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  • Fancy Twist on Classic Mac ‘n Cheese

    Thank you Thomas Jefferson for your amazing contributions to these United States of America. You gave us the dumbwaiters, the hideaway bed, the pedometer, the revolving bookstand, the Declaration of Independence (eternal thanks and admiration for this little gem) and last but not least, macaroni and cheese. Rumor has it that Jefferson actually served macaroni and cheese at the White House state dinner in 1802.

    The Monticello recipe for macaroni and cheese is basic at best. Still, it’s a far cry from the boxes of macaroni and cheese powder that we all cherish as a guilty pleasures. Today we are thinking outside the little blue box and putting inventive twists on this comfort food classic, taking it out of dorm rooms and school cafeterias and serving Macaroni ‘n Cheese in fine restaurants, gourmet clubs and family dinners, just as Thomas Jefferson intended.

    Macaroni Pie

    The Original Monticello Cookbook

    Boil as much macaroni as will fill your dish in milk and water, until quite tender; drain it on a sieve. Sprinkle a little salt over it, put a layer in your dish, then cheese and butter as in polenta and bake in the same manner.

    Nutritional yeast is a healthy product made from inactive yeast and beet molasses. It has a cheesy, umami-like flavor that serves as a fine substitute for cheese in vegetarian dishes. You can find it in the health food section of many grocery stores.

     

    A_04_Vegan-mac-and-cheese-
    You won’t miss the cheese in this creamy, “cheesy” Vegan Mac ‘n Cheese.

    Vegan Cauliflower Mac ‘n Cheese

    Yield: 4 main dish servings

    4 cups elbow macaroni

    1 large head of cauliflower, chopped

    2 large carrots, peeled and chopped

    ½ cup nutritional yeast

    1/3 cup nutritional yeast

    1/3 cup water

    1 Tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice

    ½ teaspoon onion powder

    ½ teaspoon garlic powder

    1 ½ teaspoon garlic powder

    ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

    Vegan Parmesan Cheese (optional)

    Cook pasta according to package directions, drain, and set aside.

    Fill a large pot with water, and bring to a boil. Add in the chopped cauliflower and carrots. Cook for 10-15 minutes, or until softened. Drain and place in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade. Process on high until smooth. Add the oil, water, lemon juice, nutritional yeast, onion powder, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Process until smooth.

    Add the processed “cheese” sauce to the pasta and mix well.

    Serve immediately with a sprinkle of vegan Parmesan cheese, if desired.

     

    What happens when two great American classics combine? Pure magic. That’s what.

    A_04_Buffalo-Wing-mac-and-cheese-
    Some have called this the best of America, in a bowl.

    Buffalo Chicken Macaroni and Cheese

    Yield: 4 servings

    1 (25.5-oz.) package frozen popcorn chicken (I used Tyson Anytizers)

    8 oz. cavatappi

    1 cup whole milk

    1 Tablespoon cornstarch

    1 Tablespoon butter

    ¾ cup plus ¼ cup shredded cheddar cheese

    salt, to taste (I don’t use much)

    Freshly ground black pepper, to taste

    ½ cup of hot buffalo wing sauce (I used Frank’s Red Hot), more if you like

    ½ cup blue cheese crumbles

    Cook the chicken according to package direction. Cook the cavatappi according to package directions.

    While the chicken and pasta are cooking, make the cheese sauce. In a small saucepan, whisk together the cold milk and cornstarch. Set the pot over medium low heat and slowly bring the milk mixture to a boil; reduce the heat to a simmer immediately and stir in the butter. When the sauce is hot enough to coat the back of a spoon, remove from the heat and slowly stir in ¾ cup of cheddar cheese; stir until the cheese has melted and the mixture is silky smooth and well blended.

    Remove the cooked chicken from the oven and immediately toss with the hot buffalo wing sauce.

    Place the cooked, drained pasta in a large bowl; pour the cheese sauce over it and stir to combine. Stir in the remaining ¼ cup of shredded cheddar cheese. Sprinkle with the blue cheese.

    Serve immediately with a serving of Buffalo Chicken.

     

    I love horseradish. I love bacon and I love Mac ‘n Cheese. So I combined the three and prepared them in the most decadent and indulgent way I could devise. Better save this one for special occasions.

