Category: News

  • BYBSL Opens for Season

    Photos: Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – It was opening day for the Blythewood Youth Baseball and Softball League on Saturday at the Blythewood Park.

    The Rookie Ball Division opened play between the Red Sox and the Twins. The Twins took home the win and all was good with the handshake following the game.

  • R2 board votes 4-3 to not be required to hear grievances

    Gilchrist: The Board’s Vote Could Deny Due Process

    COLUMBIA – Discussion of a complaint policy took center stage at Tuesday’s meeting of the Richland Two School District Board of Trustees.

    The two opposing factions on the board appeared to talk past each other about the intent of a change in wording to a rule known as “Policy KE,” which governs complaints made to the school district. It became the center of discussion during the meeting.

    Those in favor of the new language argued that it would better direct complaints through the proper channels before they reach the board, while those in favor of the old language argued that it better protected the rights of parents and members of the community.

    The board never discussed the content of the policy’s few paragraphs or sought compromise wording; instead, the revision passed with the characteristic 4-3 vote that often occurs when the board considers controversial issues.

    The old wording, most recently adopted in 2019, briefly described a process of referring complaints to administration for resolution, making it clear that the complaining person, if not satisfied by the outcome, has a right to appeal the issue to the school board.

    The new wording, based on a model policy of the South Carolina School Boards Association, is more verbose and details the order of authorities to contact by those seeking resolution of complaints.

    But it then goes on to add the two additional items with which the speakers and board members – and others in the community – took issue:

    The first: “Anyone who defames a district staff member and damages a person’s professional reputation, whether before students or any third party, may be subject to legal action brought by the staff member.”

    The second: “The board is not obligated to address a complaint. If the board decides to hear the issue, the board’s decision is final. Otherwise, the superintendent’s decision on the issue is final.”

    During the meeting’s public comment period, two men spoke against the new wording, requesting that any changes to the policy be rewritten with clearer, more precise wording and eliminate parts that stifle the voice of the public.

    “It seems to me what we are doing here is like they are changing the rules of the game. When you change the rules of the game, you stifle collaboration and trust, hence the problem never gets resolved,” said Larry Smalls, a parent who spoke at the meeting.

    “This is not a popularity contest sitting in these [school board] seats; you’re dealing with the public. You’re dealing with taxpayers, people’s livelihoods, their kids, and I’d hope you would take it seriously and not just change the rules so you can get commendation from the people you select coming up here.”

    Stephen Gilchrist, who is a founding member of the Richland Two Black Parents’ Association and past chairman and current member of the Richland County Planning Commission, as well as chairman of the South Carolina African American Chamber of Commerce and a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, e-mailed concerns about the policy to the board members before the meeting, noting the risks of vague terminology, lack of accountability, and a potential chilling effect on free speech.

    “We have a history that has not been too far in our past that prevented folk from being able to have a voice in the political process and the public policy arena, so my hope is that… a district that classifies itself as premier does not in some ways revert back to those days of old,” Gilchirst says.

    “I don’t see this any different than the times where black people were asked to count how many jellybeans were in a jar to vote.”

    After the vote, he expressed disappointment in approval of a policy that he says will deprive parents and students with grievances of due process.

    He says it would be better – and possible – for school board policy to strike a balance that both protects educators from wrongful accusations and protects the right for people to weigh in on issues impacting schools and education in the district.

    The policy change was considered in the context of two incidents that occurred at recent school board meetings.

    In one case, a parent publicly accused a school administrator of sexually abusing a child, an allegation that the parent later apologized for and declared to be false.

    In another case, two men who sometimes express criticism of board actions and policies and board behavior were removed from a school board meeting on Jan. 25 after witnesses say the two men and others were aggressively confronted by Superintendent Baron Davis and his wife, schoolteacher Pamela Davis – an incident that has resulted in multiple complaints against the district.

    One of the men, local blogger Gus Philpott, says it was a lengthy struggle to get the details of his ban from district property in writing – and maintains that he did no wrong and violated no policy on the evening in question, a claim that’s backed up by eyewitness accounts.

