Category: Government

  • Community forum set for admin building

    Forum Set For Sept. 20 At Fairfield Midlands

    WINNSBORO – A community forum and county council work session concerning the proposed new county administration building project will be held from 5 – 8 pm at the Midlands Technical College’s Fairfield Campus on Wednesday, Sept. 20.

    The forum will include a 5 p.m. reception where citizens can speak openly with the developers, council members and lead county administration staff, County Council Chairman Billy Smith said.

    The work session, which will include an updated presentation on the proposed project, will focus on addressing and discussing questions submitted by citizens prior to the meeting. Citizens may submit questions in any of the following ways:

    • Email question(s) to the Clerk to Council, Mrs. Patti Davis, via patti.locklair@fairfield.sc.gov. The clerk will reply to all questions received to provide confirmation. If you do not receive a response, in order to ensure that your question(s) have been received, please call the clerk directly at (803) 635-1620.
    • Turn in your written question(s) to the front desk receptionist at the Fairfield County Government Complex, 350 Columbia Road, Winnsboro, SC 29180.
    • Mail your written question(s) to P.O. Drawer 60, ATTN: Patti Davis, Winnsboro, SC 29180.
    • Or submit questions on the form found at www.surveymonkey.com/r/newadminbldg

    “We ask that those submitting questions provide their name, address and contact information along with the submission,” Smith said. “Submissions without this information will not be considered for discussion during the work session. All questions must be received by Friday, September 14, 2018. If you have any questions concerning this process, please do not hesitate to contact the Clerk.”

  • Admin building faces opposition

    Smith Pushes Back In 15-Minute Soliloquy

    WINNSBORO – Council members voted 4-0 to approve second reading of an ordinance authorizing development of a new administration building and a lease agreement and other contracts associated with the Mt. Zion site.

    But repurposing the old Mt. Zion institute into a new Fairfield County administration building is far from a slam dunk.

    Council members Dan Ruff and Douglas Pauley abstained as they did during first reading two weeks ago.

    Mikel Trapp was absent Monday, though he voted against first reading.

    Council members Cornelius Robinson, Ruff and Pauley called for public forums to be held before third reading, though Robinson ultimately voted in favor of second reading.

    “We need to have an open forum before we have third reading so everyone is aware of what’s going on,” Ruff said. “Also I would like to get written estimates for this building and other options. This is a big deal. We have to take time to make sure what we do is right.”

    “We still have some things with the contract to button up,” Smith conceded. He said the $11.4 million proposal relies heavily on selling tax credits, which is why he thinks it’s the best option. But if the deal falls through, the alternative is to demolish the building altogether, he said.

    “[Mt. Zion] is the only thing I see that we can do and afford to do,” he said. “It’s not the ideal situation, but when you’re $40 million plus in debt and unable to borrow any more, you have to dig out of those holes.”

    Fairfield County is working with a North Carolina developer proposed plans to redevelop the site.

    More than half of the estimated cost – about $6.5 million – would come from tax credits and private equity from the developer, with county lease payments covering the difference.

    County leaders say the 45,000-square-foot building would more than double the existing 21,000-square-foot building, which faces $3 million in repairs.

    Once again, the Mt. Zion issue drew several residents to the podium Monday night, including candidates for public office.

    Marie Rosborough, who opposes the site, said she fears it limits citizens’ access to law enforcement.

    “There’s no justification for putting the sheriff’s office there,” Rosborough said. “You’re not responsible for saving buildings. That’s not your role. Your job is to provide taxpayers the most for their money.”

    Randy Bright of Ridgeway cautioned the council against moving forward too quickly.

    “The reasons and details of the plan were poorly communicated. We don’t know the final cost,” Bright said. “That was clear in last week’s meeting and it was so clear, the numbers didn’t even add up. We’ve got to get a whole lot more details and better communication of this plan.”

    Dena Boorda said she and her husband had more at stake than anyone else because they live directly across the street from the teacherage.

    “It’s literally out our front door,” Boorda said. “We are not opposed to the project given certain criteria can be met. We are willing to hear the facts. We haven’t seen any documents so I’m respectfully requesting that we have an opportunity to get the facts and be able to ask questions.”

    Some Fairfield County residents propose looking at Wal-Mart instead of Mt. Zion for an administration building.

    Ordinarily reserved and guarded in his comments, Smith spoke from the heart during a 15-minute soliloquy during the council comments portion of the meeting, He systematically shot down the various populist arguments against repurposing Mt. Zion Institute property into a new county administration building.

