Category: News

  • Richland 2 Board awash in discord

    Members Vote 4-3 Against Removing Officers For Cause

    COLUMBIA – Despite several members facing ethical and criminal sanctions, the Richland Two Board of Trustees voted against a policy designed to increase their accountability.

    On Tuesday night, the board voted 4-3 against a board policy revision that would have empowered the board to discharge office holders by a supermajority vote.

    ​“The board may, with a vote of five members, remove a board officer from his/her office, for cause, as determined by the board,” the proposed policy change states.

    “In such a case, or in any case where there is a vacancy in a board office, the board may as soon as practical elect a member to fill the vacated office for the remainder of the term.”

    Board chair Amelia McKie and board members James Shadd III, Cheryl Caution-Parker and Teresa Holmes voted against the policy change.

    Board members James Manning, Lindsay Agostini and Monica Elkins-Johnson voted to support the policy.

    The vote comes in the wake of a disorderly conduct charge filed against board secretary Monica Elkins-Johnson.

    A Richland County Sheriff’s Office report states Elkins-Johnson was involved in a shoving match with Erica Davis, the sister of state Sen. Mia McLeod, following the Jan. 22 board meeting.

    A second report states that Elkins-Johnson threatened Stacy McKie, husband of Amelia McKie.

    It also comes amid the S.C. Ethics Commission fining Amelia McKie $51,750 for failing to file numerous campaign disclosure reports.

    Several other board members failed to file various ethics reports, doing so only after a series of investigative reports by The Voice.

    Elkins-Johnson issues statement

    Elkins-Johnson, 51, turned herself in to the sheriff’s office on Jan. 31 and was charged with disorderly conduct. She was released on a $237.50 personal recognizance bond, and the next court date is scheduled for March 18, according to Richland County court records.

    At Tuesday’s board meeting, Elkins-Johnson read a prepared statement, her first public remarks since Jan. 31.

    In her statement, she apologized for “the language that I used” following the Jan. 22 board meeting, and also thanked friends and family for their support.

    However, she also placed some blame on “the misconduct of others,” though she didn’t identify those people by name. She said her behavior after the meeting was out of character.

    “When several people violated my space, it took me to an unfamiliar level, which I am not proud of as a servant leader and as a result I ask for your forgiveness,” Elkins-Johnson said.

    “As always I have learned from this and will certainly use this as a teachable moment. Therefore, one moment out of my character does not and will not define me.”

    Caution-Parker also addressed board behavior, saying all board members are responsible for their own actions.

    “When we’re going to criticize a board member, take everybody into consideration, not just one,” Caution-Parker said. “We’re responsible for our passions, no matter what we do, no matter the circumstances. We are fully grown people and we are responsible for what we do and what we don’t do.”

    Board member Teresa Holmes summed up her own comments with, “Let’s just all hold hands and say kumbaya.”

    Board members mull policy

    Those voting against the policy Tuesday night said it was too vague. McKie took issue with the phrase “for cause.”

    Shadd III, who was fined $13,000 by the ethics commission in 2014, also took issue with the “for cause” terminology.

    He suggested the policy proposal was reactionary, saying sanctions for legal troubles some board members face already exist in state law.

    “What does ‘just cause’ mean?” Shadd III asked. “Failing to file reports with the ethics commission; there is a consequence to that. Failure to pay fines; there is a consequence to that.”

    Caution-Parker said she would only support the policy revision if it went into effect July 1. She vehemently opposed any application of the policy that went into effect immediately.

    “I have a major, major problem about how this all came about,” Caution-Parker said. “It’s almost like a mob mentality. Somebody did something, so we’re going to pass this.”

    Manning said all policies the board has ever passed went into effect immediately upon approval and asked why this one should be different. He also disputed assertions that the policy targets anyone. He said it has many hypothetical applications, including absenteeism, misrepresentation or other actions.

    “It’s made us review the policy and realize there’s a gap in the policy that needs to be addressed,” he said. “We have a gap that needs to be corrected, not a mob mentality about any individuals.”

    Agostini emphasized the policy wasn’t designed to remove a member from the board, only to strip them of officer positions, which include chair, vice-chair and secretary.

    “This policy is not removing somebody from the board,” she said.

    Later in the meeting, Agostini read aloud an email from a constituent who expressed embarrassment over McKie’s ethics fines amid the recently approved $468 million bond referendum funding various school construction projects.

