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  • Pets, Inc. to open office in Winnsboro

    WINNSBORO – The Town of Winnsboro has signed an agreement with Pets, Inc, to provide low cost spay and neuter surgeries for dogs at a facility in Winnsboro.

    “The former Fairfield County Animal Shelter Director Bob Innis now works for Pets, Inc. and is familiar with the needs of animals in Fairfield County. He contacted us about this arrangement last month,” Winnsboro Town Manager Chris Clauson told The Voice on Monday. “They want to have a place in town where they can provide some veterinary services at greatly reduced prices, specifically spay and neuter surgeries at first.”

    The services will be available to Fairfield County residents certain days each week. The specific days and services will be announced later.

    “The Town is leasing a building on South Vanderhorst Street to Pets, Inc. for $10 per month and I think they hope to be in it sometime in January,” Clauson said.

    The Voice was unable to reach a spokesperson for Pets, Inc. before press time. More information will be available at a later date.

  • ‘Good’ rating is a first for FCHS

    WINNSBORO – Less than 24 hours before Dr. Tracie Swilley boarded a plane Wednesday for Washington, D.C. where she will be presented as one of three nominees vying for National Principal of the Year on Friday night, she received another feather in her cap.

    Swilley

    Under Swilley’s administration, Fairfield Central High School received a ‘Good’ rating on the S.C. State School Report Card for the first time in the school’s history.

    Besides achieving an overall ‘Good’ rating, the school’s scores in math (60.8%) bested the state average (47.8%.) FCHS’ career readiness score (75.9%) also measured up well against the state’s average of 69.6%.

    While the school’s English Language Arts (ELA) score of 58% fell short of the state’s average score of 66.4%, and there was a wide gap in FCHS’ college readiness score (16.2%) and the state average (32.5%.), the school’s on-time graduation rate (85.3%) was just shy of the state average (85.4%.)

    “It’s been a long climb,” Swilley said, “and we’re still climbing.”

    Fairfield School Superintendent Tony Hemingway praised Swilley.

    “We’re really proud of the work that Dr. Swilley has done,” he said. “I’ve had a lot of conversations with her, just listening to the things she’s done with her instructional leadership, working with her staff, all of them helping to move the school forward. That hard work has paid off, and we are super proud of her.”

    Swilley, in turn, heaped praise on her students and her staff for their overall ‘Good’ score as well as other areas where they have made improvement. 

    “I attribute this success to our staff, their belief in our students, and our students believing in what it takes to get it done and following through,” Swilley said.

    “I also want to recognize what our parents, our school board, and the entire community have done to help make this happen,” she said. “It really does take a village.”

  • Passenger dies in U.S. 21 crash in Fairfield

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – A Saturday night crash on U.S. Hwy. 21 near Old 21 Road has left one person dead and three others injured, according to Corporal Nic Pye with the S.C. Highway Patrol.

    Tony Lee Canty, 56, of Ridgeway died in the crash, according to Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill.

    The crash occurred about 7:15 p.m. when a 2013 Chevrolet SUV and a 2003 Ford van were both traveling north on U. S. Hwy. 21 and collided, according to the Highway Patrol report.

    A driver and two passengers occupied the Chevrolet SUV. The driver and front seat passenger were injured and transported to a local hospital. The back seat passenger, Mr. Canty, was unrestrained and pronounced dead on the scene from injuries he sustained in the crash, according to the coroner’s report. An autopsy is scheduled to determine the cause of death.

    The driver was the sole occupant of the Ford van. That person was injured and also transported to a local hospital.

    The accident remains under investigation by Fairfield County Coroner’s Office and South Carolina Highway Patrol.

  • Fairfield County eligible for FEMA disaster assistance for Helene

    Fairfield County has been added to the list of disaster declaration areas due to the damage caused by Hurricane Helene. 

