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  • Three File for District 5 Race

    WINNSBORO (Feb. 2, 2017) – Filling closed Monday with three people entering the race to fill the District 5 seat on County Council, vacated last year when Marion Robinson stepped down for health reasons.

    Filing before the noon deadline were:

    Douglas Pauley, of Highway 321 S., Winnsboro. Pauley served as a Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputy for 13 years and is currently an insurance agent with Nationwide in Winnsboro. He serves on the board of directors for Fairfield County Behavioral Health Services and is a member of the Winnsboro Lions Club.

    James McGraw, of Stoney Circle, Winnsboro, owns a window cleaning franchise and a maintenance/janitorial services company. He is a member of the board of trustees at Fairfield Memorial Hospital and is the board’s past chairman. He is the past vice chairman of the Carolina Community Action Council in Rock Hill and is a member of the Midlands Workforce Development Board. McGraw is also a member of the Greenbrier Bethel Volunteer Fire Department and also serves on the board of directors for Benedict College and Allen University.

    Marvin Jeter, of Granite Lane, Winnsboro, is a former Fairfield County code enforcement office, currently working in the mining industry. He is a past member of the Recreation Commission and a current member of the Masonic Unity Lodge 401 in Blackjack.

    The special election will be held March 28.

     

  • CTC OK’s Sidewalk Funds

    WINNSBORO (Feb. 2, 2017) – The County Transportation Committee (CTC) gave their official OK last week to kick in $43,800 for new sidewalks in the town of Ridgeway. The sidewalks will run from downtown to Elbow Circle, which is second on the CTC’s 2017 list of roads to be paved.

    The CTC agreed in principal during their Sept. 29 meeting to a $50,000 contribution, minus funds for sidewalk repairs near the Ridgeway Post Office. The CTC, during that same meeting, approved up to $9,000 for sidewalk repair. During the Jan. 26 meeting, Ridgeway Councilwoman Angela Harrison reported that the cost of the repairs had come in under budget, at $6,200.

    Ridgeway is seeking an additional $50,000 from County Council for the new sidewalks. Bill Coleman, CTC Engineer, said the CTC’s portion of the funds would be meted out in two equal allotments – half before June and the other half after June.

    The CTC’s approval was contingent upon the County also allocating their half of the funds.

    The CTC also agreed to go in half with the County on a ditching machine for the digging and maintenance of roadside ditches. The estimated cost of the machine ranges between $65,000 and $70,000, Coleman said. The CTC agreed to pitch in up to $35,000, also contingent upon the County’s approval of an equal share.

    2017 Road Paving Bids

    While the CTC last year approved the priority list of roads to be paved this year (see below), last week they approved the contract on the work itself, going with Lineberger Construction of Lancaster for the approximately $1 million job.

    It was the only bid the CTC received on the work, Coleman told the CTC.

    “Why only one bid?” Commissioner Clifton Hendrix asked.

    “I can’t answer that,” Coleman said, “except that contractors are busy and prices are up.”

    Coleman added that the job itself was not very attractive to contractors.

    “A lot of these roads are 200-300 feet, then you’ve got to go 10 miles to get to the next one that’s 300 feet,” he said. “It wasn’t a good job.”

    2017 Priority List

    High Hill Lane (District 4, 303 feet); Elbow Circle (District 1, 1,938 feet); Rainbow Cove Road (District 2, 386 feet), Cypress Drive (District 3, 901 feet); Bob’s Point Lane (District 4, 2,275 feet); Shoemaker Lane (District 5, 1,356 feet); Valencia Road (District 7, 1,000 feet); Deck Drive (District 1, 520 feet); Hickory Nut Lane (District 2, 312 feet); Stoney Trace (District 3, 3,030 feet); High Hill Road (District 1,604 feet); Creighton Road (District 5, 984 feet); Horse Creek Road (District 7, 2,340 feet); Pineneedle Lane (District 1, 520 feet); Skylark Lane (District 2, 338 feet); and Rosewood Lane (District 3, 3,249 feet).

     

  • Woman Charged in Dog Starvation

    Katera Latrice Alexander
    Katera Latrice Alexander

    WINNSBORO (Feb. 2, 2017) – A Winnsboro woman charged with starving a dog to death turned herself in this week to the Winnsboro Department of Public Safety.

