Category: Community

  • Fishing – medicine for the mind and body

    Jake and Clara Straight and their big catches.

    LAKE WATEREE – In late April, 24 of the top fishing guides and tournament catfishermen from North and South Carolina converged on Lake Wateree for the 2nd Annual Lake Wateree Catfishing event for children with special needs.

    Under the auspices of the United Special Sportsman Alliance, Inc. (USSA) 34 special needs children, along with their parents, were able to fish on Lake Wateree, one of the top catfish lakes in South Carolina.

    The event headquarters was Lake Wateree Baptist Church on Dutchman’s Creek and despite high winds and cool morning temperatures, almost every boat caught multiple fish and catfish weighing up to 45 pounds.

    It was four exciting hours of fishing the kids won’t soon forget.

    The USSA is a not-for-profit dream-wish granting charity specializing in sending children and veterans with life threatening illnesses and disabilities on the outdoor adventure of their dreams.

    Justin Whiteside, a Rock Hill, S.C. fishing guide who fishes several lakes in the Carolinas, came up with the idea for the all-volunteer event.

    “My original idea was to give back to the sport of fishing in some way because fishing has meant so much to me and my family,” Whiteside said. “I wanted to share the outdoors experience. After talking to friends, including professional fishing guides and top professional catfish tournament anglers, the idea became reality.”

    Fishing guides, tournament anglers, cooks and boat crews donated a day of peak fishing time to help with the trip.

    Brian Snipes, who volunteered as a boat captain during the inaugural fishing event last June, did so again this trip. He said reactions from the kids have been incredibly positive both years and that the kids on his boat expressed the joy of several firsts including first fish, biggest fish or both.

    “Turns out I had as much fun as the kids,” he said. “They enjoyed catching every fish regardless of size, and I enjoyed watching them.”

    Lake Wateree and Santee Cooper Lakes fishing guide Scott Peavy of Blythewood said the youngsters on his boat were thrilled to simply have the chance to catch fish.

    “It’s a great event and one that really puts the joy of fishing into perspective,” Peavy said. “What began as a day for helping these kids get a chance to fish, turned into a day where the guides and tournament fishermen were impacted in a very positive way.”

    Peavy said the events have made him realize that it’s easy to take the sport of fishing and the outdoors for granted.

    Whiteside said because of generous donations to the event, all the children received fishing tackle of their own, including rods and tackle boxes.

    On Friday prior to the fishing trip, the kids and their families were treated to dinner, and the event wrapped up with a cookout.

    “You never know when something we do now will impact a youngster in a positive way for the short or long-term,” Whiteside said. “It takes a lot of volunteers to pull off an event like this,” he said. “Everyone from boat Captains, cooks and clean-up crews made a real difference in a lot of lives, not just the kids’ lives but the parents’, too. USSA adventures give patients something to look forward to and help sustain them in their time of need.”

    Peavy agreed that healing thru enjoyment of the outdoors is a reality.

    “Enjoying God’s great outdoors gift to us all is a passion for many and I, one hundred percent, believe it’s one of the best healing opportunities in the world, not just physically but mentally and emotionally,” he said. “Participating in these events has been humbling, enriching and healing for the volunteers, too. As a fishing guide I take people fishing and get paid for it. I love guiding, but the opportunity to take these kids fishing has become much more valuable to me.”

    At the end of the day all echoed the same sentiment – that it was one of the best things they’d ever been involved with in the sport of fishing.

  • Arts on the Ridge coming Saturday

    RIDGEWAY – Ridgeway will be colorfully yarn-bombed and read for visitors on Saturday, May 4, when the 13th annual Arts on the Ridge festival kicks off with a farmer’s market opening at 9 a.m. and festival activities from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.

    This year’s focus is on Opening Doors to Literary and Artisan Expression featuring 17 published local authors, panel discussions and book giveaways, arts and crafts vendors and unique handcrafted items.

    Plein Air painters will be at work along the streets, there will be free musical performances, the Fairfield County Farmers Market will be open from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. and attendees will be welcomed to visit the town’s new library.