    “How can I reasonably expect that our chairwoman can manage nearly a half billion dollar bond when she cannot manage a simple ethics filing,” Agostini said, reading from the letter.

    Superintendent addresses ethics

    In related matters, Dr. Baron Davis, district superintendent, acknowledged a blemish existed in his own ethics filings.

    Reading from a prepared statement, Davis said shortly after his hiring in 2017, he was unfamiliar with an ethics commission requirement that superintendents file Statements of Economic Interest, or SEI, forms.

    Davis said while filing his 2019 forms, he noticed that he didn’t file his 2018 form (for the 2017 year) within 10 days of officially becoming superintendent.

    “I did not know that and I did not file. I admitted those things once I started overlooking the process of our filings,” he said. “After realizing my oversight I quickly alerted the commission who never contacted me about the oversight.”

    Davis said he’s since filed an amended SEI form and paid a $100 fine.

    “I share this information on my own free will and in an effort to remain transparent and honest in my community,” he said. “That’s something I wanted to share publicly so we can close the chapter and move forward with the day to day operations of this outstanding district.”

  • Doko Manor wins Wedding Wire award

    Steve Hasterok, Director of Conference Center and Events, and Johnna Sutton, Assistant Manager of Doko Manor, display plaques designating The Manor as the winner of Wedding Wires Couple’s Choice award for the second year in a row. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – The staff of Doko Manor has won the Wedding Wire 2019 Couples’ Choice Award for the second year in a row, said Steve Hasterok, Director of the Conference Center and Events at Doko Manor.

    “Wedding Wire is probably the biggest wedding platform on Google,” Hasterok said. “When planning weddings, couples search the site for all things wedding – planners, venues, dresses, flowers, etc. They review the various vendors and locations. The venues with the best reviews win the award.”

    “Couples from New York, Washington, D.C., Alaska and other distant places find us on Wedding Wire. Many tell us they choose The Manor because we offer a beautiful facility with all the trimmings, and weddings here are usually much less expensive than in places like the northeast,” Hasterok said.

    To book a wedding or other event at The Manor, call 803-724-6038.

  • Redhawk Robotics

    MYRTLE BEACH – Westwood High School’s Robotics Team will compete in the Palmetto Regional competition Feb. 28 – Mar. 2 in Myrtle Beach for the sixth time. The three-day competition showcases robots developed and operated by high school teams from all over the world. The team is comprised of 22 students in grades 9 – 12.

  • Zoo offers ‘Free Fridays’ and recycling

    COLUMBIA – Two free family-friendly events are going on at Riverbanks Zoo and Garden these days.

    One is the offer of “Free Fridays” at the zoo and gardens through the end of February for residents of Richland and Lexington counties.  Guests must provide a valid driver’s license, property tax statement, or vehicle registration as proof of residency.

    The other is Recycling Gone Wild!

    Richland County joins Lexington County and other community partners for a special recycling event at the zoo. In addition to offering paper shredding and collecting electronics and scrap metal for recycling, the event will accept donations for Goodwill Industries. The free event is scheduled from 9 a.m-1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 23 at the Zoo, 500 Wildlife Parkway in Columbia.

  • Cut and Bake

    WINNSBORO – The Fairfield Chamber of Commerce cut the ribbon for Liza’s Cottage bakery last week. The bakery’s owner Liza Epps bakes the items she sells and is open Thursday and Friday from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. The bakery is located at 104-1/2 N. Congress Street. Cutting the ribbon for the shop’s grand opening are Epps and Mayor Gaddy, center. Assisting are Susan Yenner (Chamber Administrative Assistant), Valarie Clowney, Wanda Carnes, Julie Tomsuden, Vanessa Reynolds, Gene Stephens (Chamber President), Epps, Imani Paulk, Gaddy, Crystal Paulk, Jane Boytner, Jayne Scarborough (Executive Director of Olde English District) and Anita Hicks.

  • Beauty Supply store opens in downtown Blythewood

    Lady Lana store owners Star and Johnnie Waller and Mayor J. Michael Ross, center, cut the ribbon during the grand opening of the store last week. Joining them are, from left, Kesha Harrell, Ebony Allen, the Wallers and mayor, Carri Edwards, Priscilla and Arthur McCoy. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – It could be said that the town’s newest business is bent on making the town look good.

    Lady Lana’s, a beauty supply store that opened last week in McNulty Plaza, will offer cosmetics, hair, nail and skin care products, jewelry, women’s casual shoes, gift items, hair accessories, barber supplies and a mirrored wig salon.  The store will carry popular brands of hair care products including Motions, Luster’s and Clairol.