    Acting Chief of Public Safety Maj. John Seibles said Katera Latrice Alexander, 28, of Forest Hills Drive turned herself over to police on Sunday. Alexander faces a misdemeanor charge of cruelty to animals, first offense. She was released on a $1,000 personal recognizance bond and will return to Municipal Court for trial at 11 a.m., Feb. 20.

    Seibles said Alexander’s offense did not rise to the level of a felony charge because no torture was involved.

    According to Chapter A of the state statute, “Whoever knowingly or intentionally overloads, overdrives, overworks, ill- treats any animal, deprives any animal of necessary sustenance or shelter, inflicts unnecessary pain or suffering upon any animal, or by omission or commission knowingly or intentionally causes these things to be done, for every offense is guilty of a misdemeanor . . .”

    Those convicted “must be punished,” the statute states, by not more than 60 days in jail or a fine of not less than $100 and not more than $500, or both.

    A Public Safety officer responded on Jan. 13 to a call of a malnourished dog tied up on the front porch of Alexander’s home. The female pit bull was, according to the incident report, so badly emaciated that vertebrae, ribs and hip bones could be seen pressing through the skin. A bucket for water sat on the porch, but it was turned over on its side and empty. There was no food bowl available for the dog, the report states. Instead, there was a milk jug with a hole cut into the top sitting on the porch near the dog’s house. Inside the jug, according to the report, was what appeared to be milk with a layer of grease floating on top.

    One of the last photos of the Alexander pit bull. The dog, approximately 3- to 4-years old according to Animal Control estimates, was malnourished and emaciated beyond recovery and later euthanized by the County. (Fairfield County Photo)
    One of the last photos of the Alexander pit bull. The dog, approximately 3- to 4-years old according to Animal Control estimates, was malnourished and emaciated beyond recovery and later euthanized by the County. (Fairfield County Photo)

    Alexander reportedly told the officer that the dog had been ill for more than a month and would not eat, but she said she had not taken the animal to a vet because she could not afford to do so. Nevertheless, the dog immediately consumed two packages of crackers offered to her by the officer and drank a large amount of water once the officer filled her bowl.

    Alexander reportedly told the officer that she had given the dog deworming medication, but that it did not help. Someone told her, she said, to give the dog milk and grease as a remedy, but the officer noted that it did not appear as though the dog had consumed any of the concoction.

    When the officer asked Alexander to show him the food she had been feeding the dog, she said she did not have any. She had only been feeding the animal table scraps, she said.

    Alexander agreed to allow Fairfield Animal Control to pick up the dog and take it to the Adoption Center, but according to Bob Innis, Director of Fairfield County Animal Control, “the dog was in dreadful condition” when it arrived at the shelter.

    “We did all we could,” Innis said last week. “We had the vet (Dr. Robert Chappell) come out, we gave it medication. We gave her a blood transfusion – her blood count was in terrible shape. When an animal is that malnourished, it affects the internal organs. In the end, we had to put her down.”

    Maj. Seibles said last week that Dr. Chappell’s report stated that the dog suffered from “obvious animal neglect,” and was “severely anemic” as a result of malnutrition. The County euthanized the dog on Jan. 15.

     

  • Rimer Pond Road Faces Commercial Rezoning…Again

    Two notices recently popped up at the intersection of Rimer Pond Road and Longtown Road West announcing two hearings for a request for commercial zoning for 5.23 acres across from Blythewood Middle School. The first hearing is scheduled for the Richland County Planning Commission on Monday, Feb. 6. The second is scheduled for the Richland County Council on Tuesday, Feb. 28. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Two notices recently popped up at the intersection of Rimer Pond Road and Longtown Road West announcing two hearings for a request for commercial zoning for 5.23 acres across from Blythewood Middle School. The first hearing is scheduled for the Richland County Planning Commission on Monday, Feb. 6. The second is scheduled for the Richland County Council on Tuesday, Feb. 28. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD (Feb. 2, 2017) – Residents on Rimer Pond Road and the surrounding area are once again faced with a request for commercial zoning on their road.

