COLUMBIA – Richland County residents received map amendment
notices last week as part of the county’s newly adopted Land Development Code
(LDC) changes.
Even though the county has already adopted the LDC, the new
zoning codes are not yet adopted.
While the notice sent out to county residents says the new
zoning classification assignments will go before the Richland County Planning
Commission for a recommendation on Monday, March 7, Richland County Zoning
Director Geonardo Price told The Voice on Tuesday that the county has decided
to use the March 7 Planning Commission meeting to hear from residents as to
whether or not they like the new zoning designation for their area. He said no
votes will be taken on the issue on Monday, March 7.
“We’re going to push the Planning Commission vote back to
April 4, which will give the public two times to be heard by the Commission
before they vote,” Price said. “First on Monday, March 7 at 3 p.m. and again
April 4 before the Commission votes on a recommendation to county council.
According to the notice mailed to residents, the 2021 LDC
applies to all property located within unincorporated Richland County. The
county has created a new zoning map as part of the LDC which can be viewed by
going to https://bit.lyRCGovPlanning, then clicking on the different sections
of the county.
Under the new LDC, the Rimer Pond Road area – stretching
north and east – which is now zoned Rural (RU), will be rezoned to Residential
2 (R2).
The Residential 2 District provides lands primarily for low-
to moderate-intensity residential development. Minimum lot widths will be 50
feet. But there will be no minimum lot width if vehicular access is provided to
the rear of the lot from an abutting alley or if modified in accordance with
Sec. 26-3.1(f)(5), cluster development. Side yard setbacks will be allowed at
10 feet unless modified in accordance with Sec. 26-3.1(f)(4), zero lot line
development.
The next Planning Commission meeting will be held at 3 p.m.
Monday, March 7, in council chambers at the county building at 2020 Hampton
Street. More information will be posted on the Rimer Pond Road Facebook page:
Keep it Rural.
BLYTHEWOOD – After a few questions about color and materials
that will be used in the construction of a Taco Bell that is planned or
Blythewood Road, the Board of Architectural Review (BAR) voted unanimously to
approve a certificate of appropriateness for the restaurant.
Following the meeting, one of three presenters, Bob Wiseman, representing Flynn Restaurant Group, told The Voice that he expected construction to begin within 60 days and that the restaurant should be open in early fall. The restaurant will be located at 209 Blythewood Road, next to Zaxby’s.
BAR’s Plan to limit LED
In other business, the board discussed limiting the use of
LED window lighting in the commercial areas of the town, but it was not on the
agenda to be voted on.
It was the third time the board has suggested cracking down
on LED window lighting that has cropped up in windows of at least one business
in town.
In December, Town Council voted against limiting LED
lighting after two black-owned businesses told council they had been harassed
by town employees to remove their LED lighting even though there was no town
ordinance against it.
In January, the BAR pursued limiting LED lighting again,
requesting Williamson to provide draft language and to bring the board
additional images of business window signs with LED lights.
That draft, included these suggested revisions to the sign
ordinance: “Lighted signs for advertising (not incidental signs like “Open” or
“Closed”) must receive a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Board of
Architectural Review” and “Lighted window signs for advertising must receive a
Certificate of Appropriateness. Incidental signs (like “open” and “closed” can
be reviewed administratively to ensure compliance.”
Continuing the discussion Monday night in a new attempt to
prohibit most LED lighting in the windows of commercial buildings, chairman Jim
McLean asked, “Is there a need for the BAR to regulate anything beyond the
open/closed aspects of signage?”
“Do we want to ask the town [council] to write
an ordinance to give us [the BAR] the say-so on essentially, what is
acceptable,” Mclean asked. “It doesn’t mean it won’t be permitted, but it gives
us say-so on what the possibilities are.”-
McLean acknowledged that the board would not be able to vote
since the matter was not listed for action on the agenda.
“Is it the wishes of
the board to have it [LED lighting] as a certificate of appropriateness for all
lighted window signs beyond open/closed signs?” Town Administrator Carroll
Williamson asked.
“That would be my
position, and if anything needs to be grandfathered in, it should be
considered,” he said.