    “If third reading were tonight, I’d vote no,” he said. “But I would ask those who are opposed to say where the money for an alternative[new administration building or renovation] is going to come from.”

    Smith touched on a variety of subjects, including economic development, public safety and fiscal responsibility. His rebuttals were candid.

    “If we want to take that asset[Walmart]  off the market, we can do that,” Smith said.

    But he said that the day after Element announced it may slash 126 jobs due to U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, an economic prospect representing up to 250 jobs toured the shuttered Wal-Mart building at 721 Highway 321 Bypass.

    The City of Aiken, for example, is following a similar route, spending $9.5 million from a 20-year bond to refurbish a former Food Lion into a new public safety headquarters.

    Smith said that wouldn’t work in Fairfield County because frivolous spending by the previous council has eroded the county’s borrowing capacity.

    He also said Wal-Mart is ineligible for the tax credits for which Mt. Zion qualifies. And, Wal-Mart continues to pay property taxes and as it does, the building gets looks on a regular basis from prospective industries. The same is true of the Fairfield Memorial Hospital site, Smith said.

    “These alternatives would be no less expensive,” he said. “They would be the same, if not more. And we wouldn’t get tax credits to help pay for those.”

    He debunked an argument that the new building would attract vagrants, noting in recent weeks that homeless people were living in the structure and commonly loiter around it at present.

    Smith said the proposed facility would feature more parking, increased police presence and could lead to employees spending more money downtown.

    He said he’d support deed restrictions to prevent developers from using the administration building proposal as a launching pad to develop any residential properties, addressing the fears of low-income housing coming into the area.

    “If you have a better plan, bring it forward and we’ll consider it,” Smith said. “If this plan doesn’t go forward, my next move is to push demolishing the building so that we can solve its future, once and for all.”

    Blaming Fairfield County’s financial predicament on past council members who he said pushed for a $24 million bond issue in 2013, Smith said they banked on revenues from the failed V.C. Summer nuclear plant to repay the bond, revenues that never materialized.

    “Because of that $24 million bond, we can’t finance a thing,” he said.

  • Detailed review set for Blythewood’s traffic woes

    Blythewood – Thursday, Aug. 23 marked the kickoff of the Blythewood Traffic Improvement Study that is the result of a partnership between the Central Midlands Council of Governments (CMCOG), the Town of Blythewood and local consulting firm AECOM.

    The purpose of the study is to carry out a detailed review of the town’s current traffic and prepare recommendations to address current and future traffic issues based on the population increase and economic development anticipated over the next 20 years.

    US Highway 21 between Blythewood Road and Langford Road has been identified as a key focal area of this study, but an additional 20 intersections will also be examined.

    Initially, using information provided by two focus groups, AECOM will develop a transportation model to identify future transportation needs of the Town.

    The focus groups include representatives from SCDOT, Richland County, CMCOG, COMET, local developers, Richland 2 School District, the Chamber of Commerce and local businesses as stakeholders.

    A series of public meetings will be held in the near future and input from all residents is welcome on the Town’s web-site or Facebook pages

  • Santa gets new sleigh for 2018 parade

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Blythewood Christmas parade planning and funding are underway. Included in the plan is a float for Santa.

    Paul Richter, representing the Knights of Columbus, came before Council Tuesday evening to request $8,663 to finance this year’s Christmas parade. That’s about $3,300 more than the group requested last year.

    Additional funds are needed to provide a second reviewing stand and a second sound system on Main Street, Richter said. For many years, the reviewing stand was on Main Street but was moved to Blythewood Road three years ago when the Blythewood Chamber of Commerce was organizing the parade.

    “The shortest stretch of the parade route is on Blythewood Road,” Richter said. “And the longest route is on Blythewood Road. The majority of our citizens viewing the parade are on Main Street and they don’t have a clue what’s going on at the reviewing stand on Blythewood Road.”

    The cost for the second reviewing stand and sound system is about $3,000, Richter told Council.

    The $8,663 also includes an additional $500 for a nice float for Santa this year.

    “I did get comments last year,” Ross said with a laugh. “People didn’t like seeing Santa riding in the back of a pickup truck.”

    Councilman Eddie Baughman and Ross commended the Knights for the work they do on the parade.

    “You took this over when we had nowhere else to turn,” Ross said. “You all have done an unbelievable job and even refunded a check back for us two years ago when you didn’t spend all the money we gave you,” Ross said.