    The other individual who was banned, parent Gary Ginn, has a similar story. Eyewitnesses say he spoke up when a 14-year-old student was verbally attacked by Mrs. Davis. Ginn has expressed criticism of board policies in recent months, but was orderly in expressing that criticism.

    Philpott, 83, contends that the real reason for his ban is to silence his online journalism and protect corrupt officials from the public’s right to information about the actions of elected leaders. His blog, which frequently draws attention to school board issues, is often critical of current school system leadership.

    Philpott has sought to appeal the decision to the school board under the old wording of the complaint policy, he says – a right that he believes prompted the new wording and a right that was taken away by the new wording approved Tuesday night.

    Board Chair Theresa Holmes provided a copy of the document stating that administrative authorities and the school board had decided to uphold Philpott’s ban from school property for the remainder of the school year.

    “After reviewing and considering the record in this matter, which included statements from you regarding the January 25 incident, the Board voted to uphold the administration’s decision in this matter, which means that your trespass notice will continue through the end of the 2021-2022 school year,” according to the letter, which is signed by Holmes.

    Holmes, who supported the policy change, during the meeting accused board and community members of insincere grandstanding on the issue.

    “There [were] two weeks to make changes to this, and the day before there’s all this, because people want to come to a public meeting and make all these statements and these lectures and all that because it’s in public,” Holmes said. “Let’s not play the game up in here tonight because that’s what we’re doing.”

    Davis, the superintendent, said the new policy on public complaints is similar to that governing personnel matters. He said that, hypothetically, under the old policy, the board could get stuck spending large amounts of time hearing complaints that have not gone through the proper channels.

    “The policy has nothing to do with public participation. There’s a different and separate public participation policy,” Davis said in the meeting.

    Board member Lashonda McFadden said the new policy can prevent complaints that do go through proper channels from being appealed to the board and tie up time-sensitive issues in months of bureaucracy, to the detriment of students and parents who need help.

    Board member Monica Scott implied that the policy change was a form of hypocrisy.

    “We are elected officials. The public and the parents are actually the reason why we are sitting here, and… when many of us were campaigning, we were campaigning because we want to be a voice for the community, we want to be a voice for parents, we want to be a voice for equity. We want to be a voice for integrity… but once we get here, we’re not who we say we want to be,” Scott said.

    “I’m going to respond to every e-mail that comes to me, whether it’s a complaint, whether it’s a compliment, whether it’s something that they’re not happy with – it doesn’t matter to me because we’re here because of the public, and I just think that when we’re trying to take away the right of the people who have placed us here, I have an issue with that.”

    The new policy passed with the support of Holmes, James Manning, Amelia McKie, and Cheryl Caution-Parker. McFadden, Scott, and Lindsay Agostini voted against it.

    Philpott, meanwhile, says he’s looking for a lawyer to help him take his complaint against the district to the next level: the courts.

    “My complaint was that I myself was not guilty of their charge and that I did not get a chance to defend myself,” he says, contending that school board policy was applied improperly in his case – and that rules barring speakers from mentioning individuals or job titles are also improper.

    “The board says there’s no appeal. No, no, no. There’s always an appeal,” says Philpott, who promises to resume attending school board meetings in July, as soon as his ban expires. “A person can always go to court.”

    Gilchrist, meanwhile, says he and the Black Parents’ Association are looking forward to this year’s school board election. He says there are a lot of potential candidates preparing for the start of campaign season – and November’s election promises to be an interesting one.

    “I guess that the biggest concern for me is protecting the rights of the citizens of the community who have children in the district, who are taxpayers in the district, and who sometimes do offer constructive criticism,” he says, calling the Jan. 25 incident “unfortunate” and the actions of current leadership “exhausting.”

    “I am presently encouraged that… we’re seeing a large segment of our community – black and white, rich and poor, Democrat and Republican – who say enough of this, and that’s encouraging,” he says. “It’s time to get to get some adults in the room who will run the school district on behalf of the children.”

    Board members up for re-election are Holmes, McKie, Caution-Parker and Manning.