    The store’s proprietors, Star and Johnnie Waller, opened the store, named after their granddaughter, Lana, with a ribbon cutting last Friday. Star said their goal in opening the store is to meet a need in the community.

    “There were no beauty supply stores in this area. They were all in Columbia or Winnsboro. Nothing here,” Waller said. “We’re excited about what we offer, and we’re looking forward to doing business in this community where we live and worship,” she said.

    The Wallers moved to Blythewood from Columbia six years ago and are members of Round Top Baptist Church. Star is a marketing representative for a health care agency, and Johnnie is a former nuclear engineer with SCANNA and now works in the company’s corporate office. They are the parents of three grown children and an eight-year-old daughter.

    Following the ribbon cutting, presided over by Mayor J. Michael Ross, Waller talked about her vision for the new store.

    “Right now we’re just getting settled and getting to know our customers,” Waller said. “But we’re planning some exciting innovations, including launching our own line of Lady Lana cosmetics and fragrances.”

    She also plans to customize the store’s services.

    “We’ll be providing students from Westwood High School and Blythewood High School with individual makeup sessions for prom,” Waller said. “And we’re going to do some other special things that I think our customers will enjoy.”


    This story was updated June 27, 2024 at 3:03 p.m.

  • Red Gate developer moves forward

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Blythewood Planning Commission is expecting to see major amendments next month to a proposed development plan for two parcels on Blythewood Road (between Syrup Mill Road and Muller Road) that are facing a rezoning by the Commission that their developer and owner do not want.

    The Red Gate properties are presently zoned as a Planned Development District (PDD). Because the properties have been dormant for the past ten years, however, the Commission has the option, under its zoning ordinance, to revert the PDD zoning back to Rural.

    The property is owned by Arthur State Bank, and attorney Bob Fuller told the Commission last month that development had been on hold for the past decade because of a lack of access to utilities and infrastructure needs in that area, and that the bank had been unable to sell the properties for that reason.

    Reverting the zoning back to Rural, Fuller said at the December Planning Commission meeting, would have been a “terrible blow.”

    Blythewood town administrator Brian Cook updated the commission Monday night on what he expects the developer’s/owner’s planned changes for the area might be. Among possible amendments are the removal of an apartment complex that was included in the PDD zoning.

    He also said the developer has expressed a desire to cooperate with those restrictions.

    “We do not know exactly what they will propose as of yet,” Cook said. “Less density was discussed, but a potential purchaser is reviewing the development options and will be working with town leaders on any future development.”

    On Monday, Cook told the commission that the issue regarding utility and infrastructure access appeared to have been resolved.

    “There does appear to be a transaction in process to at least get something started,” Cook stated. “Whether they want to stick with the Planned Development District or go to another will be a conversation we will have to have, but there is some activity.

    “They are [working on] an amendment that materially affects the characteristics of the plan,” Cook said.

    Once the amendments are determined, Cook said the development will essentially “start back from scratch,” returning to the planning commission for approval of the site plans.

    The owner and developer must submit new plans before the commission can make further decisions on the matter.

    Cook said the timeframe for that may be sooner rather than later.

    “This developer is, I think, on a pretty aggressive timeframe to get something started,” Cook said.

    Cook said the proposed Red Gate plans no longer include property owned by Sharpe Properties. While the zoning is the same, he said he expects Sharpe to seek commercial development at that location at a later time.

  • Richards semi-finalist for Gates scholarship

    WINNSBORO – Two students from Fairfield County have been distinguished as being among 2,000 semi-finalists out of 33,000 applicants for one of 300 Bill and Melinda Gates scholarships. The prestigious scholarships cover up to $200,000 each for winners to attend any college or university of their choice within the United States.

    One of those students, Lamar Richards, a senior, lives in Fairfield County and now attends the Richland One Middle College, a free, public charter school on the campus of the University of South Carolina. The other is Janiece Jackson, a senior at Fairfield Central High School.

    Richards

    Aside from being a semifinalist for the Gates scholarship, Lamar Richards has already been accepted to 11 top universities in the nation, with offers of full rides from Louisiana State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Furman.

    The scholarship offer to LSU came after Richards and project partner Austin Greer earned first place in Engineering and Technology at a research conference in Baton Rouge last summer. Their win marked the first time in the conference’s history for a high school team to be invited to the undergraduate competition, let alone take home the win.