    Because the parade is a town event and is not specifically intended to bring in tourists, Ross said it will be funded from the hospitality taxes now and in the future instead of from accommodations taxes as in the past.

    The application stated that about 15,000 spectators are expected to view the parade this year.

    Annexation

    In other business, Council passed first reading to annex two properties on Syrup Mill Road into the town. William and Sandra Tomes, owners, petitioned for their three-quarter acre properties (R12810-05-01 and R12800-01-07) to be annexed with an interim zoning district classification of Rural.

    Both lots were zoned Rural in Richland County and are contiguous to the town to the east. Cook said the couple plans to ask for a permanent zoning classification of Rural.

  • Fairfield, RW laud policing pact

    Ridgeway Mayor Heath Cookendorfer, front, and Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery comment about the county’s new arrangement to police Ridgeway. | Michael Smith

    RIDGEWAY – Fairfield County and Ridgeway elected leaders are calling it a win-win arrangement.

    Following the defunding of the Ridgeway Police Department, the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office will now police the town of 319 residents.

    Speaking at Monday night’s County Council meeting, Sheriff Will Montgomery said off-duty deputies would spend about six hours per day policing the town. That may increase if and when Ridgeway sees a need to increase police presence, he said.

    “It gives the deputies an opportunity to make some extra money, so that’s another good thing,” Montgomery said.

    Ridgeway Mayor Heath Cookendorfer said he’s excited by the new intergovernmental agreement.

    “We’re getting some great feedback from citizens,” Cookendorfer said. “This is something we’d be using for just six hours with the option to increase hours as we need or see the need for, as well as more days.”

    Earlier this month, Ridgeway Town Council voted to disband and defund the town’s police department and the former chief, Christopher Culp.

    The vote came following a flotilla of complaints lodged against the chief.

    Many complained the chief spent a disproportionate amount of time doubling as a de facto school resource officer at Geiger Elementary School at the expense of policing the town.

    Other complaints cited general rudeness, according to documents The Voice obtained from the state’s Freedom of Information Act.

    The tone at Monday night’s County Council meeting was much more positive, however.

    “We appreciate the county allowing us to enter into an agreement,” Cookendorfer said.

    Specific costs weren’t mentioned, though Town Councilman Dan Martin reported at the Aug. 9 Town Council meeting that the switch to using county law enforcement services would save the Town approximately $70,000 annually.  Under the agreement, the Town of Ridgeway would be responsible for paying for gas for police vehicles, while the county would handle vehicle maintenance.

    Montgomery didn’t see those as issues.

    “We’re already in the town of Ridgeway, so that’s not a big deal. Most of the time they [deputies] are on foot,” he said.

    In other business, the council voted 6-0 to give Montgomery approval to apply for an $11,251 JAG grant to purchase a Ranger utility vehicle.

    Montgomery said the vehicle would be a helpful tool during special events. He said it could also be used to help search for missing persons.

    Council members noted it also would be helpful during wildfires or other natural disasters.

    “It will be a great addition to our department, a great tool for our department,” Montgomery said.

  • Smith outlines new admin building costs

    Winnsboro – Fairfield County isn’t promising that it’s a magic pill.

    But local leaders do think the plan to repurpose the old Mt. Zion Institute site in Winnsboro into a new county administration building is as innovative as it is necessary.

    “My biggest concern is if this project doesn’t go forward, there’s something that’s going to have to happen to resolve the issues with the current building,” County Chairman Billy Smith said Monday. “It’s got some problems I probably shouldn’t even tell you about.”

    Smith estimates renovating the existing county building would cost at least $3 million. It would be ineligible for the tax credits for which the Mt. Zion site qualifies.

    And Fairfield County’s borrowing capacity is virtually zero due to a $24 million bond issue it’s repaying. Smith added that other unspecified financial decisions by previous council members have further financially handcuffed the county.

    “It boxed us in, in terms of what we can and can’t do,” he said. “This is a creative model that Fairfield County could probably win some type of award for. In no other way would this be feasible.”

    Otherwise, county voters would have to “go vote on a referendum to raise their own taxes,” Smith added.

    The plan to repurpose the Mt. Zion institute costs about $11.4 million, but a series of tax credits and private equity would cover more than half the cost.

    Smith said interest free county lease payments would cover the rest.

