Category: News

  • Heins Road Meeting Delayed

    COLUMBIA – The rezoning request for a residential development that could bring as many as 500 homes to the Heins Road area in Blythewood has been deferred until November, according to Richland County Councilwoman Joyce Dickerson.

    The request was recommended for approval to Richland County Council by the County’s Planning Commission on Sept. 8. A public hearing was scheduled Sept. 22, but when a large crowd showed up to protest the rezoning, Dickerson called for the hearing to be deferred until October to give time for representatives of the developer, Drapac, Inc., to meet with residents who live near the area to be rezoned. That community meeting took place Oct. 1.

    After the developer could not answer some of the questions posed by residents at that meeting, including how many homes were to be built in the development, Dickerson said she would schedule another meeting before the next County Council meeting on Oct. 27.

    But in an email to The Voice on Oct. 14, Dickerson said that “because of the problematic flooding in the area . . . please be advised that the applicant (Drapac, Inc.) has made a request to defer this item until November. Therefore there will not be any action on this item as previously presented.”

    Dickerson told The Voice that she would let the community know when another community meeting would be scheduled, and that it would be held before the County Council’s Nov. 23 public hearing.

     

  • First of Large Signs Coming Downs

    Larry Sharpe’s BP sign will soon conform to new rules. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Larry Sharpe’s BP sign will soon conform to new rules. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD – The big signs are coming down. In response to a town ordinance passed in 2009 to require all signs in the town to conform to new standards by the year 2016 (high-rise interstate signs by 2020), Larry Sharpe Jr. presented plans to the Board of Architecture Review (BAR) Monday night for replacing nonconforming signs at his family’s businesses – the 25-foot BP sign at the Doko Express service station on Main Street and the 15-foot sign at the Exxon service station at Blythewood Road and the McNulty Road extension, across from the Waffle House.

    Sharpe told the BAR members that the signs would be replaced with 8-foot conforming monument style signs. Because each sign advertises for two businesses on the respective sites, Sharpe is allowed 64 square inches of signage space per side for each sign instead of the 32 inches allowed for one business.

    “We want to go ahead and get this out of the way,” Sharpe told members of the Board. “We’re ready to bring the sign down and conform with the ordinance.”

    Robert Tobias, who owns the building where Blythewood Consignment is located, voluntarily removed a 25-foot sign from in front of that shop earlier this year.

    The new ordinance goes into effect in January, at which time businesses whose signs do not conformed will be notified by Town Hall that they are in violation of the Town’s zoning code.

    Last December, Mayor J. Michael Ross had expressed concern that the 2009 ordinance was too restrictive and might need to be tweaked to exempt existing nonconforming signs. Letters were sent out to businesses notifying them of the pending compliance requirement. The majority on Council, however, led by Councilman Bob Massa who has since retired from his Council seat, quashed the movement to relax the sign ordinance. There were no ensuing objections to the 2009 ordinance from business owners and only two churches sent representatives to the Town Council meeting with objections.

    Michael Criss, the Town’s Planning Consultant, told The Voice that while many of the town’s signs are nonconforming, most are minor nonconformities. Among the most egregious offenders of the new ordinance are the large signs at Wendy’s, Waffle House, IGA, Pope Tire Company and the two signs Sharpe is replacing.

    Because the BAR did not have a quorum on Monday, Sharpe’s sign application was discussed by those BAR members present but will not be voted on until Thursday when a special called meeting was scheduled.

     

  • Planning Commission OK’s McLean Road Rezoning

    BLYTHEWOOD – A rezoning request for a 4.56 acre parcel on McLean Road that stirred controversy at the September Planning Commission meeting sailed through the Commission’s Oct. 12 meeting with an unopposed, unanimous recommendation for approval.

    The owners of the Rural (RU) zoned parcel, Wright and Gray Partnership, initially applied for Town Center (TC) zoning which is the second highest of the Town’s six commercial zoning districts. Owners of an adjoining property spoke out against having commercial zoning next door. During that meeting, the neighbors suggested they might be interested in purchasing the 4.56 acres. At Monday’s meeting, NIA Avant realtor Tombo Milliken, who is representing the Partnership, told the Commission that he had sent a letter to the neighbors offering the land for sale, but had received no response and was, therefore, proceeding with the rezoning request.

    No one signed up to speak in opposition to the rezoning.