    A_04_Horseradish-Cheddar-Bacon-MnC
    Horseradish Cheddar and Bacon Mac ‘n Cheese ready for the oven; just 30 minutes away from the ultimate cheesy indulgence.

    Horseradish Cheddar and Bacon Mac ‘n cheese

    Yield: 8 servings

    ½ pound of bacon

    1 pound of orecchiette

    2 Tablespoons of butter

    2 Tablespoons of bacon fat (reserved from the cooked bacon)

    ¼ cup flour

    2 ½ cups whole milk

    2 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese, divided

    2 cups shredded horseradish cheddar (from the deli), divided

    Salt and Pepper to taste

    Preheat the oven to 350°F. Spray a 2-quart casserole dish with non-stick spray and set aside.

    Line a baking sheet with foil and top the foil with a cooling rack. Arrange the bacon on the rack, side by side. Bake for 15-20 minutes or until crisp. Reserve 2 Tablespoons of the bacon fat from the pan. Crumble the bacon and set aside.

    Cook the pasta until it is just under al dente and set aside.

    While the bacon and pasta are cooking make the cheese sauce. In a large saucepan set over medium heat, add the butter and bacon fat. When the butter has melted, whisk in the flour and cook the roux for at least 1 minute but not more than 2. Lower the heat to medium low and slowly whisk in the milk. Heat until the mixture comes to a slow boil and is thick.

    Remove from the heat and slowly stir in 1½ cups of the cheddar cheese and 1½ cups of the horseradish cheddar cheese. Stir until the cheese has melted and the sauce is smooth. Take care not to add the cheese all at once or the sauce may seize. Stir in ½ cup of the crumbled bacon. Taste and adjust seasoning.

    Add the pasta to the pan with the sauce and stir to completely combine. Transfer the mixture to the prepared casserole dish. Top with the remaining cheese and bacon. Bake for 30 minutes. Let cool for 10 minutes before serving.

  • The Big Grab Map

    big-grab-double-truck-sept-8

    Check out the map to see where all of your favorite businesses will be located for the big event!

  • Reunion Honors Family History

    Nancy Juanita Thompson, named for her grandmother and Thompson family matriarch, Nancy Thompson, places flowers on the grave of her father, Ed Brice Thompson (one of Nancy’s sons) last weekend during the first reunion of the Thompson descendants in Blair. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Nancy Juanita Thompson, named for her grandmother and Thompson family matriarch, Nancy Thompson, places flowers on the grave of her father, Ed Brice Thompson (one of Nancy’s sons) last weekend during the first reunion of the Thompson descendants in Blair. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLAIR (Sept. 9, 2016) – In 1886, Bun and Nancy Thompson married and started a life together in Blair. Last week, more than 100 descendants of the couple’s 12 children gathered together in Blair for the first ever Bun and Nancy Thompson Family Reunion.

    Thompson and his wife were hard working and cared for the community, according to a reunion document prepared by one of their granddaughters, Emily Thompson Haley of Blythewood. Determined to make a name for themselves in the segregated Southern community, the two newlyweds taught themselves to read and write. Both worked as share croppers for Jimmy Frazier Sr. until Bun Thompson was able to buy 300 acres of land from Frazier to start his own farm. Thompson was the first African-American in Fairfield County to own land, Haley said.

    Nancy Thompson made a name for herself in her own right, playing a prominent role in the Blair community as the local midwife.

    “They referred to her as the Florence Nightingale of her time. She would get on her horse and ride to deliver babies and provide medical services to the ill. Most of it free of charge,” Sherry Fears, the family historian, said.

    The Thompsons diligently gave back to the community, whether it was helping the ill for free or giving food to the less fortunate and selling supplies on the open market, Fears said. Nancy Thompson organized the Women’s Humble Burial Aid Society in Fairfield County to ensure families in the community had enough money for a proper funeral for their loved ones. Her husband mortgaged his house and land to build Blair’s Gethsemane Baptist Church.

    “My great-grandfather [Bun] helped build that church,” Fears said. So it was fitting that the descendants of Bun and Nancy Thompson first gathered at the Gethsemane Baptist Church where the foundation of the community met the cornerstones of the family’s bloodline.