    Rory Dowling with 1st & Main, a Durham, North Carolina firm working with the county, outlined the two-part tax credit proposal at the Aug. 13 council meeting.

    First, he said, the firm has already applied for state and federal historic tax credits.

    The plan also calls for additional New Market Tax Credits. Dowling said 1st & Main has already received a letter of interest from the Community Affordable Housing Equity Corporation, or CAHEC, to provide the allocation.

    Together the credits total $5.4 million. Dowling said repurposing Mt. Zion is a preferred project for CAHEC, but not a guarantee.

    “It’s a very good sign, we hope to know more in October when some of these (Community Development Entities) receive some feedback on a federal level on whether they can expect some level of credits,” Dowling said regarding CAHEC’s interest. “We take these tax credits and sell them to a third party at a discount, which then finances the project.”

    An additional $1.1 million in equity has been pledged by 1st & Main, leaving about $4.5 million, totaling $11 million.

    “We do expect that to come down. This is a starting number,” Dowling said. “By our modeling, we think this is going to save the county $3.5 million over a 20-year period. It significantly reduces your payments.”

    As it stands, a majority of council supports the plan. The council voted 4-1 for first reading of an ordinance authorizing construction of a new administration building, as well as a lease agreement associated with the project.

    Council members Dan Ruff and Douglas Pauley abstained, each signaling they wanted more information before committing to a vote. Councilman Mikel Trapp opposed the ordinance.

    Economic development has become the rallying cry for those supporting the Mt. Zion plan. Several residents speaking during public input last Monday night expressed that support by invoking the looming loss of 126 jobs at Element Electronics.

    Those who oppose the plans do so for various reasons.

    Some cite a confederate monument that stands on the far corner of the green as the reason they do not want Mt. Zion renovated.

    Others cite cost.

    County resident Jana Childers said she prefers repurposing another existing building, such as the Wal-Mart that recently shut down. But that building is outside of the downtown.

    Smith said he understands the criticisms of investing in government owned property.

    But he also noted that the county’s approximately 120 employees must eat and shop as well, and nesting the new county building close to shops and restaurants does provide a benefit.

    “To have those folks be in such close distance where they could walk to (downtown businesses,) it would be huge for a town like Winnsboro,” Smith said. “It’s a hassle to get into your car and drive somewhere.”

    As envisioned, the proposed 45,000-square-foot building would more than double the county’s existing 21,000-square-foot structure.

    Administrative offices, the sheriff’s office, a daycare center and parks and recreation with a new gym would move into the new building. County council chambers would move there as well.

    Second reading is scheduled for the council’s Aug. 27 meeting. A public hearing on the building proposal is likely.

  • Fairfield asks feds to exempt Element

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County leaders want the federal government to waive tariffs impacting Element Electronics, tariffs the TV assembler says will wipe out 126 jobs, essentially shuttering the Winnsboro plant.

    However, a nonprofit geared toward the manufacturing sector disputes whether tariffs and trade wars are even to blame.

    By unanimous vote, Fairfield County Council swiftly approved a resolution on Monday that asks the Trump Administration to spare Element from the 25 percent tax set to take effect.

    “Fairfield County is ill-equipped to withstand the further loss of jobs and economic investment due to the recent events surrounding the closure of the V.C. Summer Nuclear Plant expansion project which resulted in the loss of over 5,000 local jobs and billions of dollars in investment that would have positively impacted Fairfield County and its citizens,” the resolution states.

    Element initially accepted $1.3 million in tax credits and pledged to create up to 500 jobs by the end of 2018, according to an August 2013 news release from the S.C. Department of Commerce announcing Element’s plans to open a Winnsboro plant.

    This past spring, a 10 percent tariff on Chinese goods took effect, prompting Element and Fairfield County to modify the incentive agreement by reducing incentive levels.

    If the 25 percent tariff takes effect, Element has said it would be forced to lay off most of its workforce. Although Element is based in the U.S., its televisions consist of components imported from China.

    President Donald J. Trump has taken aim at China, specifically, in tariff-related tweets to the commander in chief’s official Twitter page.

    His most recent tweet posted Aug. 5, two days before the Element announcement, said tariffs would build economic prosperity.

    “Tariffs are working big time. Every country on earth [sic] wants to take wealth out of the U.S., always to our detriment,” the tweet stated. “I say, as they come, Tax [sic] them. If they don’t want to be taxed, let them make or build the product in the U.S. In either event, it means jobs and great wealth.”