    Milliken also told Commissioners that the applicant had decided to request Multi-neighborhood Commercial (MC) zoning for the 4.56 acres instead of TC zoning. That zoning is one step less intensive than TC zoning.

    Milliken added that 1.3 acres of the property are wetlands, making only 2.7 acres usable for development since .5 acres is separated from the usable 2.7 acres by the wetlands. He also pointed out that the 2.7 acres was on the opposite side of the property from the neighbor’s property line creating a considerable distance between the usable property and the neighbor’s property.

    “Because of the required 50-foot set-back required around wetlands,” Milliken said, “any structure built on the rezoned property would likely be at least 300 feet from the home on the neighbor’s property.”

    Asked by the commission what might be built on the property, Milliken said, “We don’t know. We do not have a site plan because we don’t have a user.”

    But he speculated that a professional building would be suitable for the property.

    The Commission voted unanimously to recommend the MC rezoning to Town Council, which will meet on Oct. 26.

     

  • Fairfield Responds to Disaster

    Packed up and ready to head for Clarendon County with relief supplies for flood victims, these Fairfield County volunteers are, standing: Kim and Randy Wilkes; from left: Ash Wilson, John Combs, Ashley Wilson, Erin Holmes, Angie Kelly, Rebekah Coleman, David Hendon, Russell Wilkes and (not pictured) Todd Mattox. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Packed up and ready to head for Clarendon County with relief supplies for flood victims, these Fairfield County volunteers are, standing: Kim and Randy Wilkes; from left: Ash Wilson, John Combs, Ashley Wilson, Erin Holmes, Angie Kelly, Rebekah Coleman, David Hendon, Russell Wilkes and (not pictured) Todd Mattox. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    WINNSBORO – A Fairfield County caravan bearing food, water and other supplies grew as it traveled last Friday, even gathering volunteers to help alleviate the suffering of families who lost their homes and other possessions in the recent statewide flooding.

    It all started when Randy Wilkes and his wife Kim of Ridgeway remembered what Randy and his family had gone through in 1984 when a tornado blew through Winnsboro, leveling their home and destroying their possessions.

    “It was bad,” Randy recalls, “and so we knew how these people felt, losing their homes. We decided we’d try to do something to help.”

    That something was posting a note on Facebook asking their friends to help fill up their 20-foot trailer with supplies and take them to those affected by the flooding,

    “I thought I’d be lucky if we got the trailer half full,” Randy Wilkes later told The Voice.

    But responses to the post immediately began pouring in from family, friends and strangers.

    “Richard Winn Academy was one of the first to call to say they wanted to make a big donation of water and other supplies, then some guys I know from Rock Hill with a big flatbed truck called to say they were going to join us,” Wilkes said. “Pretty soon we were taking calls and pulling in to Ben Arnold and other donor sites loading up. The 20-foot trailer filled up quickly, and we had to ask Jimmy Ray Douglas to loan us his big yellow box truck. We filled that up and were on our way only 48 hours after the initial Facebook post.”

    The caravan not only gathered supplies, but gained volunteers along the way as well. By the time they reached the Wilkes’ home in Ridgeway to regroup and head out, the caravan included two pickup trucks, the yellow box truck, the flatbed filled with cases of water and two packed SUV’s.

    “I loaded my front loader on a trailer so we’d have something to unload the pallets with when we got to our destination,” Wilkes said.

    That destination, the group decided, would be the hard hit Clarendon County. The caravan pulled out about noon Saturday with 10 or so volunteers, the load of supplies and an American flag blowing in the wind aboard the lead pickup.

    But the adventure didn’t end there.

    A trip that should have taken about an hour and forty-five minutes turned into almost three hours. The caravan was detoured frequently by road closings and collapsed bridges. After unloading their supplies at a gym in Summerton, the group stayed on another hour using the front loader to help others unload their supplies.

    “It was a humbling experience,” Wilkes said, “seeing all that devastation. We were just glad we could help them. We are really thankful to the schools, businesses and all the individuals in Fairfield County who made the donations possible. They helped a lot of people.”

     

  • Police Station Rental Advances

    RIDGEWAY – Town Council’s scheme to move Ridgeway’s Police Department from 160 S. Palmer St. and into the Century House at 170 S. Dogwood Ave. took a leap forward last week as Councilman Russ Brown put the question to a vote.