    Following Bun Thompson’s legacy as someone who broke boundaries and strove to be a wholesome and righteous man, one of the Thompson’s grandchildren, Herman Young, also became a pillar of the Fairfield community. He became the first African-American Sheriff of Fairfield County and served for 22 years. Upon his retirement, Gov. Nikki Haley bestowed upon Sheriff Young the highest honor that can be presented by the Governor’s Office: The Order of the Palmetto.

    The descendants of this prominent family, known for their generosity to their community, celebrated their achievements and historical breakthroughs during the three-day reunion. It began with a Sunday church service at Gethsemane Baptist Church followed by a visit to the family cemetery adjacent to the church to remember Bun, Nancy and other family members who are buried there. They then embarked on a tour of the Thompson homestead in Blair and spent the afternoon at a cookout on Weston Lake in Columbia where they enjoyed lots of good food and entertainment by a James Brown impersonator.

    The Thompson relatives spent Sunday in high spirits as they learned more about their own history and built bonds to last a lifetime. The next reunion is planned for 2018.

     

  • Council OK’s Utilities Bond

    WINNSBORO (Sept. 8, 2016) – Town Council gave final reading Tuesday night on an ordinance that will allow the Town to borrow up to $6 million to make improvements to their utility system.

    According to the ordinance, the funds will provide for the rehabilitation of Winnsboro’s wastewater treatment plant and related sewer improvements; construction, replacement and rehabilitation of electric distribution lines and substation breakers; and construction and extension of natural gas lines and “cathodic improvements.”

    “Cathodic improvements,” Town Manager Don Wood explained after a meeting last month, essentially means the grounding of natural gas lines to prevent electrical discharges into the lines. The replacement of some of the Town’s power lines, Wood said, was necessary because some of those lines are undersized by modern standards.

    “They were OK when we put them (the lines) in,” Wood said last month, “but we have more people on the system now and people use more electricity now.”

    “Most small towns our size, their infrastructure – water, sewer – most of the stuff under the ground has been there for quite some time, for years we’ve been doing a lot of patchwork,” Gaddy told colleagues at last June’s intergovernmental meeting. “Hopefully (with the bond) we can do larger stretches of infrastructure and get it to where it’s up to snuff and we don’t have as much problems with it – not that we’re always putting out fires, but as everything else, including me, its aging and wearing out.”

    The infrastructure improvements come ahead of the Town’s other major project – running a raw water line from the Broad River to the reservoir. That project, which is estimated to cost approximately $13 million, is expected to bring between 8 and 10 million gallons of water a day into Winnsboro’s system.

    Margaret Pope, of the Pope Zeigler Law Firm, said one of the objectives of taking on the $6 million debt before tackling the Broad River line project was to get a better rating from the State Revolving Fund (SRF) when it came time to borrow the $13 million.

    “If we get a good rating, then it will help us demonstrably on how much money the SRF requires,” Pope said.

    Typically, Pope said, the Fund requires a borrower to deposit one year’s worth of debt service into a reserve fund.

    “It has to sit there. It’s a rainy day fund in case you can’t pay,” Pope said. “We have convinced (the SRF) that if we get a good enough rating to waive that. That’s a huge savings. This (the Broad River project) is the big issue, so we kind of strategized that.”

    Capital Expenditures

    Council also gave the OK Tuesday to a total of $5,600 in capital expenditures for the Water Department. That total will cover a nitrate/TDS field monitor ($3,800), which Wood said would monitor the breakdown monochloramine in the water system; a computer for the wastewater lab ($1,400); and a leaf blower ($400) for cleaning grounds along pump stations.

     

  • Big Grab Gets Bigger

    Bargain Hunting Begins Friday

    BLYTHEWOOD/FAIRFIELD (Sept. 8, 2016) – With a name like “The Big Grab,” one would have to imagine the event has considerable scope. After all, the word “Big” is right there in the name of the event.

    But this weekend’s curbside crawl of yard sales might have been better dubbed “The Bigger Grab.”

    Shoppers at last year's Big Grab search for deals.
    Shoppers at last year’s Big Grab search for deals.

    The event that links Blythewood, Ridgeway and Winnsboro in a network of yard sales has grown and expanded this year to include more of Richland County and will run all the way to Newberry.