    “That was a really great experience and it was even more incredible to win,” Richards stated. “It was a lot of hard work to get there, and it was very gratifying to have that hard work recognized.”

    The project focused on creating fresh alternatives to dental-ware currently on the market that is both aesthetically pleasing and cost-effective. Richards is now preparing to publish that winning work and submit it to the National Conference on Undergraduate Research and to the Hill Research Conference in Washington, D.C.

    Richards and Greer are now raising funds to travel to the national competition. Several foundations, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, have shown interest in replicating Richards’ and Greers’ research once it has been published, Richards told The Voice.

    “We expect to publish in March,” Richards said. “We’ve been working on it since last summer. Because our research was government funded, foundations such as the Gates’ will have access to it. It’s all pretty exciting for us.”

    Last weekend, Richards received another distinction – induction into his school district’s Hall of Fame as a “Legend in the Making.” And with his myriad academic achievements, his supporters say the label is likely prophetic.

    In addition to being in the lead for valedictorian of his class that will graduate in June, Richards carries a perfect 4.0 GPA, taking 15 high-level college courses and electives along the way in highbrow areas of study such as organic chemistry, microbiology, biomedical engineering and 10 other Advanced Placement (AP) courses.

    Richards attributes his success partly to surrounding himself with likeminded peers to help him keep his focus.

    “I’ve had some great people in my life who supported me in going after the opportunities that are out there,” Richards said.

    In looking to the future, Richards said he hopes to be a surgeon and medical researcher, but that he also intends to seek an MBA so that he can also serve in an executive leadership position.

    One of Richards’ mentors, Dr. Jackie Long, a professor of biology at Midlands Tech downtown campus, said that Richards’ hard work throughout his young life has earned him these deserved accolades.

    “Lamar is a highly talented and academically-decorated student. He continuously strives to attain the next level of excellence, and does not easily deter at the first sign of failure,” Long stated. “He is persistent in his pursuit of a rigorous education.”

    While growing up in Winnsboro, Richards attended local public schools. In first grade  he was invited to apply to the magnet school for math and science. While attending Fairfield Central High School, he was accepted into the SC Governor’s School.

    As the oldest of three children in a single parent home for much of his life, Richards credits the support of his mother, Alexis Perry, and his grandmother, Earlene Byrd Adams, for his perseverance to tackle challenges.

    “My grandmother was a big part of my life from early on,” Richards recalls. “I still remember her walking me to my first day of preschool, and she really cultivated in me the drive to never give up.”

    Richards said he expects to be the first in his family to ever attend college.

    “I want to show my family that this is possible and that it can happen,” he stated.


    Read about Janice Jackson here.

  • Graddick top fiddler in Carolinas

    MYRTLE BEACH – Cedar Creek’s Jim Graddick has long been a fiddler favorite with locals, performing at restaurants and pubs in Blythewood and Columbia and showing up at meaningful home town events like the poignant closing of Cedar Creek Methodist church last spring.

    Graddick

    But last weekend, Graddick, 29, added a new and significant notch to his musical bio. He was named Fiddler of the Year at the Carolina Country Music Festival in Myrtle Beach. Besting 18 competitors, Graddick said he was surprised and gratified not only because he won but because he’s beginning to see an uptick in the future for his passion – fiddle music.

    “That is an especially important award for me because it focuses on original music, not cover bands,” Graddick said.

    In an interview with The Voice, Graddick said his music career was launched at Blythewood Middle School, where he understood he’d have the opportunity to learn to play the musical instrument of his choice.

    “Turned out they didn’t teach banjo,” Graddick said, smiling. “So I asked my mom if they taught fiddle at the school. ‘Well, yes. They kind of do,’ she said. But after I joined the orchestra, the fiddle turned out to be a violin,” he said, with a shrug and a laugh.

    “Luckily, that first year, my orchestra teacher was also a good fiddler and we played a few fiddle tunes now and then,” Graddick said.

    Graddick went on to earn a degree in classical music from the University of South Carolina, but he said he learned fiddling and music theory from hanging out at Bill’s Pickin’ Parlor on Meeting Street in West Columbia.

    “I learned a lot from the great ‘teachers’ I met there and never paid a dime for those Friday night lessons,” he said.  “One was a guitar professor at Midlands Tech who always talked over my head. But he was great, and by the time I got into my music major at USC, I already knew everything they were teaching.  It’s funny, I went into orchestra thinking I’d learn to play fiddle, then I went to the blue grass place and learned music theory.”

