ribbon cutting on Friday. Manning the shears are Physical Therapist Joye Mizell and Supervisor Brian Gray. | Photos: Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – When Bruce Filler opened Blythewood Physical Therapy in McNulty Plaza in July, 2011, he was the only physical therapist on duty to treat the location’s first patients. Serving the community is how he grew his business.

    Today, Filler has nine employees at his Blythewood office who treat 40-50 patients per day, but in a new McNulty Plaza space that is double the size of the first one.

    ”It was a much needed move,” Dr. Bryan Gray, the new facilities’ physical therapist supervisor, said during a re-open house and ribbon cutting last Friday that celebrated the expansion with food, door prizes, corn hole competitions and free shoulder and back massages given by massage therapist Jeff Cullen.

    “The additional space allows us more floor room for agility and balance training, things we couldn’t do in the previous office,” Gray said. “Plus we have a break room now that allows us to see patients during the lunch hour, which is a real patient convenience.”

    With the new space and a variety of therapy specialists, including two therapists certified in the McKensie technique for back pain, Gray said his staff can handle just about every physical therapy need.

    “With our capabilities, there’s no reason for folks out here in Blythewood and Fairfield County to go downtown to Columbia for physical therapy,” Gray said. “We encourage folks in the community to tell their doctors that they want to come here for their therapy, and their doctors will write them referrals. Patients don’t always know they have that right.

    “The different with us is that, unlike large clinics that have patient quotas to fill each day, we have one goal – to make our patients better. Filling quotas can interfere with the quality of care,” Gray said. “Here, patients find less of a corporate type environment and more of a community feel. We have a lot of patients in the community that we become friends with. After their experience here, they frequently refer their friends and family members,” Gray said.

    “When our patients come here, we want them to have an overall good feeling about their care,” Gray said. “I think they do.”

    Blythewood Physical Therapy offers a work reconditioning program, does functional capacity evaluations and impairment ratings, pelvic floor rehab as well as therapy for orthopedic, neurological, arthritis, TMJ, vestibular/balance problems, auto accident injuries, sports injuries and work related injuries.

    For more information about Blythewood Physical Therapy, go to www.crcrehab.com or call 803-728-0421. The office is located at 428-3 McNulty Road in Blythewood. Hours are Monday – Friday from 8 a.m. – 6 p.m.

  • Element TV spared from tariffs

    WINNSBORO – Element Electronics has been notified that the components it uses to manufacture television sets in Winnsboro are no longer subject to federal tariffs. The latest U.S Department of Commerce list of tariffs was released yesterday, and Element was not on it.

    “All is well that ends well,” County Council Chairman Billy Smith said. “We could have done without the unnecessary scare, but we’re glad the administration listened to our pleas and has removed the tariffs from the parts Element imports for their products. I know there had been some public reporting about Element looking to possibly expand. I don’t know whether that’s on the table right now; but to Element, if you’re thinking about expanding in Fairfield County, we’re here to help you do that in every way we can.”

    Element announced in early August that it would be closing beginning Oct. 5, due to the issuance of federal tariffs on the parts. In a letter issued to employees, Element’s Vice President of Human Resources, Carl Kennedy, announced that the company would be laying off most of its employees and closing its facility located at 392 Hwy 321 South in Winnsboro.

    Element Manager Mike O’Shaughnessy blamed the closure entirely on ongoing and increasingly difficult tariff related matters.

    The announcement that it would close came just months after Element Electronics sought the county government’s help as it began looking to expand its footprint and potentially increase employment and tax revenue in the county.

    On Wednesday, Element released a statement, that “Our South Carolina factory will remain open!”

    “Our South Carolina and Fairfield teams really came together on this, working with Element to make this possible, and I’m ecstatic at this news that all the hard work paid off,” Smith said. “It’s a great day in Fairfield County.”


    Related: Element blames closing on tariffs; Fairfield asks feds to exempt Element