    “It started out at 25 miles as a way to bring people into our communities and to enjoy small towns again, as well as a way to help our citizens put a little money in their pockets,” Terry Vickers, President of the Fairfield County Chamber of Commerce, said. “Now we’re in our fifth year and it is up to 85 miles.”

    Vendors will be out trolling the roadsides from sunrise to sunset this Friday and Saturday along a route that beings at Exit 71 on I-20 and travels up Highway 21 into Blythewood and on to Ridgeway. From Ridgeway, shoppers can follow Highway 34 to Winnsboro, where sales will stretch along Highway 321 Business and the 321 Bypass, looping back to Highway 34 and running all the way to Exit 74 at I-26 near Newberry.

    The event was the brainchild of Ridgeway merchant Denise Jones, Vickers said, who saw the success of Ridgeway’s semi-annual sidewalk sales and envisioned a chain of similar sales running for miles along the open road. Since its inception, The Big Grab has not only drawn shoppers into local businesses, it has also drawn vendors from as far away as New Jersey, Vickers said.

    The event has also been a boon to local churches, who have capitalized on The Big Grab as a major annual fundraiser – not only selling their own wares, but also renting out prime selling space to vendors who otherwise would not have had a spot along the route. First United Methodist Church in Winnsboro has set the bar for other churches, raising approximately $5,000 last year.

    Vendors will begin trickling into the area soon, Vickers said, setting up Thursday evening so they will be ready for the first light of dawn on Friday. Shoppers will just have to stand by and wait until day breaks.

    “It’s exciting,” Vickers said. “My phone has been ringing off the hook!”

     

  • Shell Building Becoming Reality

    After reworking the original concept and a project re-bid, ground was finally broken last week on Blythewood’s shell building. Digging in at Doko Meadows last Wednesday are: Larry Griffin, Town Councilman; Ed Parler, Economic Development Consultant; Bill Hart, CEO Fairfield Electric Cooperative; Blythewood Mayor J. Michael Ross; Town Councilmen Eddie Baughman and Malcolm Gordge and Kevin Key, Lyn/Rich Contracting Co., Inc. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    After reworking the original concept and a project re-bid, ground was finally broken last week on Blythewood’s shell building. Digging in at Doko Meadows last Wednesday are: Larry Griffin, Town Councilman; Ed Parler, Economic Development Consultant; Bill Hart, CEO Fairfield Electric Cooperative; Blythewood Mayor J. Michael Ross; Town Councilmen Eddie Baughman and Malcolm Gordge and Kevin Key, Lyn/Rich Contracting Co., Inc. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    BLYTHEWOOD (Sept. 8, 2016) – After several stops and starts and adjustments to the overall plan, Blythewood’s spec building on the grounds of Doko Meadows Park is at last on its way to becoming a reality.

    “It’s for real this time,” Ed Parler, the Town’s Economic Development consultant, told The Voice last week, just days after a ground-breaking ceremony at the site. “We’ve awarded the contract, and construction should begin in the next seven to 10 days.”

    The Town announced the winning bid on the project last month after Lyn-Rich Contracting Co., Inc. of West Columbia submitted a base bid of $379,850. With options, which Town Council voted to accept, the Lyn-Rich bid came to $388,100. Those options include walkways and special fire protection equipment.

    The August bids were the second round of bids on the project. Council put the construction out for bid a second time after bids opened last June came in ranging from $524,000 to $761,455 – all well over the $410,000 budget for the project.

    The June bids forced Council and architect Ralph Walden to rethink the scope of the spec building.

    “We had the specs beyond a shell,” Walden said in July, “and that proved to be the wrong direction. We had wiring, 800 amps for a kitchen, HVAC and a slab. The plan was to give the end-user a little more for his money.”

    Specifications for the second round of bids included only rough plumbing and eliminated the HVAC unit. Also eliminated were interior doors and ceiling tiles, connection to water and sewer and all walkways. Finished siding was substituted for primed siding and paint. Specifications were changed for deck and rail materials, windows, doors and shingles.

    The spec – or “shell” – building is itself a scaled-down version of a plan three years ago for the Town to build a restaurant in the park, utilizing grant money from the Fairfield Electric Co-Op and a $1 million loan from Santee Cooper. That plan called for the Town to construct a restaurant and lease the facility out. But a newly elected Town Council balked at that idea.