“Based on comments
the board has made, it’s unanimous,” McLean said to Williamson.
“If I could just work
with you, Mr. Chairman, and draft language, then we can work on a process for
that,” Williamson said.
Following the meeting, Williamson confirmed to The Voice
that the proposed ordinance to require LED lighting to have a certificate of
occupancy will not be on the town council agenda Monday night.
WINNSBORO – The Fairfield County Coroner’s office released the name of the individual who was involved in a deadly shooting in Winnsboro on Feb. 16.
Michael Foster, Jr., 19, of Blackstock, was shot on Wednesday, Feb. 16. He was transported by Fairfield County EMS to MUSC Fairfield Emergency Department where he succumbed to his injuries.
The case remains under investigation by Fairfield County
Coroner’s Office and Fairfield County Sheriff’s Department.
WINNSBORO – A Winnsboro man died in a shooting Wednesday that began in the area of Dunn and Willow Streets in Winnsboro and with the victim ending up near the Strawberry Patch on Columbia Road.
A sheriff’s report released to The Voice said a deputy was dispatched to Columbia Road and 7th Street about 6 p.m. in reference to a gunshot victim.
While in route, the deputy was advised by other deputies that the incident took place on Railroad Ave. When the deputy arrived, he reported that he saw “subject #2 running on the railroad tracks.” After chasing the subject along the track on to Willow Street, the deputy lost sight of the suspect, according to the report.
After other deputies arrived on the scene, another person identified as subject #1, dressed in black, was found lying down in the bushes and was detained.
Still searching for subject #2, deputies received a tip that subject #2 had entered a house near the corner of Birch Street and 10th Street, then left in a black Chevy four-door vehicle. Deputies located the vehicle and detained the person who was in the Chevy’s passenger seat.
Deputies later retrieved a black Gen 5 Glock 19 firearm in the area where subject # 1 was taken into custody.
Neither the names of the victim nor the subjects have been released for publication at this time.
This is a developing story and more information will be posted when it becomes available.
NEW YORK – The Charleston Post and Courier and its 17 community news partners were awarded a Special Citation of the 2022 Selden Ring Award for Investigative Reporting for their investigative series, “Uncovered.” The Voice of Blythewood and Fairfield County is one of The Post and Courier’s community news partners.
The citation was for the series on rising local corruption
in South Carolina, partly a consequence of the decline in local news sources
and the reduced number of watchdogs holding local officials accountable.
Teaming up with other newspapers throughout the state, the
Post and Courier and its partners found that government officials from state
legislators to city council members to town administrators engaged in unethical
behavior — including going on taxpayer-funded junkets and outright stealing
from government coffers — while no one was looking.
Judges said the series and the local partnership “provides a
model for news organizations in other communities with news deserts.”
ProPublica won first place for its series exposing how the
wealthiest Americans avoid paying income tax.
The Tampa Bay Times’ placed second for its 18-month
examination of the problems at Florida’s lone lead smelting facility, “an
example of holding corporate and government institutions accountable.”
The Wall Street Journal won third place for “The Facebook
Files,” a report on Facebook’s inaction as its platform has been used in
malignant ways,” the judges wrote.
BLYTHEWOOD – Blythewood will celebrate Black History Month
on Feb. 26 & 27, beginning in the historic gymnasium at Bethel-Hanberry
Elementary school and culminating with a community program at Doko Meadows.
Sponsored by the Blythewood Historical Society, this year’s
theme will be ‘Honoring the Legacy & Heritage of Bethel-Hanberry High
School 1946-1970 & Beyond’
The community, especially former students, faculty and a
employees who were a part of Bethel-Hanberry school during the years from 1946
to 1970 (and beyond), are invited to join in
commemorating the iconic school for black students in Blythewood.
Registration for the program is required by Feb. 20. To register, call 803-333-8133 or go to blythewoodhistoricalsociety.org or register in person at 100 McNulty Street (Langford Nord House) in Blythewood.
NOTICE – CORRECTED DATE OF TACO BELL appearance before BW Board of Architectural Review The Blythewood Board of Architectural Review will consider a Certificate of Appropriateness for a Taco Bell Tuesday, Feb. 22 (not Monday, Feb. 21 as printed in the Feb. 17 issue of The Voice) at The Manor.