    Graddick now does what every musician dreams of – he earns a living playing fiddle and teaching music at Freeway Music’s Ballentine branch in Irmo.

    He also enjoys mentoring up-and-coming young fiddlers who share his passion. One of those is Hayley King, now 17, who recently won the state fiddling championship for 16 and under.

    “Some people say fiddling is dying out, but the future of fiddling is in the young fiddlers like Hayley. It’s going to be up to the people to bring fiddling back,” Graddick said. “I was recently heartened by a fiddler friend who started the Carolina Fiddle Club in Little Mountain. She invited fiddlers from all over to participate in workshops and learn fiddle tunes that might be becoming extinct. She has one fiddler coming all the way from Virginia for lessons. Things may be looking up,” he said.

    Graddick said he feels one of the reasons fiddling is dying out is because young people today are too stressed out to be creative.

    “The difference between fiddling and violin playing is that violin players follow directions on paper. Fiddlers just make stuff up,” Graddick said. “Fiddlers try to bring it out from the heart. We make up our music as we go along. Everything today is so fast paced. That stifles creativity when it comes to music. I think many people today are just so busy they don’t have time to improvise.

    “I remember the first time I saw Claude Lucas fiddling on stage. He never stopped smiling up there. I said, ‘That’s what I want to do!’”

  • Jackson semi-finalist for Gates scholarship

    WINNSBORO – Two students from Fairfield County have been distinguished as being among 2,000 semi-finalists out of 33,000 applicants for one of 300 Bill and Melinda Gates scholarships. The prestigious scholarships cover up to $200,000 each for winners to attend any college or university of their choice within the United States.

    One of those students, Lamar Richards, a senior, lives in Fairfield County and now attends the Richland One Middle College, a free, public charter school on the campus of the University of South Carolina. The other is Janiece Jackson, a senior at Fairfield Central High School.

    Jackson

    Janiece Jackson is a Fairfield teen wonder with a string of credentials that have boosted her into the stratosphere of Gates Scholarship semifinalist status.

    But that’s not her only offer for a full-ride. Jackson has already been accepted into 20 colleges and universities including such prestigious schools as Louisiana State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of South Carolina, Clemson, Wofford and Furman where she’s been offered full funding for her academic prowess.

    But none of this comes as a surprise. Jackson was a Duke TIP Scholar in seventh grade based on her soaring ACT scores, is president of her chapter of the National Honor Society and was the top student in the second division math category at the State Beta Club convention.

    Jackson has also been named Most Outstanding Student in at least two classes for each of the last three years at FCHS. She’s taken a number of AP courses and, with dual enrollment, she’s on track to graduate with a two-year degree from Midlands Technical College before she receives her diploma from Fairfield Central High School this spring.

    And speaking of graduation, Jackson said she has been number one in her class since the second semester of last year, virtually guaranteeing her status as Valedictorian when she graduates in June.

    But while she excels in the world of academia, Jackson’s focus is rooted on the simple desire to use her academic strengths to help others.

    “I want to study something in college that I know I’m going to use, like math,” Jackson said. “I like math a lot and I want to apply that somewhere that I can help people. I’m thinking about a statistician or actuary, so I can help people identify risk and what percent of risk everything is in their life – like life insurance, family insurance, things like that. It’s a field I’m interested in. I like to help people.”

    To that end, high on Jackson’s list is community service. She has visited the senior citizens at Pruitt Health where she entertained them and brought them snacks. She tutors her peers in the district and in the community.

    Born in Brooklyn, New York, Jackson come to Fairfield County in 2006 where she started kindergarten.

    “My grandfather brought our extended family down here from Brooklyn,” Jackson said. “He brought all of us down South and most of us are still here. Most are still here.”

    Like her friend Lamar Richards, Jackson credits her mother, Angela Jackson, a clerk at Fairfield Memorial Hospital before it closed, and her grandmother for inspiring her life.

    While she says she’s not entirely focused on academics – “I like to watch You Tube, Netflix and read romance, fantasy and sci-fi books” – she says it is her interest in reading and writing that have helped her become successful as a student.

    “My grandmother instilled in me a lot of the things I’m about,” Jackson said. “She read the newspaper to me and we worked the crossword puzzles together. Even now, I think of her when I read. She meant a lot to me and I’m grateful for what she did for me.”


    Read about Lamar Richards here.