    While losing 126 jobs is regrettable, unfair trade with China has been much more punitive to South Carolina workers, according to the Alliance for American Manufacturing.

    The alliance further claims in an Aug. 8 op-ed to its website that the tariff announcement is merely a convenient way to shift blame.

    “Element says it is seeking to have ‘our parts removed from the tariff list’ in order to maintain its taxpayer-funded operations in South Carolina,” the alliance op-ed states. “But nothing has changed — Element still wants the government pick up the tab for its American facility while staying dependent on China.”

    In support of its position, the alliance cites a recent study by the Economic Policy Institute, an independent think tank many conservative websites criticize as affiliated with the labor movement and left-wing policies.

    According to the study, unfair trade with China displaced 50,700 South Carolina workers between 2001 and 2015.

    The study ranked South Carolina 13th in jobs lost by percentage of workforce (2.58 percent), though it didn’t break down job losses by county.

    “Growing U.S. trade deficits with China have reduced demand for goods produced in every region of the United States and led to job displacement in all 50 states and the District of Columbia,” the study states.

    This isn’t the first time the Alliance for American Manufacturing has clashed with Element.

    In 2014, the alliance filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, claiming Element was fraudulently stating its TVs were made in the U.S. when they were pre-assembled in China and shipped here.

    A settlement was later reached when Element agreed to change its labeling to “assembled in the U.S.,” a moniker prominently displayed today on its website.

    At Monday night’s council meeting, however, Fairfield County residents in attendance hardly cared about Trump tweets, trade wars or false advertisement claims.

    Their concern was simple. Jobs.

    In addition to Element, another 300 jobs evaporated when the Winnsboro Wal-Mart at 721 Highway 321 Bypass shut down in 2016.

    Fairfield Memorial Hospital is shutting down later this year. And, of course, there’s V.C. Summer.

    Clarence Gilbert of Winnsboro was among the dozen residents taking to the podium, urging council members to take action to save Element.

    “It is time for us to drop that ‘oh well’ attitude, to stand up for our county against the potential job losses,” Gilbert said. “You can only poke a cat so long before it can scratch you. Let’s start scratching. Let’s save Element.”

    Others used the Element news to lobby for the county to approve repurposing the Mt. Zion Institute building in Winnsboro into a new county administrative building to spur economic activity downtown.
    Terry Vickers, president and CEO of the Fairfield County Chamber of Commerce, was among them.

    “I’ve been giving plenty of interviews too. It is poor Winnsboro, poor Winnsboro,” Vickers said. “We are not poor Winnsboro and we are not poor Fairfield County. Please don’t let one item [Mt. Zion] be divisive in this community.”

  • Council OKs first Mt. Zion vote

    Proposed Mt. Zion renovation

    WINNSBORO – With Fairfield County stung by massive job losses and another 120 positions expected to vanish, development of a new $11.4 million county administration building aims to ease some of that pain.

    Supporters also note tax credits would finance the majority of costs of renovating the Mt. Zion Institute site in Winnsboro, lowering the county’s costs to about $5M.

    But a large number some residents opposing the plans fear it will threaten the property’s historical character and turn the area into a traffic nightmare.

    “I applaud council finding alternative ways to funding this county council building. However this project is wrought with controversy,” said Ridgeway resident Shirley Green. “Let’s not court controversy. It’s the kind of controversy that pits our citizens against each other. An administrative building is not an economic driver.”

    Winnsboro resident Bill Haslett, however, said revitalizing the Mt. Zion property would unite the county, not divide it.

    “Fairfield County is not going to grow unless we take down the dividing line between Zion Hill and Mount Zion. Mt. Zion needs to be redeveloped,” he said. “We’ve had nothing but negative news in this county for the past six months and I’m tired of it. We need some positive news instead of people bickering back and forth.”

    On Monday, Fairfield County Council voted 4-1 for first reading of an ordinance authorizing development of a new administration building, as well as a lease agreement associated with the project.

    Councilman Mikel Trapp cast the lone dissenting vote. Council members Dan Ruff and Douglas Pauley abstained.

    Trapp didn’t specifically why he voted against the ordinance, though during discussion of the proposed measure, he raised concerns about revenue sources and costs, which are not finite.

    “Once that number changes, we’ll have to revote,” Trapp said.

    Council Chairman Billy Smith said the county is “in the driver’s seat,” noting that the builder faces the most risk.