    Council fist took the matter up at a Sept. 22 work session when Brown said the Town could save $500 a month in utility costs at the station and net as much as an additional $600 in rent. A move to the Century House would also give the Police Department access to internet, something lacking at the current station.

    Half of any rent collected by leasing the police station, however, would have to go to Norfolk Southern Railway, which owns the property on which the station sits, plus the Town would be on the hook for a one-time fee of $750 for subleasing any of the buildings that currently stand on the railroad’s property.

    During Council’s Oct. 8 meeting, Mayor Charlene Herring urged Council to wait another month to find out if the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office would be interested in leasing the station for use as a substation. Councilman Donald Prioleau said Sheriff Will Montgomery was ready to make such a commitment, pending funding from County Council.

    Brown then put the motion on the floor to relocate the Department to the Century House and make the station available for lease if the Sheriff’s Office was not interested in putting in a substation. Councilman Heath Cookendorfer seconded the motion.

    Countering Herring’s argument touting the value of a police presence on Ridgeway’s main street, Cookendorfer said, “A building is not presence. An active police officer on duty is presence.”

    “And it’s a building we can rent out for additional revenue, instead of it costing us money,” Cookendorfer added. “I would like to turn a profit instead of losing money.”

    Herring cast the lone vote against the proposed move, a vote she moved to change after Cookendorfer made it clear “We’re not making any move until we hear from the County (Sheriff).”

    Sheriff Montgomery, meanwhile, told The Voice Monday that his office has no interest at this time in locating a substation inside the Ridgeway police station. There is very little, he said, that deputies can do inside a static location that they cannot do in their patrol cars, and he would prefer to have officers out on the beat. Deputies already patrol Ridgeway and surrounding areas, he said.

    As of press time, Ridgeway remains without a police officer. Two candidates were interviewed during executive session on Oct. 8. Herring said this week that the Town had offered the position to one of the candidates, but had not received a response when The Voice went to press.

    Regarding the fee and the 50 percent of rent the Town would have to pay the railroad, as stipulated in a lease agreement Ridgeway signed with Norfolk Southern earlier this year, Brown suggested hiring an attorney to review the deal and perhaps encourage the railroad to make concessions.

    “I noticed one or two things with the contract,” Brown said. “There’s a specific date in there that I was under the impression would be changed. That’s troublesome. There are some things we need to pay someone to look at.”

     

  • Council Cuts into Recreation Plan

    WINNSBORO – Following an extensive executive session Monday night, County Council cut a swath through their $3.5 million recreation plan, shrinking a plan that has been, since its debut last year, more than $627,000 over budget down to more than $1.78 million under budget.

    With a unanimous vote, Council eradicated recreation projects in districts 1, 5 and 7, while trimming the District 6 plan to the installation of a walking trail and football field lights at Drawdy Park. Districts 2 and 3 have had their plans combined into a plan that will be limited to the construction of a community center, contingent upon the acquisition of property.

    The only district to remain intact is District 4, which will finally see the construction of its long-awaited community center, as well as a walking trail and outdoor basketball court. That plan originally came in at an estimated $641,660.

    The recreation plan, which under its original estimate came in at a staggering $4,127,346, has now been slashed to $1,719,954.

    The public safety components of the plan – a fire/EMS station in Jenkinsville and a fire station in Ridgeway – will proceed as planned, at a cost of $2,196,722.

    The town of Ridgeway, which turned itself inside out earlier this year debating the merits of moving its proposed community center from near a County recycling center on Highway 21 at Smallwood Road to the vacant lot where the old Ridgeway School once stood at the corner of Church and Means streets, will not have to worry about those merits again for some time.

    Efforts to locate the facility in town failed on a 2-3 vote last March after much heated debate. Under the revised plan, Ridgeway will see a new fire station, but recreation will have to wait.

    “They do want something, and I want them to have something,” District 1 Councilman Dan Ruff said, adding that location of the facility had nothing to do with the choices Council had to make. “No matter what I would have done, it wouldn’t have passed right now. It’s still going to happen, just not right now. There are several huge expenses standing in the way.”

    Relocating the Courthouse temporarily to the HON Building, renovating the Courthouse, then moving back in from the HON Building, as well as repairing the Detention Center roof are just two of those huge expenses, Ruff said. Bridging the gap between the $1.1 million in bond money and the nearly $2.2 million estimated for the fire and EMS stations is another, District 7 Councilman Billy Smith said.

