Category: News

  • Assistant Administrator for Fairfield County announces departure

    WINNSBORO – Assistant County Administrator Laura Johnson has submitted a letter of resignation to County administrator Jason Taylor, effective June 4, 2021, the day before Taylor leaves his job and takes over as Town Manager of Winnsboro.

    Johnson is the third high level county employee to leave or be forced out in the last two months. The county attorney, county administrator, a department head and other employees have also resigned following a purge by the new majority leadership on county council.

    Johnson, A CPA, will retire after 30 years in state and local government. Her resignation letter included a note to Taylor who promoted her from Comptroller to the Assistant Administrator position two years ago.

    “When you selected me to be your Assistant County Administrator, I was honored that you trusted me enough to give me this opportunity to be your “right-hand woman.” I have learned a lot and have enjoyed working with you. I will greatly miss our very blunt and honest conversations. I think we make a great team, one that is built upon cooperation and trust. So it is bittersweet for me to submit my letter of retirement from Fairfield County. I have poured my heart into this job, and I have thoroughly enjoyed working with you and all the department directors, elected officials and staff.”

    Johnson began her career in state government at the Office of the State Auditor and the Department of Public Safety. She came to Fairfield County as Comptroller in 2002. Her accomplishments, Taylor said, have been many.

    She implemented a new accounting system and time clock system, developed written policies and procedures for Finance, developed an account code structure, ensured GASB pronouncements were implemented, implemented a fixed assets system and implemented, evaluated and modified internal controls in several areas.

    “Going back to 2013, Johnson said, with the exception of two of those years, the county’s fund balance has increased (i.e., revenues exceeding expenditures), despite what is currently being conveyed to the citizens.

    Taylor said Laura’s leaving will be a huge loss for the county.

    “It has been a pleasure working with Laura,” Taylor said. “I’ve enjoyed working with her in her role as comptroller for the county, and then I was delighted to be able to work with her as my assistant county administrator. She had her heart in the job and was very much a professional in how she approached everything. She’s going to be missed.”

    Johnson is married to Otis Johnson and they are the parents of three sons, all of whom graduated as Valedictorians from Fairfield Central High School.

  • Plan takes shape for BW industrial park

    BLYTHEWOOD – A formal planning process is now under way for the development of the commercial portion of the 1,300-acre parcel of land near Blythewood’s downtown that’s slated to become an industrial park with an adjoining commercial area.

    Richland County, which owns the land, is working with the Urban Land Institute to determine how best to develop the commercial portion of the property, said Tiffany Harrison, Deputy Director of the Richland County Economic Development Office.

    “We know how to develop an industrial park; the commercial piece is something we feel like we need to bring those experts in to sort of develop a strategy,” Harrison said, explaining that a panel of experts will visit the area in June to gain input and develop recommendations.

    “They will interview community stakeholders as well as county leadership and town leadership to kind of get a vision for what people would like to see happen there,” she said, “but at the end of the day the recommendation will be based on facts and market information, taking into account everything that they hear talking to the local community.”

    In other words, the development plan for the property – while considering everyone’s ideas – will depend on what the market can realistically support.

    The portion of the property where commercial development is planned consists of roughly 100 acres, which has frontage on Blythewood road and is mostly designated as part of the town’s “town center” zoning classification, which allows for multiple uses but is relatively restrictive.

    The plan, Harrison says, is not to have a big-box shopping center – and to work closely with the town of Blythewood on the project.

    “We’re looking for smart growth and smart development,” Harrison said. “We’ve got a great working relationship with the town. We’re really fortunate, and we meant it when we came up here and said we’re partners in this and we want to continue to work together. This benefits both the county and the town of Blythewood.”

    Town Administrator Carroll Williamson said he’s been working closely with county officials since January on the project, and he views it as mutually beneficial.

    Williamson said the town council, planning commission, and boards of architectural review and zoning appeals are all concerned about ensuring that the town’s growth is well-managed and reflects Blythewood’s character and standards.

    “I think high-quality commercial development built with the guiding hand of the board of architectural review, which will review and approve the structure of new buildings of this park along Blythewood Road (zoned Town Center District) will be very beneficial to the town,” Williamson said.

    “Obviously, traffic will be an ongoing issue that we will be addressing, both by working closely with the county and SCDOT [South Carolina Department of Transportation] as well as through the comprehensive plan. My hope and intent is for this development to complement the existing neighborhoods and benefit our residents.”

    Meanwhile, Harrison said, progress is being made with regard to the industrial park development, and construction on that part of the project, which will include clearing and grading of the first industrial site, is expected to begin within the next few months.

  • Suspect found guilty; on the loose

    Tolbert

    WINNSBORO – An Elgin man was arrested and charged with distribution of methamphetamine to an undercover agent on July 3, 2018.