    A sign staked at the corner of Rimer Pond Road and Longtown Road West gives notification by Richland County that a 5.23-acre parcel across the street from Blythewood Middle School is scheduled for a public hearing on a request by Hugh Palmer to rezone the parcel for commercial use. The rezoning request will come before the Richland County Planning Commission on Monday, Feb. 6 at 1 p.m. At that hearing, the Commission will make a recommendation to Richland County Council for approval or denial of the request – a request with a history.

    Since April of 2015, Patrick Palmer – a developer/commercial realtor and longtime member of the Richland County Planning Commission – and his dad, Hugh Palmer, have launched several efforts to get commercial zoning pushed through the Planning Commission and County Council for the parcel, which is owned by Hugh Palmer. Patrick Palmer is the real estate broker for the property. The Palmers have said they want the commercial zoning designation so they can provide surrounding residents with commercial conveniences such as a pizza restaurant, dry cleaners and other businesses.

    But the Palmers’ opponents, the residents who live in that area (Rimer Pond Road, LongCreek Plantation, Cooper’s Pond, Round Top Community and Eagles Glen), have fought the Palmer’s commercial zoning requests, saying they neither need nor want commercial zoning or commercial entities in their rural neighborhood, testifying repeatedly before the Commission and County Council that they are already well served by nearby businesses in Blythewood and on Killian Road. For the better part of three years, the residents have fought the Palmers tooth and nail, showing up in large numbers at Commission and Council meetings to speak out against the zoning request.

    The score so far – Residents: 2, Palmers: 0.

    Against strong neighborhood opposition, Hugh Palmer withdrew his request after the Planning Commission recommended denial (4-1) in June 2015. On the eve of Thanksgiving in November that same year, after another recommendation of denial (5-5) from the Commission, County Council failed to pass the Palmers’ request for commercial zoning when the vote ended in a tie, rendering a denial of the request.

    But with close to $2 million riding on commercial rezoning of the property, the Palmers are not giving up. Again they are calling on Patrick Palmer’s fellow Planning Commissioners to grant him and his father a commercial zoning designation on the property, which is advertised for $350,000 per acre.

    Residents say the timing for the hearing, on a weekday afternoon, causes a hardship on those who would like to oppose the rezoning.

    According to the County’s zoning history of the parcel, it was part of a larger 36-acre parcel that was zoned Rural District (RU) in 1977. Palmer later had the entire parcel rezoned from RU to Residential Single-Family Medium Density (RS-MD) District and sold 31.23 acres for residential use, keeping the 5.23 acre point of the property that contained a cell tower. It is that point that the Palmers want rezoned to Rural Commercial (RC).

    The County planning staff (not the Planning Commission) has, for the third time, recommended approval of the commercial zoning, citing the district’s zoning summary that says, “RC zoning is designed to bring commercial services to residents in the more isolated agricultural and rural districts who are located beyond the limits of commercial services.”

    The summary also states that the RC district is designed to be located at or near intersections of major collector roads.

    “All the (zoning) guidance points to this intersection as a parcel needing rezoning,” Hugh Palmer told the Planning Commission in 2015. “The documents that the County has passed have put this area as an area for change per the comp plan.”

    Planning Commissioner Heather Cairns disagreed at a previous hearing.

    “If all it takes is an intersection for there to be commercial development in what is an otherwise totally rural area, I’m sort of horrified,” Cairns said. “That means we won’t ever have integrity in our rural areas. It may be an intersection, but this area is already well served by commercial development a couple of miles away. This area is not underserved by commercial development.”

    Commissioner Beverly Frierson agreed, saying that the properties along Rimer Pond Road are not isolated from commercial services.

    “These residents,” Frierson said, “would be adversely impacted (by commercial zoning.) There are already stores and conveniences nearby.”

    The rezoning request will be heard by the planning Commission on Monday, Feb. 6, at 1 p.m., in County Council chambers, 2020 Hampton St. in Columbia (at the corner of Hampton and Harden streets) and is the second item on the docket. The agenda and information packet about the property can be found at richlandonline.com. Click on ‘government,’ then ‘commissions,’ then ‘planning commission,’ then agendas.

    The public can attend the meeting and speak for or against the rezoning request.

     

  • Blythewood Woman Killed in Lexington County Crash

    LEXINGTON (Feb. 1, 2017) – A Blythewood woman was killed last week in a two-car crash on Highway 378 in Lexington County.