    Looking forward, he says, he’s hopeful that the upcoming elections will result in more civility in school district leadership at Richland Two.

    “It’s my hope that as we move toward these elections in November, that parents are paying attention, parents are beginning to get more engaged, and they see this for whatever it is,” Gilchrist said.

    “We look to bring on some energy on the school board that cares about governing, that cares about parents, that cares about learning, that cares about the things the parents care about, and not about using taxpayer money, using the district apparatus, and using the power of governing to silence the community.”

  • Mungo stakes out Blythewood countryside

    Mark Johnston puts out signs to alert neighbors to the development. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – When longtime Blythewood resident Mark Johnston noticed surveyors in his wooded neighborhood near the intersection of Swygert and Mt. Valley Roads about a month ago, he said his heart sank.

     “We’ve lived out here in the country for more than 20 years,” he said, “and those surveyor stakes don’t look good to me.”

    While the land has been surveyed and staked, Mungo has not yet purchased it.

    Bill Dixon, vice president of land development for Mungo, confirmed that Mungo has a contract on the property and is looking at developing 262 acres along Mt. Valley Road on each side of Swygert Road.

    “We’re still in the due diligence phase so we’re not certain just how many homes will be built, but 400 is probably a ballpark number,” Dixon said. “There’ll be a lot of green space. We’ll know more in another month or so,” Dixon said, “but right now we’re studying and learning everything we need to know about the property.”

     Johnston said he understands that the plan is to break ground in six to eight months.

    “So, sometime in the fall I guess,” he said.

    Dixon said that’s probably about right based on how long it takes to do the study.

    “The homes will be served by Columbia water and either Columbia or Palmetto sewer,” he said.

     “This is a rural area out here,” Johnston said. “It’s a beautiful area and we don’t want to see a big housing development go up out here in the countryside. I don’t think anyone out here is going to want this.”

    If the development becomes a reality, rezoning of the property will take about three months or maybe longer. Any rezoning will first go before the Richland County Planning Commission for a recommendation to Richland County Council. It will then go before Council for three readings. The public will be allowed to speak to any request for rezoning at the Planning Commission meeting and again at the public hearing that will be held during one of the three County Council meetings.

     On Saturday, Johnston and his wife Pam were seen putting out signs at the intersection of Swygert and Mt. Valley roads. Down the road a ways, pink ribbons tied to survey stakes were blowing in the wind. Johnston’s signs displayed the acreage of the proposed development, the number of homes that could be built as well as Dixon’s name and phone number for residents to call if they are concerned or have questions.

    Johnston said that while he still doesn’t know a lot of the details of Mungo’s planned development, he said he is trying to alert his neighbors so they can have their say before it’s too late.

  • Great Falls man gunned down in Ridgeway

    RIDGEWAY – Jamaal Talford, 38, of Great Falls died of multiple gunshot wounds Friday night, March 18.

    Franklin Terrence Durham, 29 called the Fairfield County Sheriff’s office a little after 8 p.m., Friday night,  to say he had shot somebody, according to officials.

    Durham

    Deputies were dispatched to the 900 block of Old Highway 21 in Ridgeway where Durham came out of the house with his hands up.

    The victim was lying in front of the home, according to the report, and was transported to MUSC Fairfield, where he was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.

    According to the incident report, Durham told deputies that he and Talford had gotten into an altercation at a location on Sand Dollar Lane earlier in the evening, but that he (Durham) had left and gone back to his home on Old Highway 21.

    Shortly thereafter, according to Durham’s statement, the victim arrived at Durham’s home and began pummeling him. Durham said he then pulled out his gun and shot the 38-year-old man.

    Durham was taken to the Fairfield County Detention Center where he was released on a $100,000 surety bond for manslaughter and a $5,000 surety bond for possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

    The incident continues to be investigated by the Fairfield County’s Sheriff’s department and the Fairfield County Coroner.


    This story was updated March 23, 2022 at 6:42 p.m.