    Tommy Gene Tolbert, 50, was scheduled to stand trial on the charges in the 6th Judicial Circuit Court in Winnsboro on Monday, but did not appear. The trial proceeded without him, and he was found guilty.

    The sentencing is sealed until Tolbert is located and brought back to court. An outstanding warrant has been issue for his arrest.

    Tolbert is traveling with his wife, Tara Gerbert Tolbert. They are driving a 2010 black For Expedition with a S.C. tag # SKG371.  A decal, “Only Girls Squat” is displayed on the black window of the truck.

    Tolbert has a tattoo on his upper right arm.

    Anyone with information about the Tolberts’ location is asked to call the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141 OR contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888-CRIMESC (888-274-6372) or visit www.midlandscrimestoppers.com to email a tip. The caller’s identity will be kept anonymous and, if a tip leads to an arrest, you could be eligible for a cash reward of up to $1,000.00.

  • Fairfield DUI may be related to Blythewood accident

    WINNSBORO – A DUI arrest on Sunday in Fairfield County may have included a separate incident earlier in Blythewood.

    HALL

    LaPorchia Hall, 36, was driving a 2009 Murano Nissan Sports Utility when she was stopped for speeding on Highway 21 between Blythewood and Ridgeway in Fairfield County at about 4 p.m. Sunday by Master Trooper Gary Miller.

    Hall was charged with Driving Under the Influence with a .13 blood alcohol level. A .08 level is over the legal limit for blood alcohol in South Carolina. Hall was taken to the Fairfield County Detention where she remains.

    Information on the accident in Richland County reportedly involving Hall’s vehicle was not available at press time. More information will be published as it becomes available.

  • Search for man off Hwy 21 ends

    BLYTHEWOOD – About 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputies were called to a disturbance in the area of Boney Road and Shade Tree Road off Highway 321 just outside of Blythewood, going towards Ridgeway. The man ran into the woods with deputies in pursuit, according to Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery.

    Sheriff’s deputies from both Fairfield and Richland Counties were on the scene.

    The Voice was notified just after midnight on Tuesday that the Sheriff’s office called the search off. No other information is available at this time.

    This is a developing story and The Voice will have more information as it is available.

  • Revelations lacking in Greene’s MZI report

    WINNSBORO – A Fairfield County ad hoc committee report takes several jabs at financial decisions tied to the Mt. Zion renovation project but the financial facts regarding the renovation of Mt. Zion did not vary from what had earlier been made public.

    The report, delivered at a special meeting last week by Councilwoman Shirley Greene, chair of the ad hoc committee, rebukes the decision to repurpose Mt. Zion into a new county building for reasons she claims are divisive.

    “The choice to place the seat of local government on a site that embodies Fairfield County’s segregated past excludes the total community,” her report states.

    “Hopefully, this report and observations will help us as citizens examine ourselves and our commitment to fairness and unity.”

    While at one time Mt. Zion was attended primarily by white students, it was later desegregated and attended by both black and white students.

    Greene insisted the primary focus of the committee was advisory in nature, noting there have been “many efforts to give misinformation about what the role of the ad hoc committee was, and other things.”

    Greene and council members Moses Bell, Mikel Trapp and Tim Roseborough have commented negatively on the use of the building as a county administration building. According to public records, one council member spoke publicly to cancelling of the contract.

    In March, Councilman Tim Roseborough, who also serves on the ad hoc committee, quizzed developers about what consequences the county would face if it canceled the contract.

    “If the county decides to break the lease, it would cost the county $1 million,” Roseborough said, referencing a $1 million contingency fund that was established for the project. “Is that what you’re saying?”

    “No sir,” Rory Dowling with 1st and Main, the project developer, replied. “We would be forced to enter into some legal ramifications with the county because we’re on the hook for $13.5 million.”

    Greene criticized 1st and Main and Taylor for having joint access to the account without going through procurement or receiving council approval.

    “That is how the previous council agreed it should be done,” Taylor said. “Council approval was not required because it was more practical to work through the escrow to pay for change orders rather than be delayed for weeks getting council approval for every change order.”

    Greene also took aim at 1st and Main’s decision at one point to stop allowing the county to dip into a $1 million escrow fund. But Dowling took that action only after Bell refused to pay for various change orders that eventually totaled over $328,000, including penalties for delay in the work.

    County Administrator Jason Taylor said one benefit of the escrow account was that it offered convenience. He said it gave the county a quick way to cover unexpected expenses.

    Greene further criticized 1st and Main for locking Fairfield out of the account.

    “The developer assumed that the council was seeking to cancel the contract and stopped allowing Mr. Taylor, our county administrator, to use the escrow account, resulting in additional costs after March 15,” Greene said.

    Emails obtained by The Voice state that 1st and Main moved to protect the escrow by locking out the county only after council members Mikel Trapp, Greene, Roseborough and Chairman Moses Bell broached canceling the contract.