    Lexington County Coroner Margaret Fisher said Autumn Victoria Joiner, 20, was pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, which occurred at approximately 5:45 p.m., Jan. 24.

    According to the S.C. Highway Patrol, Joiner was driving a 1996 Honda Accord south on Clubside Drive, approaching the intersection of Clubside Drive and Highway 378. Joiner failed to yield the right-of-way at the intersection, the Highway Patrol said, and pulled in front of a 2001 Dodge Durango that was traveling west on Highway 378. The Durango struck Joiner’s Accord as it entered onto Highway 378.

    Joiner was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the collision, the Highway Patrol said. The driver of the Durango was not injured in the accident.

    The crash remains under investigation by the Highway Patrol.

     

  • A Book About Miracles

    Blythewood Couple’s Story Inspires Hope, Faith

    Chuck and Debbie Kegley, holding their book, “After A Stoke Strikes,” relax on the back porch of their home in Cobblestone Park overlooking the fairway. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Chuck and Debbie Kegley, holding their book, “After A Stoke Strikes,” relax on the back porch of their home in Cobblestone Park overlooking the fairway. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD (Jan. 26, 2017) – Cobblestone resident Chuck Kegley is no stranger to the world of book publishing. As a professor emeritus of International Relations at USC, he’s written over 60 books and many scholarly articles on international affairs. But his latest book, co-authored with his wife, Debra Kegley, is more personal.

    “After A Stroke Strikes: A Long Night’s Spiritual Journey Into Day” was released in November by Live Twice Press, and has since drawn glowing reviews from readers touched by the story and its purpose.

    “It’s a book about miracles,” Chuck told The Voice. “In the Bible, in 1 Peter, it says to always be prepared to share the reason for the hope that you have. So by sharing the story of Debbie’s miraculous recovery, we hope it will help to strengthen the faith of others.”

    He explained that it all started on Jan. 8, 2014, when Debra, 54 at the time, suffered a brain aneurism as the couple was driving home to Blythewood from Virginia.

    “Before that, Debbie had been the picture of health, in perfect shape,” he said, his voice still carrying echoes of the harrowing experience. “Miraculously, there was a hospital only two exits away, and being able to get her into the ER so fast saved her life.”

    From there, she was helicoptered to a hospital in Charlotte, where Charles remained by her side for 83 days. During that time, she endured many serious complications, including a second aneurism near her stomach, paralysis, full life support and numerous operations.

    “And in all that time, our Cobblestone neighbors were so, so wonderful,” he said. “They helped us out in countless ways, as did members of our church. When we were finally able to return home, we were just blown away to be greeted with balloons on all the trees and a big banner that said ‘Welcome Home, Debbie!’ They did so many kind things, like bringing meals and praying with us, and we’re so grateful.”

    Since then, Debra has continued to heal – she can walk again and is able to enjoy life. But Charles said that the impact of her experiences and recovery extended far beyond their own lives and concerns.

    “It turned out that she’s one of only five people in the past 25 years to have survived two aneurisms within a month,” he said, “and she’d actually become a case study. One Saturday night in the ER, the Head Surgeon told me that her progress was being closely followed by other health care professionals around the world!”

    The book also conveys a philosophical perspective about mortality, the afterlife and Christian faith.

    “I had dinner with a miracle a few weeks ago,” wrote Cobblestone neighbor Don Sanders in his review of the book on Amazon. “She was at my house, laughing and enjoying the meal and friends, my wife and me, as we assembled in our dining room . . . light years away from [the day] her stroke struck. . . . You need to read this book to rekindle your faith in medicine and the people trained in that field. You also need to read it to rekindle your faith in Jesus Christ. Medicine can heal you . . . but only with the hand of the Lord involved.”

    Another review, from the Dean of the Honors College at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, describes the book as a “touching story about a couple’s journey from stroke to recovery, and how it brought them closer to each other and to God. It will tug on your heartstrings and offer inspiration and hope for dealing with adversity in the face of seemingly insurmountable circumstances.”

    Charles said that he never intended to write a book, but had simply started keeping a notebook to track information like Debra’s vital signs. But eventually, he said, the project grew into a wholehearted chronicle of their experiences, written from both of their perspectives.