    “Some of that $3.5 million (recreation budget) is going to have to be redirected to the fire and EMS portion of the plan,” Smith said. “Our priority was on the public safety projects.”

    Ruff said that while the County was waiting on recreation to come back around on their to-do list, the School District has agreed to make available facilities at Geiger Elementary School for some County recreation activities.

    District 1 had originally planned on a community center near Ridgeway, as well as an outdoor basketball court, for a total of $617,017. District 2, a community center and a combination EMS/recycling facility for $573,333. District 3, four playgrounds, equipment and a basketball court for $499,337. District 5, four playgrounds and equipment, three picnic shelters, two walking trails and a basketball court for $641,660. District 6, conversion of former County maintenance facility into a fitness center, lighting for fields, walking trails and a picnic shelter for $509,629. District 7, improvements to the genealogy building, basketball court, baseball/softball field, picnic shelter and restroom facilities for $644,440.

    With the project debuting last September at $627,346 over budget, paring down the individual wish lists was also a real possibility in the original plan.

    “This is not the end of the discussion about recreation in Fairfield County,” Smith said. “We were going to have to compromise. Maybe we can fund one or two (projects) now, determine how they’re going to work out, how successful they’re going to be, before we spend the whole pot of money on it. It was the best thing we could do at the time, all things considered.”

     

  • Blythewood Town Council Candidates: Eddie Baughman

    Eddie Baughman copyEddie Baughman

    (4-year term)

    As a 30-year resident of Blythewood, I am incredibly passionate about our community and am grateful for the opportunity I’ve had to serve you on Town Council, to be your voice in government. My life’s calling has been to public service, and I take it seriously.

    U. S. Navy veteran

    I served as a petty officer assigned to a fighter squadron, trained pilots and air crewmen, served on the USS Nimitz, USS John F Kennedy, USS Forrestal, USS America, USS Independence and the USS Saratoga. Today I am active in our veteran community through post-sponsored activities and continuing education for veterans. I hold senior leadership positions in both Lake Wateree VFW post 8346 and Lake Wateree AMVETS post 33.

    Fire Service Career

    As a 26-year member of the Columbia Richland fire service, I have 17 years command experience, serving as Captain on both engines and ladder trucks and as Battalion Chief in the largest battalion of Richland County. I was responsible for command and control of nine fire stations and 60 personnel. I served as Department Coordinator of the Muscular Dystrophy Association’s “Fill the Boot,” helping to raise over a million dollars to find a cure for neuromuscular disease. In my retirement, I serve as an officer in the International Association of Fire Fighters local 793.

    Church Service

    As a member of Sandy Level Baptist Church I’ve served in many areas of church life, children’s Sunday School teacher, usher, trustee and as chairman of the deacon board.

    Community Service

    As a Town Councilman and as a citizen, I am incredibly focused on the controlled growth of our town. My wife, Donna, and I raised our two children here and my goal was always to put my best efforts into maintaining the beauty and appeal that brought each of us to Blythewood.

    If re-elected to Council I vow to continue to work diligently with area government agencies to improve our town’s infrastructure. I will continue to support our local businesses and to seek improvements to attract new local and family oriented establishments. I will seek to safe guard our residents and town from unnecessary debt and continue to be a good steward of the town’s resources. I am absolutely dedicated to protecting our town’s citizens’ right to good governance. I believe our government is more open and accessible now than ever before. I attribute that to an administration and Council who want it to be so.

    If re-elected to Blythewood Town Council, my promise to you the citizens of Blythewood is that I will work with you to promote the harmony and diversity Blythewood is known for so that our community can continue to be a shining example to all of Richland County.

    Much has been accomplished these last four years, but we have much more work to do. Blythewood is our home.

    I ask for your vote on Nov. 3. Together, we can!

     

  • Always the Optimist

    At work in their ‘office’ at Lizard’s Thicket in Blythewood, Optimists Lola Cumbo, Keri Boyce and Sierra Kelly plan their club’s first banquet set for Saturday night at Round Top Baptist Church. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    At work in their ‘office’ at Lizard’s Thicket in Blythewood, Optimists Lola Cumbo, Keri Boyce and Sierra Kelly plan their club’s first banquet set for Saturday night at Round Top Baptist Church. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD – Keri Boyce of LongCreek Plantation has long been passionate about promoting youth service projects. So when the opportunity to organize an Optimist Club presented itself last year, she saw it as a natural extension of what she had already been doing. To that end, she joined fellow Blythewoodians Lola Cumbo and Sierra Kelly to make the Club happen. Round Top Baptist Church agreed to serve as their meeting place, and by June the Club was chartered as the Hope Optimist Club.