    Taylor said it was Bell who asked him in an email to stop paying for the change orders. This, Taylor said, made 1st and Main developer Rory Dowling uncomfortable to the point that he moved to protect his escrow.

    Greene also took issue with 1st and Main’s expenditure of over $900,000 on various upfits. She claimed this has driven the actual Mt. Zion cost from $8.7 million to about $9.7 million.

    Most of those upfits, however, relate to an E911 center that the county would have had to fund even if the county stayed in its current administration building.

    Taylor said all counties, including Fairfield, collect an E911 tariff on residential phone bills, which subsidize E911 operations.

    “That money is collected and put in a separate account for periodic upgrades to E911,” Taylor said. “We would have to start to replace the [E911 center] here even if we stayed in this building.”

    Not everyone on the ad hoc committee embraced its findings.

    “I just want to thank Ms. Greene for her research. I’d be remiss if I took any credit for it,” Councilman Neil Robinson said at an April 21 meeting. Robinson was appointed by Bell to serve on the committee with Greene and Roseborough.

    Asked Tuesday about his remark, Robinson said it was intended as tongue-in-cheek. Re-examining the contract now is unnecessary and unproductive, he said.

    “I was being sarcastic in a sophisticated kind of way,” Robinson said. “She’s doing research on information that’s been out there for two years already.”

    Bell, the council chairman, said Monday night the committee’s work was necessary in reviewing the totality of the contract.

    “We had been hearing concerns about how much money it was costing us. There was some discrepancy that we had to pay versus what we didn’t have to pay. We wanted to have a total look at the contract,” Bell said. He did not reveal what those discrepancies were.

    In addition to big ticket items, Greene also took issue with a $13,000 expenditure to hire Dr. Elijah Gaddis and Peter Thomas to research the history of Mt. Zion. Fairfield County and 1st and Main split the cost 50-50, she said.

    “This inequitable allocation of research funding produced a narrative that reinforced and affirmed Mt. Zion’s past … without consideration of how presentation of this historical perspective in isolation affects Black citizens,” the report states.

    The study referenced by Greene actually concentrated on Fairfield County’s entire education system, not just Mt. Zion, Taylor said. It was suggested by the study to perhaps house exhibits from all of the county’s education facilities over the years. The teacherage was purchased with those and other exhibits in mind.

    Dowling also explained that some portion of the wide hallways in the Mt. Zion building might be used for displays reflecting all the county’s schools.

    Greene cited other racial grievances, including the Confederate monument that stands on the Mt. Zion property.

    However, she didn’t mention at the meeting that the county and Town of Winnsboro have previously offered to move the monument, but are prohibited by state law.

    The Winnsboro monument likely falls under the South Carolina Heritage Act, which prohibits any war monument from being moved or disturbed.

    The S.C. Attorney General’s Office has issued several opinions stating that similar monuments elsewhere in South Carolina fall under the act.

    Enacted in 2000, the Heritage Act requires a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of the S.C. General Assembly.

    Such a vote has occurred only once, when the state in 2015 voted to remove the Confederate battle flag from Statehouse grounds following a mass shooting at a Charleston church.

  • Masks off in BW, effective May 1

    BLYTHEWOOD – Wearing masks will no longer be part of the Town’s emergency ordinance, beginning May 1. Council voted 3 – 2 Monday night to amend the Town’s emergency ordinance to not require face masks in the town limits. Voting against were Councilmen Sloan Griffin and Larry Griffin.

    While masks will no longer be required and the park, Manor and other town government areas have been open to the public for months, town hall remains closed with no word about when it might reopen, according to a town hall employee. Mayor Bryan Franklin has not responded to The Voice about when the town hall might be reopened to the public. It has been closed since March 16, 2020.

    “Is there a reason to make the mask requirement expire?” Sloan Griffin asked. “We’re still in a pandemic.”

    “We’ve been wearing masks for a year,” Councilman Eddie Baughman said. “It’s time we get back to normal.”

    Business owners and churches can still require the wearing of masks in their businesses and churches within the town.

  • Penny tax may bring roundabout to Boney/McNulty intersection

    Richland County Transportation Penny Tax officials will hold a public hearing on May 26 from 6 – 8 p.m. at The Manor, to receive input from town residents in regard to the construction of a roundabout at the corner of the Boney Road and McNulty Street intersection. | Ashley Ghere

    BLYTHEWOOD – As part of the Richland County Transportation Penny Tax program, the town is in line to have Creech Road extended from Blythewood Road down to Main Street (Highway 21/Wilson Boulevard) as well as the construction of a roundabout at the intersection of McNulty Street and Boney Road.

    Before plans are drawn up for the two projects, Richland County officials want to hear from the residents of Blythewood regarding their preferences for the extension and the roundabout.

    A public meeting for that purpose is set for 6 – 8 p.m., May 26, at The Manor.