    To apply for Individual Assistance through FEMA, visit: https://www.disasterassistance.gov/

    FEMA has also put out a resource toolkit to help those impacted by Hurricane Helene:  https://www.fema.gov/…/fema_helene-recovery-toolkit.pdf

  • Candidate forum postponed to Oct. 24

    WINNSBORO – Due to severe weather predictions and then severe damage caused by Hurricane Helene, the county council candidate forum initially scheduled for Sept. 26 was first postponed to Oct. 3, then to Thursday, Oct. 24.

    The forum will feature candidates running for seats on Fairfield County Council and will take place at Christ Central Community Center, in downtown Winnsboro.

    The doors will open at 6:30 p.m., and the candidates will take their seats on stage at 7 p.m. to answer questions submitted by members of the audience. Cards and pens will be available on tables in the foyer for submitting questions.

    The Voice provided free space on the front page of the Sept. 19 edition of the newspaper for candidates to make their case and talk about their candidacies. Each candidate will be introduced, and will have two minutes to answer each question. Time keeper is former Fairfield County Chamber of Commerce official Susan Yenner. Each candidate will be given two minutes for a closing statement at the end of the forum.

    Door Prizes, Refreshments

    When attendees enter the auditorium, each will receive a free ticket for a door prize drawing that will be held at the end of the forum. The following Fairfield County businesses have each donated $50 gift certificates or a door prize valued at $50 or more: Sharpe’s Shoppes (fuel), Porter Gas (door prize), Bella & Blue boutique (gift certificate), Old Town Hall restaurant (gift certificate), and Over the Top boutique (gift certificate), and Laura’s Tea Room (gift certificate).

    Refreshments will be served at the end of the program.

    For more information about the forum, call 803-767-5711.

  • RWA trucks supplies to NC hurricane victims

    Student volunteers who loaded the truck (l-r): Bowen Crager, Jes Sharpe, Josh Tyndall, Dylan Wood, Bennett Nicholson, Aaron Geddens, Hoffman Sharpe, Justin Autry, Monty Sharpe, Alexis Coley. Front center: Tucker Beam and Lilly Grace Beam | Jerrica Beam

    WINNSBORO – When members of the Richard Winn Academy PTO and Booster Club heard about the hurricane-related devastation in the mountains of North Carolina, they sprang into action.

    Helping to organize the efforts are PTO President Grace Cameron and members Jerrica Beam and Anne Bass. Beam and Bass are also Richard Winn alumni. 

    Anne Bass and Jerrica Beam

    “Hurricane Helene was a real catastrophe for so many in western North Carolina,” Beam says, “and once we realized how horrific the destruction is, we decided we had to do something.”

    Members of the PTO and the school’s booster club met to organize a donation drive, sending out the request for help through e-mail and social media.

    “We knew the magnitude of what the Richard Winn Academy family is capable of doing when it comes to helping one’s neighbor,” Beam says. “With a North Carolina contact who was closely involved with the effort to bring relief to several communities in North Carolina, we found a perfect fit for the initiative.”

    Within two days, the school and hallways were flooded with donated goods that had been requested by those on the ground in the disaster zone: baby diapers, wipes, and formula; dry dog food; and basic hygiene products.

    In an interview Friday, Beam said the individual in North Carolina provided a list of needs, and people with trucks and trailers to transport the donations to devastated areas. The first shipment left on Saturday to be delivered to churches and individuals in hard hit areas.

    A second wave of donation deliveries was scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 8.

    “Phone calls are still coming in from both the school community and the broader community from those wanting to help,” Beam says.

    She says donations are still being accepted – and many are praying continuously for healing in the North Carolina mountains and surrounding states feeling the heartbreaking loss and impact of the storm.

    “I hope it gives them hope for tomorrow, for the next day, peace that things will be OK, knowing that they have a community – our community and many others – supporting and praying for them,” Beam said of the delivery of supplies from caring people in South Carolina.

    “I hope that they can all be reached by somebody who loves and cares for them and is just there for them,” she said. “And we hope these donations will help.”

    For more information about donating, call Jerrica Beam at 803-374-2192 or drop supplies at Richard Winn Academy (1796 Old Chester Road) during school hours.