BLYTHEWOOD – Plans for a Taco Bell with a drive-thru will go before the Board of Architectural Review on Tuesday, Feb. 22, to be considered for a certificate of appropriateness.
The applicant, National Restaurant Designers, is
representing the owner, Flynn Restaurant Group, in its request to develop
approximately 1.1 acres for the construction of a 1.944 square foot restaurant
with a drive-thru lane, according to the application.
The property, located at 209 Blythewood Road, is in the Town
Center (TC) District.
If approved, the restaurant will sit between Zaxby’s and
Blythewood Dentistry.
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.
This will be the second time since 2018 that Taco Bell has
considered opening a franchise in Blythewood.
The Board of Architectural Review will meet at 5:30 p.m., Monday evening at the Manor to review the application. The meeting is open to the public and will be live streamed and available on YouTube via the town’s website, townofblythewoodsc.gov.
In this third of four excerpts from her book, Deep South – Deep North: A Family’s Journey, published in 2018, Ridgeway native Lottie B. Scott tells both the heartbreaking and triumphant tale of her maturation into adulthood against a racially-charged, impoverished, yet fiercely loving backdrop in Longtown, S.C.
THE COURTSHIP – Mama and Daddy met during the spring of 1935 at Mount Olive Baptist Church in Longtown, South Carolina, while attending a spring revival meeting.
…
Mama said the happiest time of the week was going to church
on Sundays. Churches filled a social need for young people to meet people. Mama
and her siblings attended no parties or dances, as Grandpa Saul viewed these as
sinful. She had some opportunity for social life at school, which was opened
only a few months of the year, but she spent little time there because of the
demands of the farm. When school let out, Mama could not dally and engage in
conversation with other children. She had to rush home and perform chores
before sunset. Grandpa Saul kept a clock with him at all times and took note of
what time she got home. If she and her sister Scillar were even a couple of
minutes late arriving from school, he asked them to give an account of what
happened. Grandpa Saul would begin to fuss and would not let up until bedtime.
Mama said he wanted everything done his way and by his clock.
After working in the fields a half day on Saturdays, Mama
would spend the remainder of the day preparing for Sunday. She would fetch two
large pails of water from the spring, which was a quarter of a mile from the
house. She poured the water from one pail into a small black wash pot and built
a fire under it. When the water reached a very warm temperature, she used a
dipper to remove the water to a large pail. Mama used a bar of soap made with
lye to wash her hair. Then she rinsed the suds from her hair with the other
pail of water. Next she used an old fork to untangle her hair and sat in the
sun for her hair to dry as she waited her turn to use the straightening comb
after her sisters. Mama at times became impatient, and instead of waiting for
the straightening comb, she would heat a smoothing iron and use it to get some
of the kinks out of her hair. She did this by placing her long hair on the
ironing board and pressing it, beginning at the nape and proceeding to the
ends. She then would sweep the warm smoothing iron over her entire head. This
method got more of the kinks out of her hair but did not make it straight. Mama
would make two corn rows and two large braids in the back, and crisscross the
braids together to create a large bun in the back, and other times she would
twist paper into long strips and roll her hair to make curls. At night, she
tied a cloth on her head tightly to hold the hair in place. She did all of this
without a mirror.
Saturday night was bathing time. Mama had to make a second
trip to the spring to get water for a bath. She walked slowly to and from the
spring, careful not to perspire, as she did not want her hair to “turn back”.
There was competition between the sisters for the large washtub. While the
water was heating for the bath, Mama would choose one of two dresses to wear.
She did not like wearing gloves, or carrying parasols or handbags. Mama marched
to her own beat and always wore plain dresses that her mother made. For one
occasion her parents bought her a dress made of rayon. Rayon dresses were
popular and highly prized. The drawback of wearing it was when it rained: you
never wanted to be wearing your beautiful rayon dress during a downpour because
it would surely shrink. Before putting on the rayon dress, Mam would check the sky
for thunderclouds. She would accessorize it with a simple piece of jewelry. One
earring was often all she had. She never cared if the earring matched the dress
or not. Mama said she always wore a single strand of pearls, a practice she
continued until her death at age ninety-four.