    Of the four Blythewood projects that will be completed with Penny Tax funds, the first will be to widen and improve the Creech Road Extension down to Main Street.  Second priority is to widen and improve McNulty Street from Main Street to Blythewood Road. The third priority is to widen and improve Blythewood Road from I-77 to Main Street. And the fourth priority is to widen and improve Blythewood Road from Syrup Mill Road to Fulmer Road.

    “The big one the County wants input on is the intersection of Boney Road and McNulty Street,” Blythewood Town Administrator Carroll Williamson said.  “They want to know if we would rather have a four-way stop or a roundabout.”

    “We want to get some public input before the government proceeds to make changes to the intersection,” Mayor Bryan Franklin said.

    Council voted unanimously to recommend to Richland County Council a Penny Project Priority List for the town.

  • Fairfield Fire Service awarded $28K grant

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – The Fairfield County Fire Service has been awarded a $28,000 grant from the Volunteer Strategic Assistance and Fire Equipment (VSAFE) program. This program is administered by SC State Fire with funding provided by the SC General Assembly.

    The funding will be used to purchase a complete set of vehicle extrication tools to include a spreader, cutter and ram, along with all the necessary accessories and mounting brackets.

  • Basketball Great, Winnsboro’s Ronnie Collins dead at 79

    Gamecock basketball great and Winnsboro native Ronnie Collins, 79, died Tuesday. 

    A 1960 Mt. Zion Institute graduate, Collins came to the University of South Carolina in 1960 after receiving state basketball player of the year honors in his senior year at Winnsboro High School. 

    “Basketball players didn’t come out of South Carolina back in those days,” he said on a feature of the Frank Martin Show in recent years. “When I was able to get a scholarship here, I was excited.”

    Collins

    Collins, whose athleticism gained him attention from all over the Southeast and Midwest, “has been called the greatest high school basketball player in South Carolina by many observers,” wrote State newspaper reporter Bob Talbert in an April 8, 1960 article. “In all, 16 schools have sought the young man’s talents.”

    That article announcing his intent to play for the Gamecocks went on to say that Collins received football and basketball offers from a wide range of schools, but Collins chose South Carolina because he had simply wanted to be a Gamecock ever since he could remember. 

    Then head basketball coach Bob Stevens said of the then 6-3, 160-pound Collins, “We are fortunate to get Collins. When Tex Winter, basketball coach at Kansas State, was here for the high school clinic, he expressed a great interest in Collins. Brother, that’s a pretty high recommendation.”

    Winter, who coached Marquette, Kansas State, Washington, Northwestern, Long Beach State, as well as a 2-year stint with the Houston Rockets in the early 1970s, posted a 453-334 college head coaching record, and was 51-78 in the NBA. He died in 2018 at the age of 96.

    Collins played for Stevens and then Chuck Noe 1960-1964, just before Gamecock great Frank McGuire, took the head coaching job after the 1963-64 season. 

    By the time he graduated, Collins averaged 17.0 points per game over his career, with his senior year average of 23.7 points, a team high that year and fourth all time for a single season at USC. That year he was also the South Carolina College Player of the year and was a First Team All-ACC selection. 

    He set the team’s single-season free-throw percentage record of 88.4 percent, set in his sophomore year. He averaged 80.1 percent from the free-throw line in his career, seventh on the all-time Gamecocks list. Collins scored 1,256 career points in 74 games with the Gamecocks. 

    Collins was inducted into the South Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame in 2002, and was the South Carolina Men’s Basketball Legend at the 2008 SEC tournament. 

    Collins moved back to Winnsboro from Fayetteville, NC., in 1996, after a post-basketball career that included running the family bowling center business and later going into sales. 

    “I’m happy to be back here, to the best town in South Carolina,” he told the Winnsboro Herald Independent while attending the Fairfield County Gamecock Club in May 1997. “It’s great to be in the same room full of Gamecock fans for a change.”

    He began having annual parties he called “Legends in Our Own Mind,” in which Gamecock basketball players from the 50s and 60s and 70s would gather at the Old Armory in Winnsboro and reminisce.

    “We would meet and have a hundred people there every year, and we did it for thirteen years,” he told the Frank Martin show. A lifetime devotee to the University of South Carolina and Gamecocks athletics, he added “If you are good enough as an athlete, whether you’re in football, baseball, basketball, it’ll be the four greatest years of your life coming to Gamecock Land.” 

    Collins is survived by his four sons, Charles Collins (Michelle), Christopher Collins (Susan), Casey Collins (Delaine); Carey Collins; and daughter Claire Dickerhoff (Blake); six grandchildren; and siblings Van Collins (Pam), Susan Strausbaugh, and Brett Collins (Beth).

    At his request, Collins’ body will be donated to the Medical University of South Carolina for the advancement of science.