    This weekend, the 22-member club will host its first membership banquet, inviting others in the community to join them for an evening of food, entertainment and great conversations about good works they are planning.

    “That’s what we’re all about,” said Cumbo, the club’s president. “As Optimists, our work is focused on young people. We promote contests that help them develop writing and speaking skills and we promote communication to aid youth who are deaf and hard of hearing. We look for ways to help all young people achieve their dreams.”

    And they didn’t waste any time doing just that. In September the club bought paint and plywood to refurbish the Round Top Community playground equipment. Next month they plan to pack and donate eight Thanksgiving baskets for families in need. In December they will organize a group of young people to make and take holiday cards to residents in a local senior care center.

    In January, the group will sponsor an essay contest for students in local schools and in March an oratorical contest. Both scholarships and medals will be awarded to winners.

    Cumbo said the banquet will serve two purposes.

    “We will recognize those volunteers who have been instrumental in helping to get the club up and running,” she said, “and I think the banquet will provide others in the community the opportunity to learn more about us and, hopefully, decide to join us.”

    The banquet will be held from 5-7 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 17 at Round Top Baptist Church, 120 Round Top Court in Blythewood. Tickets are $15. The Club meets on the third Tuesday of the month, alternately between Round Top Baptist Church and Lizard’s Thicket restaurant. For more information, call 864-978-8277.

     

  • Low-Income Homes Stall at Planning Commission

    BLYTHEWOOD – An $8 million low-income apartment complex proposed in downtown Blythewood hit a snag at the Planning Commission meeting Monday evening when Commissioners expressed concern about increased traffic from the project and the developer’s lack of a fleshed-out plan to manage storm-water runoff.

    The proposed project, named The Pointe at Blythewood, is planned for Main Street behind the Langford-Nord house and across from Blythewood Consignments in the Town Center District. The developer is Prestwick Companies of Atlanta. Devin Blankenship, Senior Development Manager, told The Voice last month that while the apartments are considered affordable housing they are not Section 8 housing.

    Clayton Ingram, a spokesperson for the S.C. Housing Finance Authority told The Voice that the developer will receive a federal tax credit of $699,052 each year over a 10-year period to construct the apartments. He said residents are required to have an income between 50 and 60 percent of the mean income for the area where the apartments are located.

    “The property is zoned Rural (RU) and meets multi-family zoning requirements,” the Town’s Planning Consultant Michael Criss told the Commission. “The developer is only required to come before the Planning Commission for site plan approval.”

    Prestwick Companies was represented at the meeting by Robert Byington Jr., an architect with Studio 8 Architecture Design, and Mark Binsz, Vice President of Engineering with Site Design, Inc. of Greenville.

    Before the project’s traffic and storm water plans were met with questions from some of the Commissioners, the development was pummeled during the public comment segment by several of the 25 residents who showed up in opposition to the apartments.

    “My sister and I own 2 acres next to that property,” Harold Boney told the Commissioners. “I’m not against the project. I’d like to see it come to Blythewood. But I don’t like the location.”

    Cindy Shull voiced concerns about increased traffic.

    “The amount of traffic already in this area is only going to get worse,” she said.

    Referring to a copy of the Town’s Master Plan, Shull said, “The Master Plan was developed to accommodate new density in a way that preserves quality of life.”

    She said this development does not do that.

    Irene Shepard said she felt the development would take away from Blythewood’s country lifestyle.

    “What you’re bringing in is low-income housing,” Shepard said. “Bringing in 56 of these apartments is bringing in crime and trouble.”

    Shepard’s daughter, Danielle Andes, agreed with her mother.

    “This is not what this town needs,” Andes said. “People who sit on this board have not lived here for 40-plus years. They are people from the outside who have moved here, have come with a little bit of money and ruined what we had.”

    Kathy Johnson had not yet arrived at the meeting when her name was called to speak, but a man who said he was her husband, spoke on her behalf saying he “grew up in the inner city, so I’ve seen this type of housing. I want to keep Blythewood like it is. If you want big city problems, start with low-income housing and you’ll have big city problems.”

    Criss said, however, that multi-family housing is not only allowed in the Town Center District, but welcomed.