    At straight up 10 a.m., the festival organizer, Phyllis Gutierrez, will welcome the crowd and present the Fairfield County Arts Association will present the 2019 Friend of the Arts Award. The remainder of the day will be filled with musical performances, literary discussions, giveaways and drawings.

    Stores and restaurants will be open all day with specials for Mother’s Day and other sales.

    “The weather is expected to be great and the shopping will be too,” Gutierrez said. “It will be a really fun day for the whole family.”

     

  • 6th Annual Hall of Fame Induction

    WINNSBORO – The 6th annual Fairfield County School District Hall of Fame gala was held April 27 in the school gym. A welcome by Tracie Swilley, Principal of FCHS and the introduction of the inductees was followed by dinner and entertainment by Seven Show Band. This year’s inductees include Russell N. Feaster, Sr., Jessie C. Gaston, Lloyd J. McGriff, Carolyn P. Pierce,  James E. Smalls (posthumously) and Gloria B. Thomas.

  • Pine Tree Playhouse to give encore performance

    Cast of Noises Off | Bill Marion

    WINNSBORO – By popular audience demand, the Pine Tree Playhouse will present an encore performance of ‘Noises Off’ on Saturday, May 4 at 8 p.m. The performance is one night only.

    ‘Noises Off’ is a play within a play about an ambitious director and his troupe of mediocre actors. The silly, sexy comedy is a single-set farce in which lovers frolic, doors slam, clothes are tossed away and embarrassing hi-jinks ensue.

    The play is a slightly bawdy British farce which may not be suitable for children under 13.

    The cast includes Matthew Swanson, Fran Jolly Shepard, K.E. Carter, Sydney Fowler, Shane Moody, Lisa Cathcart, Nancy Jolly Smith, Brian Garner and Maddie Garner from Winnsboro, Great Falls, Blythewood, Chester, Columbia and Aiken. The set was designed and built by Frank McKinney, Bill Wedding, Matthew Swanson and Gary Baker. The set crew includes McKinney, Wedding, and Baker.

    During the play’s two 10-minute intermissions guests will be offered (for a small donation) refreshments of wine, water and snacks in the lobby.

    ‘NOISES OFF’ was written by Michael Frayn and is produced with the exclusive permission of Samuel French www.samuelfrench.com. It is directed by Shane Moody and Becky Koeller.

    To reserve seats, call (803) 635-6847 or email pinetreeplayhouse@gmail.com.

  • Bengals retire Sydney Burnsed’s Jersey

    BLYTHEWOOD – Sydney Burnsed’s softball sisters, friends and family came together at Blythewood High School on Friday to retire the former Bengal’s #6 softball jersey.

    The 2016 graduate of Blythewod High School died in a car accident in March 2018. As her parents unveiled a memorial sign to be hung on the fence of the softball field, there were hugs, tears and smiles of remembrance.

    Sydney was a four-year member of Blythewood’s softball team.

  • Goins fights back

    WINNSBORO – Bertha Goins is fighting back.

    A week after a Jenkinsville Water Company attorney issued a cease and desist letter and threatened to sue Goins over comments she’s made critical of water quality, she’s hired her own attorney to safeguard her First Amendment rights.

    Working in a private capacity, Goins’ attorney Tommy Morgan said his client categorically denies making any false and defamatory statements.

    Last Thursday, he wrote back to the JWC’s attorney, demanding that the water company cease infringing upon Goins’ right to free speech.

    “Ms. Goins will not be silenced by Jenkinsville Water Company’s threats of legal action and damages to be sought against her for merely speaking out about the water she receives from Jenkinsville Water Company,” the letter states.

    “Despite your meritless legal demand, Ms. Goins will continue to shed light on the matter that Jenkinsville Water Company seems so intent on keeping in the dark,” the letter continues.

    In a telephone interview with The Voice, Morgan said Goins has no desire to engage in a protracted legal battle. But Morgan noted Goins is committed to speaking freely about water quality issues.