    “The new Council had questions about the Town being in the restaurant business and carrying all that debt,” Parler said. “So we scaled down the project. Rather than doing a fully fitted out building, we would construct a shell. Hopefully, by the first of the year we will be able to sell it and have the owner finish it out.”

    And while there are certain restrictions on what kind of business could set up shop in a building located in a publicly owned park, Parler said the likelihood is high that it would be a restaurant after all. The building could also serve as an office building, Parler said.

    Fairfield Electric Co-Op has been instrumental in making the shell building a reality, Parler said. A 2013 economic development grant from the Co-Op netted the Town $240,714, and a year later the Co-Op pitched in another $216,167, for a total of $456,881, Parler said.

    Last month, Town Administrator Gary Parker told Council that the Town still holds $325,916 of the original $456,881 utility grant from Fairfield Electric Co-Op. The balance of the costs of the shell building, Parker said, can probably be taken from Hospitality Tax revenue.

    Parler said the Town’s intent is to recover those funds with the sale of the shell building.

    Construction is slated to begin any day now, Parler said, and should be wrapped up in approximately 150 days. The Town will begin marketing the building for sale in November.

     

  • Fighting for Green Space

    Cobblestone Residents Look to P.C. for Help

    BLYTHEWOOD (Sept. 8, 2016) – After discovering in July that Cobblestone Park developer D.R. Horton is planning to build six new roads and 74 more homes in what residents thought would remain green space around their homes in the Primrose section of Cobblestone, Lenora Zedosky and about 30 of her Primrose neighbors appeared before the Town’s Planning Commission to protest the development, saying, “We were told (by the developer) that the green space would always be there.”

    Zedosky and her neighbors appeared again at Tuesday evening’s Planning Commission meeting to report that four days after their July protest, D.R. Horton upped the ante, displaying in the Cobblestone Clubhouse an entirely different road/housing plan for the Primrose section that included two more roads and 10 more new homes.

    “In this new plan, the backs of homes would face Primrose, which is the primary entrance into our neighborhood,” Zedosky said. “To our knowledge, the new plan has not been presented to Council, but is already being marketed. That’s a great concern to us. It’s an entirely different plan than was approved by you in October 2014.

    “We are not trying to stop all development,” Zedosky continued. “We just want a buffer and no clear cutting, which has been the habit we’ve seen so far.”

    Commission Chairman Buddy Price asked Town Administrator Gary Parker to confirm that the developer cannot move forward with the proposed construction until it comes before the Planning Commission for approval.

    Parker agreed.

    “We had a meeting with the developer about a week ago and saw the new proposal, but there’s a ways to go,” Parker reassured Zedosky.

    Following the meeting, Michael Criss, the Town’s Planning Consultant, reviewed for The Voice the steps the developer will need to complete in order to progress to the construction and sales stages of the project.

    “After the developer brings a sketch plan to the Town Administrator, he will then send it to the Planning Commission for a preliminary plat approval,” Criss said.

    “That’s a full civil engineering plan – roads, street drainage, water, sewer, as well as other infrastructure,” Criss said. “At that point, if the plan is approved by the Commission, work can begin on the infrastructure (grading, pipes in the ground, sidewalks, paving, etc.) When this work is finished, the developer will bring a final plat to the Commission for approval. When that’s approved, they can start selling.”

    Asked if the Commission had the authority to outright turn down the plan because of the residents’ objections, Criss said any approval or disapproval must follow zoning regulations spelled out in Chapter 153 of the Town’s zoning ordinances.

    “The developer has already been given the authority to build so many homes, so the Commission can make some suggestions for the plan, but there is just so much land available to build on. We have to be fair with how the houses and streets are arranged to accommodate what has been approved,” Parker said.

    Franklin Elected Chairman

    In other business, the Commission members unanimously elected Commissioner Bryan Franklin as Chairman. Buddy Price said he was stepping down from the Planning Commission after six years to give someone else an opportunity to serve.

     

  • District Surveys Teachers on Patio Homes Plan

    WINNSBORO (Sept. 1, 2016) – Following an update by Dr. J.R. Green, Superintendent, at the beginning of the Aug. 16 School Board meeting concerning his proposal last month that the School District construct and rent out patio homes to teachers, School Board member William Frick (District 6) suggested the District first survey teachers who have left the District to determine whether, if those teachers had had viable housing options, it would have kept them from leaving the District. Frick said a survey might determine if there’s a demonstrated need for teacher housing and if it would be helpful for teacher retention.