  • Voice receives Jay Bender Award

    COLUMBIA – The ninth annual Jay Bender Award for Assertive Journalism was presented to Barbara Ball, publisher of The Voice, at the South Carolina Press Association’s annual meeting in Columbia on March 11.

    Ball

    The award recognizes one daily newspaper and one non-daily newspaper journalist in the state each year who stands up to authority in the public’s interest. As one of the top honors presented by the SCPA each year, it includes a prize of $250 and is named for the SCPA’s attorney of 30 years, Jay Bender, whose career has been dedicated to preserving open government and First Amendment freedoms.

    The judges’ comments, which were read during the presentation, made note of Ball’s persistence and dedication.

    “In the small town of Blythewood, Barbara Ball has spent more than a year standing up for her work and her newspaper, despite financial repercussions. In this entry, Ball highlights the great lengths the mayor has gone to intimidate her related to her newspaper’s in-depth reporting on the hiring [and subsequent firing] of a marketing firm to help promote the town. While The Voice has faced public, false allegations, Ball has stood up for the integrity of her reporting, offering readers insight and evidence on complex developments. Kudos for using the FOI to shine light in dark places. With some members of local government trying to sully The Voice in the community’s eye, it’s nice to see readers stepping up to support The Voice with subscriptions and donations. Ball is unshakeable and we honor her for her persistence.”

    This is the third time Ball has won the award, winning previously in 2018 and 2019.

    “This award recognizes assertiveness in journalism, particularly by journalists who are covering public officials, public figures and public life in general,” Bender said when Ball won the award in 2019. “To be a reporter, you have to be assertive in the first place, but to go above and beyond like Barbara has done is special.”

  • Family safe after fire burns home

    BLAIR – Fairfield County fire units were dispatched to a reported structure on fire off of 99 Road in Blair at 3:45 Monday morning.

    Upon arriving, the first unit reported fire coming through the roof. They were informed that all occupants were out of the home.

    Newberry County fire service also responded to the call to aid the Fairfield county units. The fire teams were able to control the fire in about an hour.

    The fire is believed to have started in the kitchen. No injuries were reported.

    The Red Cross is assisting the family.

  • Doko Ribfest Winners

  • Uncovering Corruption in South Carolina

    COLUMBIA – Post and Courier editor Autumn Phillips introduces the Post and Courier Uncovered teamm Avery Wilks, Glenn Smith, Stephen Hobbs, Tony Bartelme, and Voice publisher Barbara Ball during Monday’s panel discussion on working to expose corruption in South Carolina’s news deserts. 

    A recording of the event can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/c/postandcourier.

  • Taylor: No contamination, no ink in Winnsboro water

    WINNSBORO – Rumors spread quickly Saturday morning across Blythewood Facebook pages that a Winnsboro water pipe had broken at Palmetto Imaging on Highway 34 and that ink from the business and other contaminants were flowing through Blythewood’s waterlines.

    Winnsboro Town Manager Jason Taylor informed The Voice about 11 a.m., Saturday morning that there was no health hazard associated with the sediment residents were currently seeing in their water.

    “We encourage people to run their lines a little while and run that sediment out, and the water should clear up. There is no need to boil the water or take other precautions. No water advisory has been issued. The water is fine to drink,” Taylor said.

    “I just got off the phone with the water operator and there is nothing wrong with the water except some sediment which is harmless,” he said. “There was a break in the waterline on Highway 34 late on Thursday. They lost approximately three million gallons of water through their fire suppression system. We went down to shut their system off to keep them from continuing to loose water.

    “When that three million gallons went through our system, it drew some of our tanks down and basically flushed our system. That’s not a bad thing. We flush our system on a regular basis,” Taylor said. “But the break caused an unexpected, quick flushing of our system and stirred up sediment in the lines.

    “That sediment is what residents are seeing in their water right now.” Taylor said, “But it is not dangerous. If residents will let the water run a little while, it will clear up.”

    Even after Taylor’s explanation, some residents insisted they had talked directly to the water department employees and were told that ink from the imaging business had gotten into the lines and that even boiling the water would not clean up the ink.