    “I think the best way to structure it is to put the contractor at risk, not the county,” Smith said. “We’ve got two more readings to flush this out. We all know the first reading is procedural.”

    Both Ruff and Pauley said they wanted more information before casting a vote.

    “I just need a little more time to get information and feedback,” Ruff said.

    Pauley asked for a lot more.

    “The vote concerning the project is a very important vote and a vote I would not take lightly,” he said. “My reason for abstaining tonight, there are a few questions I’ll present to the county administrator before I make my decision.”

    Pauley requested detailed information about the county’s outstanding debts, as well as alternative sites for the administration building.

    “We can get that information together for you,” County Administrator Jason Taylor said.

    Two more readings are required before the deal becomes official.

    Rory Dowling with 1st & Main, a Durham, North Carolina firm working with the county, hopes that will be soon.

    Dowling said he hopes an agreement can be finalized within 30 days, and to apply for a building permit by early 2019. The goal, he said, is to begin construction within 10 months, with a grand opening by April 2020.

    As for spurring economic development, Dowling noted that the building would bring about 120 employees daily to downtown Winnsboro.

    “When you have 120 people within walking distance, it helps keep the lights on at some of these establishments,” he said.

    If constructed, the four-story structure would include 45,000 square feet of space, more than doubling the existing 21,000-square-foot administration building at 350 Columbia Road.

    The new structure would house administrative offices, the sheriff’s office, a daycare center, and parks and recreation with a new gym. County council chambers would also move to the new building, making use of the old auditorium.

    About half of the $11.5 project would come from a series of state and federal historic tax credits totaling $5.4 million.

    Another $4.5 million would come in the form of a construction loan, as well as $1.1 million in equity from money 1st and Main would raise itself.

    Dowling said he felt confident the tax credits would be awarded, but acknowledged there aren’t any guarantees.

    “This is a tax credit program that’s geared toward a low income tax tract, which this is,” he said. “We hope to know more in October when some of these [organizations] receive some feedback on a federal level on whether they can expect some level of credits.”


    This article was updated 8/20/18 at 3:06 p.m. to correct the county’s cost from $5K to $5M. 

  • Martin: Sheriff’s contract saves Ridgeway $70K a year

    RIDGEWAY – After voting on Aug. 9 to contract with the Fairfield County Sheriff’s office for law enforcement services for the Town of Ridgeway and on Aug. 11 to defund the Ridgeway Police Department, Town Councilman Dan Martin reported that the change would save the Town approximately $70,000 annually.

    “The fact is, we spent $108K on our police department last year. That’s what it cost after deducting the revenue the town took in for traffic tickets,” Martin said. “What we are proposing will be the same or better coverage and will cost us about 39,000 a year.”

    Martin said the town would be getting more police coverage by contracting with the Sheriff’s Department than it had funding its own police department.

    “According to our chief’s own records, he patrolled the town six hours and fifteen minutes per day, on an average of five days a week,” Martin said. Because Culp scheduled longer hours for himself on some of the days, he was on duty only four days during some weeks, Martin explained.

    Martin said that on days/weeks when Culp was away on vacation or training sessions, the town had coverage only from the Sheriff’s department but had no officer on duty within the town.

    “We won’t have this with a contract officer,” Martin said. He said the town would have an off-duty Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputy on duty in the town six hours a day, five days a week every week. He said the Sheriff’s department would continue to provide round-the-clock law enforcement for the town the other 18 hours just as it does now. The on-duty officer would be paid $25 per hour.

    “What we’re doing is equal or better than we have right now,” Martin said. “These off-duty police officers are highly trained, professional men and women who are more than adequately prepared to protect us. No one on this council would allow this town to go unprotected,” Martin said.

    Jones added that small towns are more and more abandoning their police departments for contracted security from county sheriff departments.

    “Blythewood contracts with Richland County, Lugoff with Kershaw County, Jenkinsville with Fairfield County,” Jones said.

    Martin provided The Voice with a list of the some of the biggest expenses the Town had last year in funding its own police department.

    Culp’s total salary expenses – $49K+; office expenses, supplies, equipment, legal and professional – $4,073; utilities – $7,248; fuel and maintenance for two patrol cars – $6,081 and insurance – $10,778. The town recently purchased a new Tahoe for Culp at a cost of approximately $34,000 and there were other miscellaneous expenses.

    There was also the cost of $4,000 for the town to provide court and a judge that are required when the town has a police department.