    Barbara Ball contributed to this story.

  • Woman indicted on 41 counts of animal abuse charges

    WINNSBORO – A woman was recently indicted on 41 counts of animal abuse charges including abandonment, ill treatment, and torture.

     The charges stem from an incident that occurred in December 2023, when a WDPS (Winnsboro Department of Public Safety) officer was dispatched to the 100 block of Sixth Street in Winnsboro because animals were running loose. The officer reported that he found numerous dogs running loose near a home where they were housed.

    Chambers

    The front door to the house was open. As more animals were found inside the home, more officers as well as animal control were called to the home.

    Officers reached the home’s owner, Jinger Coffey Chambers, on the phone and she gave permission for the officers and animal control to enter the home, according to the incident report. After conducting a property check, animal control officers deemed the animals kept at the home were not being taken care of.

    The animals within the residence were deemed neglected and treated inhumanely. A search warrant was obtained to enter the residence and obtain evidence of how the animals were being cared for.

    Chambers told officers that she ran an animal rescue shelter named Farm Rescue and Sanctuary under a federal license 501(c)3.

    When animal control asked for the paperwork for all the animals on the property, Chambers could not provide it in reference to vaccination and immunization records, according to the report.

    When animal control advised that it could seize all the animals, Chambers voluntarily released 38 dogs, two cats, and one chicken from the residence to animal control.

    The Voice has left messages with Sixth Circuit Solicitor Randy Newman’s office at least three times over the last two weeks, to ask about the specifics of the charges and when the case is scheduled for trial, but has had no response. 

  • Reward offered in investigation of Fairfield animal cruelty case

    The female pit bull mix was near death when found. | Photos: Contributed

    WINNSBORO – A reward has been offered in conjunction with a Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office investigation of an animal cruelty case regarding a female Pit Bull mix that was found on the edge of Drawdy Park Sunday morning by a citizen who was driving by.

    The dog, which was barely breathing and severely emaciated according to the incident report, was found partially stuffed inside a dog food bag and lying on the side of Eighth Street at the corner of Drawdy Park across from the cemetery.

    According to the citizen who found her and rushed her to a veterinary emergency clinic in Columbia, a deep bloody wound circled her neck where it appeared that an embedded collar or rope had been ripped out of her skin before she was dumped. The citizen also reported that when the dog was found, she couldn’t raise her head off the ground.

    The dog did not survive the day.

    While whoever abandoned the dying dog had left the scene, they also left evidence – two latex gloves – on the ground next to the dog that Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery says may possibly aid in the investigation.

    “We’re having the gloves tested for DNA,” Montgomery told The Voice. “Hopefully, it will give us a lead to who did this, who left this dog to die. We’re also checking cameras in the area that might provide information useful for the investigation.”

    A $1,500 reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible for the abandonment and subsequent death of the dog, according to a Sheriff’s report. Three organizations (Hoof and Paw, Final Victory, and Because of Roscoe) contributed to the reward.

    The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office asks that anyone with knowledge about this incident contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141.

  • S.C. electric cooperatives work to restore power following Hurricane Helene

    COLUMBIA – South Carolina’s electric cooperatives are working around the clock to restore power after Hurricane Helene tore a path of destruction through the Palmetto State Friday morning.

    As of 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28, approximately 276,000 co-op members remain without power, down from a peak of 425,000 on Friday morning. Most of the remaining outages are concentrated in the western half of the state, and particularly the Upstate, where Helene’s destruction of critical electric infrastructure has surpassed that of even Hurricane Hugo in 1989.

    Cooperative members in western South Carolina should prepare for outages of at least a week, if not longer, as crews repair and replace a mangled power grid.

    “This is not a simple restoration job,” said Mike Couick, CEO of The Electric Cooperatives of South Carolina. “For many areas, particularly in the Upstate and along the western border of South Carolina, co-ops are essentially rebuilding our electric system from the ground up.”