    “That’s an interesting point,” Green said. And last week he followed up with a survey, but to current teachers, not to teachers who have left the District as Frick suggested. The surveys were email generated to individual teachers from the District office.

    Green said in the July meeting that he had spoken with the County’s strategic planners who thought providing housing for teachers was a great idea.

    David Gjertson, a planner with Landscape Architecture/Urban Design, told The Voice that while he liked Green’s idea of using housing as an incentive, he would like to see it broadened to include other Fairfield County public employees as well – fire fighters and EMS employees, for instance.

    He also questioned how the project would be funded. Gjertson told The Voice that he would like to see a combination of public and private funding including federally subsidized funding rather than the traditional funding that Green initially suggested.

    Gjertson also said he would rather see the program based on home ownership instead of patio home rentals to avoid the appearance of public housing. Gjertson also said, most importantly, that the project be developer driven.

    “We are not advocating public housing,” Gjertson said. “We are advocating home ownership, and for a broader group of County employees.”

    Green further clarified the project, saying, “We are in the research phase (of the proposal). We don’t have all the details worked out yet. A lot of issues I will be working on. I had a conversation with (State Education Superintendent) Molly Spearman last week about some assistance from the state to make this vision become a reality.”

    Green included some documentation in the Board’s packet of similar projects in North Carolina. He said he is looking at how some of those are being funded.

    “There are more options that we are exploring to make this a reality,” Green said. “When I have all the details I will present it to the Board as an action item to be approved.”

    Board member Paula Hartman (District 2) asked Green if the school could legally finance the project with school funds. Green said he did not know.

    Bus Driver Pay Increase

    “Some have asked what it will cost the School District for the 3.2 percent pay raise the state has mandated for the District’s bus drivers (discussed at the July Board meeting),” Green said at the Aug. 16 meeting.

    Green said that while most of the raise for the bus drivers will be covered by the state, he wants to also provide a 3.2 percent increase for the bus monitors, which is not covered by the state. That will bring the cost to the District to about $36,000.

    “We determined we have adequate funding in the budget for that,” Green said.

    Renovations of Kelly Miller

    Green told the Board that renovations to Kelly Miller Elementary School would allow the portables to be removed from the campus and that a six classroom addition would alleviate overcrowding. He gave as an example that the school band now has to use the stage as a ‘practice room’ while at the same time physical education classes are being conducted in the gym.

     

  • Doko Smoke Needs Your Vote

    Tony and Chris Crout of Doko Smoke BBQ shoot for ‘Best of the Best.’
    Tony and Chris Crout of Doko Smoke BBQ shoot for ‘Best of the Best.’

    BLYTHEWOOD (Sept. 1, 2016) – Barbecue duo Chris and Tony Crout, owners of Doko Smoke BBQ, have made the top 10 in the ribs and barbecue categories in The State newspaper’s Best of the Best contest, but Tony Crout said they will need a little help from the community to make it over the top.

    “We’re in the running for the final vote,” Crout told The Voice, “but we’ll need a lot of votes from our customers to be named the Best of the Best.”

    But voting, Crout said, is tricky. One vote won’t do it.

    “People have to vote in a minimum of 30 categories for their vote to count,” Crout explained. “They can go online and vote once a day at thestate.com/best or look for the green ‘The Best’ logo.

    While there is no prize, to win would mean a lot to the Crouts.

    “The recognition would be great and we would be able to use the Best of the Best logo in our marketing and advertising,” Crout said. “We hope it will happen.”

    The contest runs through Sunday, Sept. 11. Winners of the public opinion poll will be announced Sunday, Oct. 23. Doko Smoke BBQ is located at 408 Main St., Blythewood. For more information, call 803-730-6016.

     

  • Who Let the Dogs Out?