Young people could hardly wait until Sunday, knowing they
would have an opportunity to see that “special” person. There was never an
argument about going to church early. Young people would have an opportunity to
sit together or near each other during church services and Sunday school, and
to talk while waiting for service to begin. At church, they had many
opportunities to interact, pass a note, give a smile, or hold hands when adults
were not looking. However, adults always seemed to be looking. Services lasted
all day and sometimes into the evening, yet at the end of the service, no one
rushed home. Adults enjoyed the socializing after church. This gave young
people further opportunity to continue their conversations.
The young people really like the nighttime service. They
were required to stay in the church yard; however, they would stand on the
edge. They obeyed their parents by standing on the edge, but the kerosene
lanterns gave off only dim light, giving the young people a sense of privacy
and an opportunity to hold hands. So they enjoyed the company of the opposite
sex in the moonlight.
Mama caught Daddy’s attention during the April revival
meeting on a Sunday night. He was attracted to women with ebony skin color.
“The blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice,” was his mantra. Mama excited
him with her deep dark skin and sweet disposition. Daddy was a handsome young
man. He stood about six feet with a slim physique, honey tone complexion, and
green-grey eyes, and was smooth talking. For the next few Sundays, they talked
briefly with one another. Mama had been seeing a fellow named Tucker, but she
was not quite sure he was the one. Grandpa Saul had very strict rules. He did
not allow his daughters to entertain more than one fellow at a time. He forbade
them from bringing home one fellow this Sunday and another one the following
Sunday. Mama had to make sure she was willing to discontinue the relationship
with Tucker. She needed to be certain that Daddy was as interested in her as
she was in him. So began the dance.
Mama and Daddy lived several miles apart and saw each other
only on Sunday. There was no other way of communicating. Sending a letter required
walking to the mailbox more than a mile away. She had no stamps and no time to
go to a mailbox. Grandpa Saul would not have allowed her to take time away from
farm work. Grandpa Saul tried to watch their every movement. When Daddy asked
to walk Mama home after church, she agreed.
When a guy is really interested, he shows this by asking
permission to walk you home. The first time Daddy walked Mama home, Grandpa
Saul was a little concerned. “Here we go again with a new guy,” he bellowed.
The following Sunday, Daddy walked Mama halfway home and asked to be excused.
He said he had an errand to do for his father. He did the same thing the next
Sunday. On the third Sunday, as they were strolling down the road, he told Mama
he had to turn back. She let him know she was fully aware of what he was doing.
He was not doing errands for his father, but was racing back to catch up with
Rachel to walk her home and spend time with her. Mama was not going to play
second to anyone. She told Daddy he had a choice: walk her all the way home or
just walk out of her life. This was probably the first time Daddy had
encountered a woman who challenged him and gave him options that he had to
choose on the spot. Daddy learned that Mama was very sweet but more than a
handful when she got angry. He liked the feisty Mama even more and continued
walking until they reached the Stones’ farm.
…
Courtship was not easy. Mama’s father kept a close eye on
his daughters, and the fellows. When the couples sat in the sitting room, he
would always be in the next room with an ear to the door. When the clock struck
9 p.m., he would clear his throat very loudly. If that did not work
instantaneously, he would turn over a chair, causing it to make a loud crashing
sound as it hit the floor. A minute later, he would say loudly, “It’s 9
o’clock. It is time for people to go to bed. Everyone should be home by now, or
getting ready to go home.” With that remark, the fellow would say, “I am going
home. See you next Sunday.”
The couple would proceed to the door, walking slowly, of
course, and dallying a minute to say goodbyes. While Grandpa Saul could not see
the couple, he listened carefully for every movement. If the goodbyes took too
long, he yelled from his room, “What’s going on out there? I heard the fellow
say he was leaving. How long does it take to walk to the door? He should have
been halfway home by now.” Of course, this was an exaggeration as the fellow
lived many miles away.
With the hard farm work of plowing and harvesting the crops, and the lack of freedom to attend even a ball game, Mama longed for an opportunity to escape from what she called “prison”. When Daddy asked for her hand in marriage, she viewed it as an escape to freedom.
WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Council once again had to pull
an agenda item at the last minute after failing to follow proper meeting
procedures.
At Monday night’s meeting, the council tabled third reading
of an ordinance relating to the sale of property within the Fairfield County
industrial park.
The reason? Council had never held a second reading.
Ordinance 784 received first reading by title only on
January 10. The measure would grant a first right of refusal over the sale of a
parcel within the commerce center.
Councilman Doug Pauley called attention to the agenda gaffe.
“I would like to know who is responsible on the agenda team
to make sure these agendas are correct,” Pauley said. “We need to make sure
that we are providing our citizens with all the information necessary.”
Council chairman Moses Bell never addressed the vague
descriptions of properties and the lack of other information on several
ordinances.
Bell did acknowledge the council failed to give second reading to Ordinance 784, and supported tabling the measure until after a second reading is held.
“You are absolutely correct,” Bell said. “So tonight, we’re
going to table [the ordinance] until we get the second reading. You’re right.”
Pauley also pointed out that agenda errors unnecessarily
cost taxpayers money. These mistakes force Fairfield to buy multiple advertisements
at extra cost to the county. Pauley also noted that the county is publishing
public hearing notices in the newspaper three times when they are only required
to publish them one time, 15 days prior to the public hearing. That, Pauley
said, is also an unnecessary extra cost to tax payers.
Bell replied to that feedback with a mere “thank you.”
Recurring theme
Council failed to approve third and final reading of Ordinance 787 amending the appropriation of funds from the American Rescue Plan due to the lack of a second. After discussing it in executive session later that evening, council voted 5-2 to approve it, with Councilmen Mikel Trapp and Tim Roseborough voting against.
The ordinance oversight is the latest in a series of
procedural blunders over the last several months relating to the agenda.
At the January 10 meeting, council members delayed second
reading of a lease agreement with Dominion Energy for a public recreation area
because virtually no details had been made available to council members prior
to the vote.
“We need to see the proposed lease agreement with Dominion
on the property,” Pauley wrote in an email to Bell.
“It’s hard to vote on a lease agreement when you haven’t
seen it. If this is second reading why does it not show the full ordinance and
only shows title only?”
Bell agreed, leading to the measure being pulled. It’s not
come back up for a follow-up vote.
“You are absolutely right,” Bell responded. “Since the
ordinance is not complete it will come off the agenda.”
Also in January, The Voice called attention to another
omission, this one relating to a rezoning request that failed to identify the
property.
Bell initially said that the property information was on the
agenda. But when The Voice noted the information was missing, Bell stated
it was included in the council’s agenda packet, which isn’t readily available
to the public.
Bell later apologized and said it “would not happen in the
future.”
More missing information
Despite Bell’s pledge in January, several properties on the
Feb. 14 agenda were not sufficiently identified subject to a public vote.
While some Commerce Center related measures on Monday
night’s agenda identified pertinent parcels, the public notices published in
advance of the meeting did not.
During a series of votes, council voted to spend $500,000 to build a new spec building, did not vote on Ordinance 786 the sale of two undeveloped properties in the Commerce Center and also did not vote on Orinance 785 to ease design restrictions for structures that might be built on those properties.
A buyer called Windy Hill Development had offered to buy the
two Commerce Center parcels. County officials have said the sale would make the
commerce center more conducive to development.
On Monday night, county resident Landrum Johnson voiced
concerns that the buyer seems to be receiving special treatment. He also
thought the sale price was low.
“That sale seems to be done without restrictions, which
seems to invite potential abuse of the neighborhood. It doesn’t seem
appropriate,” Johnson said.
During public comment, Ridgeway resident Randy Bright said
the ordinances on the agenda continue to illustrate the council’s willy-nilly
approach to budgetary and planning matters.
“We don’t even know where we stand financially. We haven’t
done an audit in over a year,” Bright said. “Now and then we quote a one-day
figure of the fund balance, which is mostly meaningless.”
RIDGEWAY – Five candidates have filed to run for two council seats and for mayor in the Ridgeway general election to be held April 5, 2022.