    A few stats that illustrate the extent of the damage:

    • At least 1,400 cooperative power poles – and counting – were snapped by the storm and require replacement. For context, it takes about one to four hours, on average, for a crew of four to replace a single pole.
    • Just under half of the cooperative system’s substations across the state – about 80 in total – remain offline due to transmission outages.
    • The cooperatives’ materials supplier, CEEUS, is shipping out 15 tractor trailer loads of equipment and supplies a day – about the same volume of materials as were required in the aftermath of Hugo. Cooperatives are requesting about 10 times as much material as usual for a typical storm restoration effort. The required materials include wood crossarms, overhead transformers, fuses, hot line clamps, and other equipment typically seen on a power pole.

    Crews from every South Carolina electric cooperative are working in the field, including some who have completed restoration work for their co-ops on the coast and now are helping Upstate co-ops restore power.

    About 140 out-of-state line workers are expected to help with that effort, including crews from Alabama, Florida, Ohio and Virginia. The cooperatives also are working with their transmission providers, Santee Cooper and Duke Energy, to restore power as quickly as possible.

    “Our co-ops understand the significant inconvenience of extended power outages,” Couick said. “We need your help as we navigate this challenge. Please stay safe and continue to be patient as we work to restore power to South Carolina.”

    For the latest updates on power restoration efforts, please visit ecsc.org or follow us @SCcooperatives.

  • Blythewood, Fairfield families impacted by firefighters’ deaths

    BLYTHEWOOD/FAIRFIELD COUNTY – At least 25 people have been reported killed in South Carolina as the result of Hurricane Helene’s destruction in the state.

    The deaths of two of those people directly impacted Blythewood and Fairfield County families. Volunteer firefighters Landon Bodie, 18, and George (Chad) Satcher, 53, were killed Friday morning when a tree fell on the cab of their fire truck as they were answering a service call in Saluda County in connection with Hurricane Helene.

    Bodie, who played football at Blythewood High School and graduated last May, had recently become a volunteer firefighter for the Circle Fire Station in Saluda.

    Blythewood High School Principal Matt Sherman remembered Landon Bodie as a servant leader.

     “He was always quick to offer help,” Sherman said. “He always brought a kind word to the conversation and definitely raised the bar of character for anyone nearby. He always went above and beyond to help others. I can see him as a volunteer fireman, ready to assist and help in the storm.

    “While his death is a tragedy, I’m comforted to know that he died doing what he loved,” Sherman added, “helping others.

    “As an officer in the FFA, Landon was one of our Bengal Ambassadors,” Sherman said. “He represented not only Blythewood High School but the Blythewood community when he went out to local or state FFA events. I remember him as being very proud to wear his FFA jacket.”

    In an email to the BHS staff, Sherman wrote:

    “If you had a chance to meet or teach Landon… you are one of the lucky ones. Landon lived a life of high morals and a call to serve. Such an amazing kiddo with an old soul.”

    George (Chad) Satcher, 53, and a resident of Batesville-Leesburg, was a longtime volunteer firefighter for the Circle Fire Station of the Saluda County Fire Department, where he served as Chief.

    Satcher is a first cousin of former Winnsboro Town Manager Jason Taylor.

    “Chad and I grew up together and were very close,” Taylor said. “He was the kind of person who was committed to his community. His loss was a blow to our family, of course. But he lost his life doing something he was very committed to and very proud to do. He very much enjoyed serving his community as a firefighter.

    “A lot of us define ourselves as far as the job we do,” Taylor said, “but Chad largely defined himself as a father, a husband, and a firefighter.”

    In a Facebook post, the Saluda County Fire Service said the funeral for Satcher will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 5, at the Batesburg-Leesville High School Fine Arts Center, with internment to follow in Ridge Crest Memorial Park. The family will receive family and friends from 4 to 6 p.m., Friday, October 4 at the Milton Shealy Funeral Home of Batesburg.

    Funeral service information for Bodie was still pending as of Tuesday.