    Those residents, it turned out, had actually talked to someone in the public safety department whose advice was mere speculation, a Winnsboro town official told The Voice.

    “I think the rumors got started because of the type industry that had the broken line,” Winnsboro Utilities Department Director William Medlin said. “There was the thought that ink and other contaminants had gotten back in the system after the break. But that was totally impossible with that back flow system that was in place.

    “The tanks were low, but we didn’t lose water,” Medlin said. ‘We connected with Columbia water to get our tanks filled back up quicker. But anytime you go from one water source to another, it changes the direction of the flow and that can break lose the sediment that had built up on the inside of the pipe,” Medlin said “That’s what caused the tint in the water.”

    “But there was not at any time any ink or contamination in the water.” He said.

    That information was confirmed by Ron Aiken, DHEC Media Relations Director at the S.C. Department of Health & Environmental Control.

    “According to the Town of Winnsboro, there was no form of contamination as a result of the line breaking at Palmetto Imaging,” Aiken said. “A Boil Water Notice was not required.”

    Aiken said DHEC received no calls from the public in this regard.

  • Douglass’ song to immortalize tragedy that broke Winnboro’s heart

    Jimmy’s parents are buried on either side of their son.

    WINNSBORO – The obituary in the Winnsboro newspaper told the sweet but tragic story – almost to the word – the way Jimmy Ray Douglas has told it many times.

    “It happened in 1953. Jimmy and I were about 10 ten years old. He was in my Cub Scout Troop,” Douglas began. “He had this little black dog that he called Blackie, and they went everywhere together. And one day Blackie ran on to the railroad track across the street from where Jimmy lived with his mom and dad, up there in a brick house back behind where Jackie Mincey used to have a store.

    Blackie was on the track and a train was coming and Jimmy was trying to save Blackie from getting hit by the train. He saved Blackie, but the train hit Jimmy…killed him. Everybody in town was tore up over it for a long time. Me and Jackie Wilkes and some other kids in our cub scout pack carried Jimmy to his grave.”

    Jimmy’s Obituary, published in the Winnsboro newspaper

    Jimmy and his mother

    Jimmy Bumgarner, Jr., 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bumgarner of Winnsboro, was fatally injured Wednesday afternoon (Sept. 9) about 5:25 o’clock, on the track opposite his home off Chester Highway, when he was struck by Train 32, shortly after it had left the Southern station here.

    Jimmy was trying to rescue his puppy from the track when the Diesel engine hit Jimmy, throwing him free, about sixty feet away. He sustained a fatal head injury.

    The puppy escaped unhurt.

    Dr. J. B. Floyd administered oxygen and rushed him to the Columbia hospital. He was given a blood transfusion but died shortly before midnight without regaining consciousness.

    Jimmy was the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Bumgarner. His father operates a service station and café just south of Winnsboro Mills on the Columbia highway.

    Funeral services, conducted by Dr. Ralph E. Lattimore, pastor, were held Friday afternoon at the First Baptist Church, and interment was in the Winnsboro cemetery.

    Serving as pallbearers were members of Jimmy’s Cub Scout troop: Irvin Montgomery, Jimmie Ray Douglas, Buck Ellison, Johnny McLeod, Dub Davis, Jackie Wilkes and Jamie Frazier.

    The boy, who was in the fourth grade at Mount Zion Institute and a member of the First Baptist Church, is survived by his parents, his maternal grandmother, Mrs. W. G. Groomes and a number of aunts and uncles.

    His tragic death was a shock to a wide circle of classmates, relatives and friends.

    Jimmy Bumgarner is on the left, second from the top.

    It’s a story Winnsboro guitarist Susan Douglass Taylor has remembered since she was a young girl.

    Although Jimmy died before she was born, Taylor knows the story well.

    She said her dad’s family lived four doors up from the Bumgarners. He was in college when the accident happened. But before that, Jimmy was a frequent visitor to the Taylor home.

    “Daddy said Jimmy would come to the house, come in the kitchen, get something out of the refrigerator and make himself at home,” Taylor said. “He said Jimmy was the kind of neighborhood child that everyone loved.