    “We would be happy to have a meeting with the Jenkinsville Water Company over their water quality,” he said. “She was just trying to express her thoughts and concerns.”

    Morgan also questioned why Goins appears to have been singled out.

    “Other individuals spoke to the media about water quality,” he said. “It would be interesting to see if anyone else received a cease and desist letter. This threat of legal action is not going to stop Ms. Goins.”

    Goins has been a frequent critic of not only the Jenkinsville Water Company, but also the Town of Jenkinsville and Greg Ginyard, president of the JWC and the town’s mayor.

    In June 2018, Goins lobbied heavily against a massive annexation effort by the town, which was voted down. Morgan said he couldn’t say whether Goins’ past clashes with the town contributed to the letter.

    “Obviously the water company is distinct and separate from the Town of Jenkinsville,” Morgan said. “Ms. Goins is not focusing on the annexation vote.”

    When asked by The Voice for a comment about Morgan’s response, an attorney representing the water company emailed that, “JWC does plan on making a full response to Mr. Morgan’s letter next week, but we do not see this as a First Amendment issue as defamatory statements are not protected by the First Amendment.”

    On March 28, a Goodwyn Law Firm attorney sent a cease and desist letter to Goins, which disputed remarks she made to various local media organizations stating that Jenkinsville water quality is poor and contains sediments.

    “These false and misleading statements are defamatory and illegal,” the letter stated. “Legal demand is hereby made that you immediately stop such illegal activities.

    “If you continue to make such false and defamatory statements, I have been instructed to take all legal steps to enforce my client’s rights, including filing suit against you, for injunctive relief, slander and defamation seeking all damages allowed by law,” the letter continues.

    Also on March 28, in tandem with the cease and desist letter, the Jenkinsville Water Company sent a separate letter to its members.

    That letter contested of what the JWC calls “erroneous reporting,” and makes several innuendos about being absorbed by larger water companies.

    Both The Voice and The State newspapers, citing public records, have reported that the JWC has been cited by the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control.

    Documents obtained by The Voice show the JWC has been cited three times in the past five years, most recently in 2016.

    As for the suggestion that the JWC is facing absorption, the newly formed Fairfield Joint Water and Sewer Authority, which consists of Fairfield County and Town of Winnsboro representatives, has been discussing ways to beef up infrastructure at the I-77 megasite.

    The authority’s chief objective, however, is to attract new industry to Fairfield County, and not to consolidate other water companies. Absorbing the JWC or any other water company has never been discussed.

    Goins has independently called for the JWC to join the authority, but no other council members have made that suggestion.

    Still, the JWC letter takes several jabs at water authorities.

    “When smaller companies are taken over by a larger water system, this historically results in rate increases between 100% and 150%,” the letter states. “We are committed to not letting this happen to JWC members.”

    Morgan questioned the JWC’s statistics.

    “I have no idea where they got that data from,” he said.

  • Good news for Brelynn

    Breelyn Seeger cuddles with her mom, Mandy Seeger, during the Family Fun Day fundraiser at Doko Park on Sunday. | Photos: Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – Last week, Mandy Seeger received the best news she’s had in a long time. Doctors at Duke University Hospital notified her family that a donor has been found and approved whose bone marrow is a match for her daughter, Brelynn.

    Brelynn, 5, has suffered from a debilitating immune deficiency called Combined Variable Immune Deficiency (IKAROS) for most of her life.

    She and her family – mom, Mandy; dad, Scotty and her brother Bryson, 16 – left Wednesday for Durham, N.C. where they will remain for up to a year as Brelynn undergoes treatment that, hopefully, will cure her illness.

    But the road to wellness will be long and difficult for the five-year-old and her family.

    “For the first week or so, she’ll have several doctor visits. Then on April 29 she will be admitted to Duke, where a tube will be inserted into her arm and through the main artery in her heart where it will remain for six months. Three lines will run off that tube for pain medication, nutrition and blood sampling.”

    And that’s just the beginning.