Hartman
Martin
Johnson
Former council member Robert Hartman, Rick Johnson and current councilman Dan Martin will be vying for the two open seats on council. Mayor Heath Cookendorfer and former Mayor Rufus Jones have filed to run for mayor.
Both council seats and the mayor’s seat are for four year
terms.
Heath Cookendorfer
Rufus Jones
The election will be held at the Ridgeway Fire Station, 350
U. S. Hwy 21 S. Those desiring to vote in the election must be registered by
March 5, 2022, at the Fairfield County Board of Voter Registration.
This is a nonpartisan election and no party affiliation will
be placed on the ballot.
The polls will open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. on
election day. The process of examining return-addressed absentee envelopes will
begin on April 5, 2022, at the Fairfield County Voter Registration and
Elections Office at 315 S. Congress Street in Winnsboro.
On Friday, April 8, 2022, at 10 a.m., the Fairfield County
Voter Registration and Election Committee will hold a hearing at 315 S.
Congress Street in Winnsboro to determine the validity of ballots challenged in
this election.
WINNSBORO – Fairfield County is facing a financial “mini
crisis” after failing to timely file required financial statements. That
failure has resulted in the county’s FY2021 audit being held up, according to
emails obtained by The Voice.
In an email to council members, County Administrator Malik
Whitaker said the county is six months tardy in submitting its audits,
potentially jeopardizing critical infrastructure projects dependent on state
money.
“We have a
mini-crisis situation with our audits being six months behind,” Whitaker wrote
in an email to council members on Feb. 1. “Our team is committed to getting us
through this situation with lessons learned so this will not happen again. Your
patience is appreciated. I will keep your [sic] posted.”
However, the S.C. Comptroller General’s Office is
withholding payments to Fairfield pending receipt of the required financial
statements, according to the S.C. Rural Infrastructure Authority, or RIA.
Among the Fairfield County projects potentially impacted is a proposed water main project at Peach Road, said Kendra Wilkerson, a program manager with the RIA.
“We have been informed that the [Comptroller General’s]
office is currently withholding state payments to a number of counties,
including Fairfield, pending receipt of FY21 financial statements,” Wilkerson
said via email to Fairfield County leaders.
“So, if you submit a request for payment to RIA for the
Peach Road Water Main project (RIA grant R-21-2057), that payment will be
withheld until this situation is resolved with the CG’s office,” the email
continues. “RIA does not have any control over this situation, but we wanted to
make sure you were aware of it.”
Whitaker said the county is working on an 18-day action plan
to bring its financials up to speed.
“I have committed our finance team to a February 28th
deadline for submitting our audited statements to the State,” Whitaker said.
“We now have an action plan with weekly steps and two accountability meetings a
week.”
Council chairman Moses Bell called the county’s predicament
“unacceptable.”
Councilman Doug Pauley suggested that the loss of top tier
county employees over the last year has exacerbated matters.
Since the installation of the current council, there have
been a number of high profile resignations. Those resignations were most of the
top county administration officials.
They include former County Administrator Jason Taylor,
former Assistant Administrator Laura Johnson, former county attorney Tommy
Morgan, former Clerk to Council Patti
Davis, former Community Services Director Chris Clausen, former County Parks
& Recreation Director Russell Price and former Building Official Chris
Netherton.
“We lost Laura, who was a big help in getting things like
this done, and now all of it falls on [Finance Director] Ann [Bass],” Pauley
said. “She now has to answer the many demands for information from council
members and new members of the administration.”
During citizen comments, Ridgeway resident Randy Bright
blamed council’s willy-nilly approach to budgetary and planning matters.
“We don’t even know where we stand financially. We haven’t
done an audit in over a year,” Bright said. “Now and then we quote a one-day
figure of the fund balance, which is mostly meaningless.”
Though not directly addressing the money being withheld by
the state, Councilman Clarence Gilbert said on Monday that employee morale is
worsening.
Gilbert suggested hiring an outside firm to anonymously poll
staff about morale issues and how to solve them.
“It’s obvious that our county government is suffering from
low employee morale,” Gilbert said. “Good or bad morale is contagious. If the
soldiers are not happy, then the generals will fall on their face.”