    “There is not an explicit density limit for multi-family housing,” Criss said, “other than what will fit on the lot with adequate landscaping, parking, buffering and up to four stories in building height.”

    The proposed apartments are two-stories tall with a pitched roof. They will offer one-, two- and three-bedroom units.

    Commissioner Ernestine Middleton asked if affordable housing was welcomed because of the need to add affordable housing in the community.

    “Yes,” Criss answered, “and to also bring people downtown, to bring vitality and business customers to the Town Center District.”

    After making a short presentation to the Commission, Binsz was asked by Commission Chairman Malcolm Gordge how the developer proposed to mitigate the effects of increased traffic on Main Street and at the intersection of McNulty Road and Main Street.

    “We will get DOT’s (S.C. Department of Transportation) input on any final design plans,” Binsz said.

    “What about construction traffic?” Gordge asked, “Can you mitigate that?”

    Binsz said that would be the contractor’s responsibility.

    When asked what the company had done to determine the amount of storm water they would be able to dispose of, Binsz answered that while the company didn’t have a final design, their initial estimates would not require a runoff pond.

    “Let me speak from my own personal point of view,” Gordge concluded. “There are still significant uncertainties regarding traffic mitigation and we don’t have the recommendations from SCDOT on what they would require when faced by traffic during construction. We also don’t have the full details on the management of storm water, so I don’t feel as though we can recommend or deny approval based on what we have.”

    Commissioner Buddy Price agreed.

    “I like the concept, the idea that we have a project such as this, and I understand the foot traffic and bringing folks into our businesses and those kinds of things,” Price said. “My concern is that it’s in the wrong place. I’m mostly concerned about the traffic. Right now the traffic is extraordinary because of the re-routing due to the flooding, but even under normal circumstances it backs up.”

    “We will comply with what SCDOT requires,” Binsz said. “They will dictate what we can and cannot do.”

    In an email to the Town’s Administrator Gary Parker last week regarding whether SCDOT would require a traffic study of the developer, SCDOT Engineer Tyler Clark told Parker, “At this time we don’t have plans to require a TIS (Traffic Impact Study); however, this does not mean we will not require mitigations along US-21 as needed. We will know more after we meet with the engineer/developer.”

    Gordge called for a deferral of the matter until the next meeting on Nov. 2. The vote was 3-1 with Commissioner Don Sanders voting for approval of the site plan. Commissioner Marcus Taylor was absent.

     

  • Ridgeway Pedestrian Killed in Double Hit-and-Run

    RIDGEWAY – A Ridgeway man was killed Saturday in a double hit-and-run, the second such incident in Ridgeway in just over two weeks.

    Fairfield County Coroner Barkley Ramsey said Jamel Thomas, 35, was standing on the side of the road outside a home in the 9100 block of Highway 34, near the Long Road intersection, at approximately 8:45 p.m. Thomas, of 437 Carolina Drive, was talking with friends outside the home, Ramsey said, when a car traveling east on Highway 34 struck him and then sped away. Witnesses were only able to describe the car as a dark colored compact car.

    Witnesses at the home went down to the road to check on Thomas, who was lying in the roadway. A second east-bound vehicle, described only as a tan in color pickup truck, also struck Thomas and sped away. Thomas was pronounced dead at the scene, Ramsey said.

    On Sept. 24, Devante Christopher Middleton, 22, of 2796 Mood Harrison Road, was struck by an east-bound 2002 Honda Accord while walking east down Longtown Road at approximately 6:45 a.m. The S.C. Highway Patrol said Middleton was walking illegally in the middle of the road when he was struck and Ramsey said Middleton was wearing dark-colored clothing, making him difficult if not impossible to see in the rain and the darkness.

    The driver of the Honda only saw Middleton at the last second, Ramsey said, and swerved to avoid him, but it was too late. Middleton was only injured, however, and lying in the west-bound lane of Longtown Road. The driver of the Honda pulled over, got out of the car and spoke with Middleton, Ramsey said, and called 9-1-1 for help.

    While the driver was on the phone with 9-1-1, Ramsey said, a second car traveling in the west-bound lane struck Middleton a second time, this time fatally. The second car, described only as a dark-colored vehicle with tinted windows, did not stop, the Highway Patrol said.

    Both incidents remain under investigation by the Highway Patrol. The vehicles involved in the Thomas hit-and-run should both have sustained significant front-end damage, Ramsey said.