    “To prepare her for the bone marrow transplant, she will undergo chemotherapy for 8 – 11 days,” Seeger said, “and will remain in the hospital for up to 45 days.” Then the family will have to remain in the Durham area near the hospital for up to a year.

    “We will all stay at the Ronald McDonald House for the first two months, then we hope we will be able to move into a small apartment near the hospital for the remainder of our stay,” Seeger said. “But it’s first come, first served, so we hope one will be available when the time comes.”

    During that time Brelynn will continue to remain isolated until her immune system becomes strong enough to ward off germs that, in the past, could have proven fatal.

    Both Mandy and Scotty are taking year-long, unpaid leaves from their jobs – she works from home for Amazon and he is a business technician for Spectrum.

    “My grandmother will also be going with us to help look after Brelynn. While she’s in the hospital, at least one of us is required to stay with her every moment. We’ll be responsible for much of her daily care – mouth washes four times a day, taking her on short walks every day, even when she doesn’t feel like it, bathing her and other things,” Seeger said. “We’ll take shifts in her hospital room around the clock.”

    Bryson will also move with the family and attend school online.

    “He didn’t want us to go off and leave him here,” Seeger said. “We’ll all be together through this.”

    Seeger said there are many risks for her daughter during and after the transplant.

    “But it’s our best hope for her to have a normal life,” Seeger said. “It will be very difficult and sometimes scary for her. We are trying to prepare her as best we can. The doctors have told us to tell her what will be happening, to explain everything before it happens.”

    Because of Brelynn’s susceptibility to infections, she has had serious bouts with pneumonia, flu and other illnesses since birth. For that reason, she has spent her young life in near isolation – from friends, from playing with other children, from going shopping and eating out with her family.

    The trials have been many for the family during Brelynn’s illness, Seeger said. Two years ago, Brelynn was hospitalized with pneumonia. She was so ill that she was on life support for a while, her mother said.

    “After that,” Seeger said, “the doctors suggested we take Bryson out of school for a year and a half. The germs he brought home from school were too dangerous for Brelynn.”

    During a benefit in Doko Park last weekend, the family’s church, Pineview Baptist, organized a family festival to raise funds for the myriad of expenses the Seegers will have during the next year.

    It was a rare outing for Brelynn.

    “She just loved it and had so much fun. She ran and played with the other kids from church, ate hot dogs and just had a good time,” Seeger said.

    The event raised about $10,000, something Seeger said her family greatly appreciates.

    “I can’t say how much we appreciate our church members who put this together and worked so hard on it,” Seeger said. “And we are thankful for everyone who came out to wish us well and donate their time, money and effort for us. It meant so much.”

    “After we got home, I asked Brelynn what she enjoyed the most about the park and she said, “’Playing with Amy [the church pastor’s daughter].’ It’s such a little thing that most kids take for granted, but it’s something she almost never gets to do. Hopefully, after this year, she’ll be able to play with other children and do other things that children her age enjoy,” Seeger said.

    The church’s fundraising efforts are continuing with the hope of raising at least $20,000 more. To donate, contact Carla Hawkes at 843-408-3944 or the church’s pastor D. T. Kirkland at 803-381-3898.

    Well-wishers joined the Seeger family on Saturday for a Family Fun Day fundraiser organized by Pineview Baptist Church.
  • Yow wins March Madness cash

    BLYTHEWOOD – Joshua Yow, 15, of Blythewood has been named the winner of The Voice’s $200 March Madness Bracket Challenge. While no contest entry chose Virginia to win the Championship, Yow and one other entry, Yow’s neighbor Bobby Armentrout, placed Virginia in the Championship game.  To break the tie, Yow got 43 picks right and Armentrout was one pick short with 42.

    This was not Yow’s only Bracket Challenge win this year. He also won the Challenge at his dad’s place of business which he won last year as well.

    Asked if his picks were guided by his basketball expertise, Yow, a 6’ 3’’ Blythewood High School freshman, said he doesn’t play basketball. He attributes his win, instead, to “dumb luck” and a few bracket predictions he viewed online. So far those skills have paid off, winning three out of three Bracket Challenges.