    “We want the book to give people hope and encourage faith, because I am certain that these were interventions from God,” he said. “The first thing Debbie remembered during her recovery was from a sermon, that ‘we ought to thank God for our blessings, and not just call on Him when we’re in need.’”

    “After A Stroke Strikes” is available for purchase at Amazon.com.

     

  • Charges pending in dog starvation

    WINNSBORO (Jan. 26, 2017) – A Winnsboro woman will soon be facing charges after County officials were forced to euthanize a dog that she had allowed to virtually starve to death.

    “The dog was in dreadful condition,” Bob Ennis, Director of Fairfield County Animal Control told The Voice Tuesday. “We did all we could. We had the vet (Dr. Robert Chappell) come out, we gave it medication. We gave her a blood transfusion – her blood count was in terrible shape. But in the end, we had to put her down.”

    Acting Chief of Public Safety Maj. John Seibles said Tuesday that a warrant had been signed on Katera Latrice Alexander, 28, for a charge of animal cruelty. Seibles said his office was giving Alexander the opportunity through this weekend to turn herself in, after which time if she had not done so the warrant would be served.

    According to the incident report, a delivery driver alerted Public Safety on Jan. 13 of an apparently malnourished, weak and distressed dog tied up on the front porch of Alexander’s home in the 300 block of Forest Hills Drive. Just after 5:30 p.m., a Public Safety officer found the dog – a brown female pit bull, approximately three- to four-years old – cowering under the front steps of the home. The dog was tethered to the front porch by a length of cable, approximately 15-feet long.

    The dog was emaciated, the report states, with the outlines of vertebrae, ribs and hip bones pressing through the skin. A bucket for water sat on the porch, but it was turned over on its side and empty. There was no food bowl available for the dog, the report states. Instead, there was a milk jug with a hole cut into the top sitting on the porch near the dog’s house. Inside the jug, according to the report, was what appeared to be milk with a layer of grease floating on top.

    When Alexander arrived home a short time later, the report states, she told the officer that the dog had been sick for more than a month and would not eat. The officer then produced a pack of crackers and offered them to the dog, who devoured them almost instantly. The dog quickly went through a second pack, “so it appeared to be very hungry,” the report states. The dog also lapped up a large amount of water when the officer filled her water bowl.

    Alexander reportedly told the officer that she had given the dog deworming medication, but that it did not help. She showed the officer an empty box of worm medicine, which she said had “just run out.” Someone told her, she said, to give the dog milk and grease as a remedy, but the officer noted that it did not appear as though the dog had consumed any of the concoction. Alexander also told the officer that she had not taken the dog to a veterinarian “because she could not afford it,” the report states.

    When the officer asked Alexander to show him the food she had been feeding the dog, she said she did not have any. She had only been feeding the animal table scraps, she said. She also told the officer she suspected her neighbors, who had also been feeding the animal, may have poisoned the dog.

    Alexander agreed to allow Fairfield Animal Control to pick up the dog and take it to the Adoption Center, but by the time the County took possession of the animal it was too late. The County euthanized the dog on Sunday.

    Seibles said Dr. Chappell’s report stated that the dog suffered from “obvious animal neglect,” and was “severely anemic” as a result of malnutrition.

    “When an animal is that malnourished,” Ennis said, “it affects the internal organs. We gave it medication, but there was no improvement and the dog became lethargic. It was in just dreadful condition.”

     

  • Ridgeway Seeks Arch Bargains

    RIDGEWAY (Jan. 26, 2017) – With all three bids for the final stabilization and restoration of the old school arch coming in over the $12,000 allotted in a Municipal Association grant for the work, Town Council may be faced with some tricky decisions.

    “What do we really want to do with the arch?” Mayor Charlene Herring asked Council during their Jan. 19 special meeting. “One thing is we want to make it is useable, we want to make it look more attractive than it is, but not take away from the character of the arch and the historic nature of it. If we look at these quotes, maybe we can go back and look at some of the things we requested.”

    Ralph Golden presented the lowest bid on the project at $15,720. W.C. Construction’s offer came in at $18,274, while H&H Construction bid $26,200.

    The Town’s grant proposal also included fencing for the area, as well as lighting. Those items, Herring said, may have to be eliminated from the project in order to finish the brickwork.