    Shelter, Rescuers Partner to Find Homes for Strays

    Bob Ennis, Shelter Manager for Pets, Inc. and new Fairfield County Animal Shelter Director James Hill with one of 29 dogs taken from the Fairfield shelter in the last 10 days by two rescue organizations, Pets, Inc. and Ozzie to the Rescue, and placed in safe havens where they will receive shots, be altered and cared for until they can be adopted. Clearing of the dogs from the shelter was facilitated by The Hoof and Paw Benevolent Society.
    Bob Ennis, Shelter Manager for Pets, Inc. and new Fairfield County Animal Shelter Director James Hill with one of 29 dogs taken from the Fairfield shelter in the last 10 days by two rescue organizations, Pets, Inc. and Ozzie to the Rescue, and placed in safe havens where they will receive shots, be altered and cared for until they can be adopted. Clearing of the dogs from the shelter was facilitated by The Hoof and Paw Benevolent Society.

    WINNSBORO (Sept. 1, 2016) – The dogs are on the move in Fairfield County. More specifically, they are on the move out of Fairfield County’s animal shelter and on their way to rescue organizations that will find them permanent homes.

    After a meeting with members of The Hoof and Paw Benevolent Society last week, James Hill, Director of Fairfield County Animal Control, has seen the number of dogs sitting in the shelter’s intake kennels dwindle to nearly zero.

    “The last four days have really made an impact on the shelter,” Deborah Richelle, president of Hoof and Paw, told The Voice last week. “The last four days have been amazing to me. We’re hoping that it gives the folks at the shelter the feeling that ‘yes, it can be done.’”

    Hoof and Paw proved to be the conduit between the shelter and two prominent rescue organizations – Ozzie to the Rescue in Rock Hill and Pets, Inc. in West Columbia. These two outfits helped clear dogs from the shelter’s intake kennels, Richelle said, and will find for them permanent homes while they wait in no-kill shelters.

    Pets, Inc. had previously assisted the Fairfield County shelter, Richelle said, but with Hill taking over last month that relationship had to be reestablished. Now that it has, the wheels have remained in motion.

    Ozzie to the Rescue was quickly able to take eight dogs off the County’s hands, Richelle said, while Pets, Inc. took the rest.

    “Pets, Inc. has been a big help to us,” Richelle said. “They have taken all the dogs that (Ozzie) couldn’t take. They are a huge asset to Fairfield County, because they have a much larger audience (of potential adopters) in West Columbia.”

    “Pets, Inc. has helped us out tremendously, just in the last two weeks” Hill said. “They’ve already taken more than 20 dogs. And they are not selective – they take all dogs.”

    The assistance of these two rescue groups has reduced the number of animals euthanized at the shelter, Hill said, an issue that was of great concern to Hoof and Paw. Richelle said the shelter put down about a dozen dogs in the last month.

    Another area of initial concern for Hoof and Paw, Richelle said, was the limited hours the shelter is open. Richelle said the County might be able to adopt out animals more easily if the hours of operation at the shelter made more sense. At present, the shelter is open 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. The shelter is closed on the weekends; and Saturday, Richelle said, is Prime Time for adopting pets.

    Hill is making adjusting those hours of operation a priority. Beginning Sept. 12, Hill said, the shelter will now be closed Sunday, Monday and Thursday, and will operate Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Most importantly, the adoption center will be open Saturdays, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m.

    Hill said Animal Control has made other improvements as well in recent days.

    A new web hosting database, he said, will help his department track animals that have been taken in and adopted out or sent to rescues. Hill said his department is also establishing a database of non-profit rescue groups to which daily mass emails will be sent cataloging the animals in the County’s custody.

    “We want to keep all the rescue groups in the loop as to what we have,” Hill said. “The earlier we can get that information out there, the more exposure the animals have.”

    Hill said Animal Control has also reestablished its student volunteer program through the School District’s Career and Technology Center. Students in the Small Animal Care class will get credit hours volunteering at the shelter, Hill said.

    Hill said he also wants to have input into plans the County Council undertook earlier this year to recommend changes to the County’s animal control ordinance, specifically to address tethering which is not currently addressed in the ordinance.

    Hill said he also wants to implement a ‘responsible pet owner’ program in the county’s elementary schools.

    Richelle, meanwhile, said Hoof and Paw would like to hold a food drive for the shelter.

    Richelle also encourages people interested in acquiring a pet to shop first at their local shelters, instead of buying dogs for their breed.

    “Now the challenge is to keep the momentum going,” Richelle said.