    Yow said the $200 will come in handy.

    “I’ll probably pay off my cell phone with it,” he said.

    Aside from Yow and Armentrout, only four entries chose Virginia to play in the Final Four, and only one picked Texas Tech to make it to the semifinal round. No other entries chose Texas Tech or Virginia for the Championship bout.

    But never fear, March Madness maniacs, there’s always next year and the hope of an unbusted bracket.

  • Free job training for construction work

    Training Targets Disadvantaged Women, Minorities in Fairfield

    WINNSBORO – “We’re looking to provide free training for 10 Fairfield County individuals over 18 who are interested in careers in highway construction,” Larry Salley with the Benedict Allen Community Development Corporation said in his address to Council Monday evening.

    “But for the last eight weeks we’ve been working with the County’s WIOA, DSS, the Fatherhood Coalition, the Good Samaritan House and we’ve sent 85 letters to churches, and we have only gotten three applications. We need someone to help us get the word out,” Salley said.

    “We are targeting counties with high unemployment rates, and we’re looking for individuals – women and minorities – who traditionally would not be in these kinds of jobs,” Salley said. “We’re looking for current residents of Fairfield County who are economically disadvantaged.

    The training is being offered through the Corporation’s Transportation Careers Training Program and will be conducted at the Fairfield Central High School’s adult education facility.

    The training, Salley said, consists of three phases:

    1. appointment or pre-employment training (soft skills, resume writing, flagger training, etc.),
    2. commercial driver’s license (CDL) training – permit only and
    3. heavy equipment operator training for bulldozers, back hoes, etc.

    Applicants must have a high school diploma or a GED and a valid driver’s license. The training lasts 8 – 9 weeks and, upon the successful completion of the program, Salley said the program’s staff will help the graduates find employment.

    “We work with a number of SCDOT contractors to help place our graduates” Salley said.

    “We pay for all the training except for the pre-employment drug screening,” Salley said. “We pay for physicals, materials, safety equipment and training.”

    Salley said individuals with a criminal history may apply for the program, but applicants must be unemployed or underemployed (part time or temporary).

    “We are trying to get the first training classes filled by the second week in May,” Salley said. “So we are really pressed to find at least 25 applicants.”

    While Salley said that transportation is a problem for applicants in Fairfield County, County Administrator Jason Taylor offered the County’s transportation system to help get individuals in the program to and from training classes.

    Applications can be completed online, however, all submissions must include the requested documentation at the time of application to determine eligibility for the program.

    For more information, contact Venus Sabb at 803-705-4631 or via email at venus.sabb@benedict.edu or Salley at 803-705-4682 or email at larry.salley@benedict.edu.

  • Films selected for Fest

    BLYTHEWOOD – “The films that will be screened are now decided, so we know what the audience will be viewing, they are all very good – sad, serious, funny and some very good stories, all short and easy to watch. Adults and students will find enjoyment in them,” Ray Smith, organizer of the Doko Film Fest, said of the event set for April 26 – 27.

    The event, featuring the work of student film makers, is expected to be high-end entertainment for both adults and students, with films submitted from across the state of South Carolina, Texas, California and Canada.  Film categories include animation, music, comedy, short stories and doc mentaries.

    Of the entries, Smith said 13 films were selected.

    A special reception will be held at the Doko Manor on April 26 for Blythewood’s own Academy Award winner, Michelle Eisenreich who, with her production team, has won two Oscars for special effects. Eisenreich also served as a judge of the entries and will make a presentation on screening day, April 27 at Westwood High School.

    Also, during the screenings, four masterclasses will be offered that anyone can attend: making films with a smart phone, good camera and lighting techniques, directing actors and what makes a winning film.

    The actor who plays Michael Myers in the movie Halloween also served as a judge for the entries.

    Tickets to the event are $5 for adults and free for students.

    For more information about Doko Film Fest, go to dokofilmfest.com.