    Susan Douglass Taylor

    “Jimmy’s father ran a little convenience store down in South Winnsboro; his mom, I think, was a homemaker. I vaguely remember his parents,” she said. “My dad said the train accident was something the whole town had trouble getting over.”

    Jimmy was buried in what was then called the Winnsboro Public Cemetery on Garden Street. His mom and dad never had any more children and are buried on either side of their boy.

    “It’s the kind of story you can never forget, never get out of your mind. It stays with you, always in the background,” Taylor said.

    “When I became interested in music, in performing, in my late teens, I always planned to write lyrics for that story about Jimmy.” said Taylor who has performed in bands for more than 40 years.

    “But I never got around to writing it,” she said.

    Then, last week, just months after retiring from her day job as manager at South State Bank, located on the bypass, Taylor, who has been writing songs for 12 years or so, finally penned the story into sweet, haunting lyrics that touch the heart.

    “I started working on it on Tuesday, “Taylor said, “and I finished it by Friday. I’ve been consumed to get it on paper.”

    While writing songs is nothing new for Taylor, she said this one is special and she plans to perform it for the first time locally, for the people who know the story.

    Taylor, who plays 5-string banjo, guitar and piano, has performed with many different bands over the years. She currently performs with two bands – the No-Name Bluegrass Band and the BunchQuitters a trio that includes her husband, Carey, and that performs mostly country music.

    “My father was a fan of the 5-string banjo and he had a passion to learn to play it, but he never really developed his talent for it. He loved music, especially bluegrass,” Taylor said.

    “When I took an interest in the banjo at the age of 17, my parents started taking me to bluegrass festivals and nurturing that atmosphere for me. They helped expose me to people who could help me learn. So it was through that circle of meeting people that I made good friends with musicians from Columbia and we formed bands and played together. In fact, that’s how I met my husband.

    “I’ve been playing in bands ever since,” she added.

    Taylor said she’s looking forward to performing Jimmy’s song for folks in her hometown, maybe at a small, local festival such as Rock Around the Clock.

    “I’ll record it when I have a new collection of songs,” she said.

    “I think the song speaks for itself and that’s what I hope it will do” she said.” I want it to tell the story of Jimmy, his family and his dog, Blackie.”


    Little Jimmy

    A tribute to Jimmy Bumgarner, Jr., by Susan Douglass Taylor 3-2-2022

    Jimmy was a 10-year old, he walked to school each day

    And when the final bell would ring, he and his friends would play

    The woods between his school and home were full of things to do

    They’d run and jump and swing on vines, and Jimmy’s dog came, too

    Blackie was a spaniel pup, and loved his Jimmy so

    And followed close beside him wherever he would go

    Everyone knew Jimmy, and called him by his name

    They welcomed him as if their own, and Blackie just the same

    One afternoon they wandered from the woods where they had played

    Train 32 was coming, and the dog got in the way

    Jimmy jumped onto the track to save his little pup

    The engine hit poor Jimmy and they could not wake him up

    The doctor down the street was there to try and save his life

    They rushed him to the hospital as fast as they could drive

    But just before the midnight hour, sweet Jimmy lost his fight

    And left his parents childless that dark September night

    Little Jim, a cub scout, was dressed in uniform

    Many came to pay respects, for all the town did mourn.

    Six cub scouts held the casket, all dressed the same as Jim

    The boys were small in stature, but proud to carry him

    Some say that little Blackie who could not understand

    Was often seen by Jimmy’s grave just waiting for his friend

    His parents shut his bedroom door, his toys and things to hide

    And mourned their Darling Jimmy until the day they died

    This song’s for little Jimmy, his Mom and Daddy, too

    And also little Blackie, ‘cause Jimmy sure loved you

    God rest your souls in peace now, you’ve gone to be with Him

    Your graves are just inside the gate on either side of Jim.

    Many thanks to Beth Bonds, Jackie Wilkes, Bubba Montgomery Jimmy Ray Douglas, Jamie Frazier, Buck Ellison, Pat Grooms Styron, and Johnny McLeod for content and memories.