    “My hope is somebody will make the recommendation that we take the lowest bid, which is $15,720, and give the mayor permission to go back and review the area and see if we can’t bring it under $12,000,” Herring said. “If we can do that then we move forward with that and we do have other parts of this grant we wouldn’t be able to do – the fencing, the lighting.”

    The priority, she said, was stabilizing the arch.

    When the old Ridgeway School was demolished a decade ago, local resident David Waters purchased most of the structure’s original brick from the Town. In 2015, Waters offered to sell back to the Town as much brick as they required to restore the arch. Minor stabilization of the arch was completed last year. During the Jan. 19 meeting, Councilman Heath Cookendorfer said only a small portion of the brick purchased from Waters had been used in that phase of the project. A great deal of brick remained, he said, that had not yet even been moved from Waters’ property to the arch site. The additional brick, he said, may help in bringing down the estimated cost presented by Golden.

    Council gave the OK to Golden’s bid, while also authorizing Herring to attempt to negotiate a lower price in light of the additional brick.

    Bids for fencing, meanwhile, ranged widely. Guardian Fencing submitted a high bid of $6,482, while Fence It was only slightly off that mark at $6,338. Both companies offered what Herring described as “commercial-grade” aluminum fencing. The lowest bid by far came from JMS Fencing at $1,252.

    Herring said JMS did not visit the site and take measurements, but instead based its pricing on estimates of the size of the site taken over the phone. The fencing offered by JMS, she said, was also of a lower quality than the commercial grade offered by Guardian and Fence It.

    The grant has $3,000 earmarked for fencing, Herring said, but as the grant also allows for the transfer of funds from one line item to another, and with such a transfer likely in the face of the steep bids on the brickwork, the Town will have to do some negotiating in that arena as well.

    “Basically, we don’t know if we have enough money,” Herring said. “This is what I would like to recommend: that we look at going with the bid that has the best quality . . . and meet with the lowest bidder and see if we can get things to come down, make the area smaller, see what they can do, and if that doesn’t happen, then look at the (JMS) aluminum fencing.”

    Cookendorfer moved to contact JMS Fencing to determine what their price would be for a commercial-grade fence. Councilman Donald Prioleau seconded the motion, which carried 4-1.

    Councilwoman Angela Harrison voted against the motion. Harrison said she was against the idea of fencing altogether, as it sent a “keep away” message for a place that was meant to attract people.

    2017 Priorities

    In a work session held before Council’s Jan. 19 meeting, Council hashed out their Strategic Plan priorities for the coming year.

    Extending the Town limits through annexation topped nearly every Council member’s list of suggestion, and Council agreed to make that a goal this year under the plan’s “Organization” header.

    Under “Services and Utilities,” Council included the extension of water lines, the repair and upgrade of those water lines and adopting a system of automated meter readers.

    Under “Public Safety,” Council, as in previous years, agreed to seek funding to hire a second police officer, while also made installing security cameras downtown a priority. Councilman Prioleau, who offered the security camera suggestion, said he once voted against having cameras downtown but that he has since accepted their value.

    “My high school alumni in Winnsboro has cameras, and I didn’t realize how valuable they were,” Prioleau said. “A citizen in that area had someone ride by on a bicycle and take her pocketbook out of her car and our cameras caught that.”

    Council also agreed, under the “Economic Development” header, to install public rest rooms downtown, to free up additional business space downtown and to research ways to bring additional housing to Ridgeway.

    Preservation and restoration of historic buildings continued to top the “Historical and Cultural” section of the plan, to include restoration of the old Ridgeway School’s Teacherage and the second floor of the Old Town Hall on Palmer Street. Council also agreed to research funding for the publication of a book on the history of Ridgeway.

    Under “Public Relations,” Council agreed to look into the production of a video loop highlighting the history of Ridgeway and its downtown businesses that would play on a cycle on the recently approved computer kiosk in the Visitor’s Center.

    Finally, the community garden again made the list under “Community Action,” as well as the idea of a community Health Day.

    Council meets again on Feb. 9 at 6:30 p.m. in The Century House.