    “We could use this money in better ways, to provide more and better services to our citizens,” Martin said.

    But Councilman Donald Prioleau disagreed.

    “We aren’t putting the safety of our citizens first,” Prioleau countered. “Chief Culp is a top police officer that raised policing to a professional level and his criminal justice experience is helping to hold down crime. We make three to four times what our foreparents made and they had a police department and we’re getting rid of our police department with the salaries we make today. Let the citizens advise council what they want for safety,” Prioleau insisted. “We’re on the wrong track.”

    “You say we have a great officer. That’s okay,” Martin said. “But what you’re saying is that our officer is better than the Fairfield County Sheriff’s officers. That they cannot do as good a job as our officer.

    “That’s not true.”

    Martin said the contract off-duty officer(s) who serve the town will patrol a mixture of daytime and nighttime hours.

  • Blythewood BZA denies Taco Bell variance

    BLYTHEWOOD – Plans for a Taco Bell with a drive-thru to come to Blythewood Road were doused Monday evening when the Blythewood Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) denied the company a variance request to enlarge the usable area of the property the fast food restaurant proposed to build on.

    The applicant, BWL Holdings, LLC, represented by Cason Development Group, requested a variance to reduce the necessary buffer transition yard on each side of a lot located at 209 Blythewood Road in the Town Center across from the Waffle House.

    Because the 130 foot x 220 foot property is not wide enough to accommodate the building and a drive thru lane, the variance was requested to reduce the buffer transition yard on the western side of the lot to 3.4 feet and on the eastern side to four feet.

    The Town requires a buffer between adjoining commercially zoned lots in the Town Center District to be a minimum of 10 feet in width, or 7 feet if a wall, fence or berm is used between adjoining properties on both sides and to the rear.

    For a variance to be granted, according to Town ordinance all of the following findings and conclusions in a written order:

    (a)  There are extraordinary and exceptional conditions pertaining to a particular piece of property;

    (b) These conditions do not generally apply to other property in the vicinity;

    (c)  Because of these conditions, the application of the chapter to a particular piece of property would effectively prohibit or unreasonably restrict utilization of the property;

    (d)  The authorization of the variance will not be a substantial detriment to adjacent property or to public good, and the character of the district will not be harmed by the granting of the variance; and

    (e) The effect of the variance would not allow the establishment of a use not otherwise permitted in the zoning district; would not extend physically a nonconforming use of the land; would not change the zoning district boundaries shown on the official zoning map.

    Cason spoke on behalf of granting the variance indicating they had to “skinny up the site plan” due to the dimensions of the site.  One of his suggestions to enhance the narrow buffer zone was a ‘living fence.’  He had some examples to share of hedge plantings used to create borders.

    “This will most likely come back up again,” Darren Rhodes, with Coldwell Banker and the realtor for the sale of the property, said. “It is a unique challenge to fit something on that site,” he told the BZA members.

    Marie Berry said she is a co-owner of the property and represents the other three owners, all of whom she said were longtime residents of Blythewood.

    “It would be an attractive addition to the community and economic development for the community,” Berry said.

    Shelia Finkel, who along with her husband own the dental practice located on the property adjoining the east side of the site, reminded the Board that any decision they make now will come up again.

    “Whatever decision you make will be for all of the town,” she said.

    Stan Harpe, who said he owned the parcel to the west of the property, said the site was too small for the use.

    “I went through the zoning process before trying to get Walgreens,” Harpe said.

    After closing the public hearing, BZA Chair Pat Littlejohn read each of the five findings required to be met for a variance to be granted.

    “There are lots of narrow lots, and shoehorning in this sets a precedent. This would be over-reach,” Board member Ray Fantone said.  He asked Cason if the variance requester had tried to purchase land from the properties on either side.

    “Yes, they have not been able to get land from either side,” Cason said.

    Board member Derreck Pugh commented “that the variance brought up the same issues and they should keep in mind what the Town did before.”

    “What if the live fence dies?  What will we be looking at?” Board member Sharron Pickle asked.

    Board member Marlon Hinds also had some concern about the fence and questioned what if it would change down the line.

    “I don’t feel this is a special case. Not unique,” Hinds said.

    Hinds made a motion to deny the request for a variance to reduce the buffer transition yards between adjoining commercially zoned lots at 209 Blythewood Road for a proposed commercial use. The motion was seconded by Fantone and the Board voted unanimously to deny the request.

    Board member Tom Utroska was not present.