     

  • Credit Union Ponies Up for Naming Rights

    Nick Wodogaza, center, President of Blythewood’s newly opened Palmetto Citizens Federal Credit Union, presents a check for $125,000 for the naming rights to the Town’s new amphitheater to Jim McLean, left, Chairman of the Doko Meadows Park Foundation; Foundation members Martha Crawford and Buddy Price; Wodogaza; Town Councilmen Larry Griffin, Eddie Baughman and Malcolm Gordge; the Town’s financial assistant Chris Keefer and Mayor J. Michael Ross.  (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Nick Wodogaza, center, President of Blythewood’s newly opened Palmetto Citizens Federal Credit Union, presents a check for $125,000 for the naming rights to the Town’s new amphitheater to Jim McLean, left, Chairman of the Doko Meadows Park Foundation; Foundation members Martha Crawford and Buddy Price; Wodogaza; Town Councilmen Larry Griffin, Eddie Baughman and Malcolm Gordge; the Town’s financial assistant Chris Keefer and Mayor J. Michael Ross. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD (Jan. 26, 2017) – During a check presentation ceremony last week, Nick Wodogaza, President of the town’s newly opened Palmetto Citizen’s Federal Credit Union, made good on the bank’s pledge of $125,000 for the naming rights to the Town’s planned amphitheater in Doko Meadows Park. Town officials and donors broke ground last week for construction to begin on the amphitheater.

    The outdoor entertainment venue was planned as an integral part of the Town’s Master Plan that was approved by Council in 2010. A non-profit foundation was established in 2015 to bring in donations and grants to fund construction of the facility.

    The foundation received its first major contribution, a $25,000 check from Fairfield Electric Cooperative, in January 2016. That was followed by a $75,000 check from Central Carolina Community Foundation in March to purchase concert-quality sound and lighting systems.

    Last June, Palmetto Citizen’s Federal Credit Union, which opened a branch office in Blythewood last week, sealed the deal on the amphitheater’s naming rights with a $125,000 offer.

    “We are so happy to be here in Blythewood now, and we hope that our contribution to the amphitheater will make a difference for the community,” Wodogaza said during the groundbreaking ceremony for the amphitheater last week.

    Foundation Chairman Jim McLean said the Foundation raised 80 percent of the funds to build the amphitheater in less than a year. Individual donations include a $100,000 donation from Blythewood’s Joyce Martin Hill. McLean said the Foundation only needs $60,000 more to cover the cost of the base bid of $415,893 to construct the amphitheater stage, pavilion structure and concrete pad in front of the state.

    Construction is expected to be completed by mid-May.

     

  • Council, Mayoral Races Take Shape

    WINNSBORO (Jan. 26, 2017) – Filing closed at the Fairfield County Office of Voter Registration and Elections last Friday for candidates taking aim at Winnsboro’s Mayor’s office and a pair of open Town Council seats.

    Current Mayor Roger Gaddy, who only a few weeks ago had indicated he would not seek a third term, recently had a change of heart and filed his paperwork before the noon deadline Friday. Gaddy, of W. High Street, finds himself in a three-person race with Winnsboro businessman and former Councilman Bill Haslett, of State Highway 213, and Ophelia Irby, of S. Garden Street.

    While Irby is a newcomer to municipal politics, Haslett made a run for mayor in 2013. He was bested by Gaddy in that race 344 votes to 232.

    Absent from the lineup for the mayor’s race was Mid-County Water director Herb Rentz. Rentz had, only a few weeks ago, told The Voice that he intended to make a run for mayor. That changed, however, with Gaddy’s decision to enter the race after all.

    Filing for the District 2 Town Council seat were Tony Armstrong, of Sand Creek Drive, and Janice Bartell, of Hunstanton Drive. The District 2 seat is currently held by Stan Klaus, who also served District 2 from 1997 to 2009 and returned to the seat in 2013 by edging out Sonya Kennedy, 81 votes to 50. Klaus has been in the hospital battling illness in recent months and is not seeking re-election.

    Long-time District 4 Councilman Jackie Wilkes, who won his fourth term in 2013 over Pam Smith, 175 votes to 103, is also not seeking another four years on Council. Filing to fill his seat Friday was Winnsboro businessman John McMeekin, of Evans Street. McMeekin will be unopposed for the District 4 seat.

    Winnsboro will hold its municipal elections on Tuesday, April 4.