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  • Manor Director Stepping Down

    Booth Chilcutt
    Booth Chilcutt

    BLYTHEWOOD – Booth Chilcutt, the Director of Events and Conference Center (The Manor) will be leaving his position the end of April for what he calls, ‘retirement’… real retirement this time.

    Chilcutt said he came to work for the Town as assistant to the Director in March 2013 freshly retired as Director of the Sumter County Cultural Commission and Director of the Performing Arts Center. The following January he was elevated to his present position.

    “I really never got a break from work,” Chilcutt told The Voice, with a laugh. “I just need a break and I need to leave all this hard work to someone who has the time and energy to run it. I’ll be in the audience enjoying and applauding.”

    While Chilcutt said he intends to spend time in the garden, and more time with his wife, Peggy, he still plans to stay involved with the Arts. While in Sumter, he was three times nominated for the Verner Award, the top award in the state for the Arts.

    “I was drawn to The Manor because of my love for the Arts,” Chilcutt said, “but now I want to be involved on a less committed basis. Sometimes I’m up here (at The Manor) booking events before 8 a.m. I really enjoy the work and the challenge, but at my age, it’s a little too much. I need some relaxing time with my family, and to read more. I love to read.”

    When Chilcutt came to work at The Manor the operational losses were at an all-time high. Projected losses were $12,000 to $44,000 for General Maintenance/Service Supplies and from $33,000 to $49,000 for Program and Oversight Salaries for the fiscal year. The weight of the Manor’s success was squarely on his shoulders. Since that time, working with Council, Chilcutt has made many changes in how The Manor does business. So it is with some degree of satisfaction that, last week, Chilcutt was able to report at the March Council meeting that the projected average loss for March through June is only $226.62.

    “We’ve learned a lot more about what we need to do to make it work and we have a conscientious, hardworking crew. The Manor has so much potential, but it’s a business, really, with contracts and other things that go along with a business,” Chilcutt said. “Probably more than anyone expected.”

    Chilcutt, who lives in Cobblestone, will still be in town. “I’ll probably see everyone just as much as I do now,” he said. “I’ll be at all the events.”

    Mayor J. Michael Ross told The Voice, “The town will miss Booth. He did a great job of bringing more arts and cultural events to our town! We wish him a happy retirement but may be calling on him to consult on future projects.”

     

  • Industry Getting a Lift

    Planning Commission OK’s Height Increase

    This map of the Town of Blythewood depicts the areas that have been or are currently being zoned for industry. The Planning Commission has recommended that height requirements in these districts be allowed up to 100 feet.
    This map of the Town of Blythewood depicts the areas that have been or are currently being zoned for industry. The Planning Commission has recommended that height requirements in these districts be allowed up to 100 feet.

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Planning Commission voted to give Blythewood’s economic development consultant, Ed Parler, what he asked for and more on Monday evening – a recommendation to Town Council for an extension on the height of industrial facilities, from 35 feet to 100 feet, in the town’s newly proposed Limited Industrial (LI-2) zoning district. Another 10 feet can be tacked on by the Board of Zoning Appeals upon request.

    And while they were at it, the commissioners, at Chairman Malcolm Gordge’s suggestion, voted to make the 100-foot height extension applicable to all the town’s industrial zoning districts which, in addition to the proposed LI-2 district, include: Light Industrial Research Park (LIRP), Limited Industrial (LI) and Basic Industrial (BI).

    The height recommendation will now be tacked on to the second reading (vote) of the proposed LI-2 industrial zoning ordinance. Council passed first reading on that ordinance last week, but only approved Parler’s height request up to 50 feet, so Parler took his request back to the Planning Commission for recommendation. At their April 28 meeting Council members will decide whether to act on the Planning Commission’s recommendation for the additional height on the LI-2 zoning district only. Adding additional height to the ordinances governing the other three industrial zoning districts would have to be brought up separately.

    When Commissioner Marcus Taylor questioned how the 100 feet of height would impact neighboring residents, Parler said the nearest resident would be more than 3,000 feet from the industrial facility and that, when in proximity to residential areas, the lot line setback for the building would be 6 feet for every foot above 40 feet.

    The proposed LI-2 zoning ordinance is a text ordinance only. The zoning map will have to then be amended before such zoning can be applied to a particular parcel of land. Parler has told Council that a 600-acre parcel is the target of the LI-2 zoning proposal and will accommodate a specific industry that Richland County has recruited and wants to locate in Blythewood. The parcel is roughly bordered by I-77, Northpoint Industrial Park, the Ashley Oaks neighborhood and Locklear Road. The proposed parcel as well as the other three industrial parcels in the town can be seen on the zoning map.

     

  • Rimer Pond Road Gets Reprieve

    BLYTHEWOOD – A group of residents from Rimer Pond Road and three neighborhoods connecting to the Road – LongCreek Plantation, Cooper’s Pond and the Round Top Community – won their case Monday afternoon against a recommendation by the Richland County Planning staff for commercial zoning on Rimer Pond Road. But the victory does not end the residents’ fight to keep their road zoned Rural (RU).

    The issue will now go before County Council on April 28 for a public hearing and the first of three readings (votes) on the ordinance. That first meeting is the only one of the three meetings that members of the public will be allowed to address Council on the matter.

    After listening to most of the members of the group speak out against commercial zoning on the road, the County Planning Commission, which is only a recommending body, voted against the recommendation in a 4-1 vote.

    Commission member Christopher Anderson, a realtor in northeast Columbia, was the sole commissioner to argue for the rezoning of the 5.23-acre property located on Rimer Pond Road across from Blythewood Middle School.

    The property for which the zoning is sought is owned by developer Pat Palmer (Sycamore Development), who is also Chairman of the Planning Commission. Palmer recused himself before the agenda item was discussed, leaving only five members to vote.

    Commissioners Heather Carnes, Beverly Frierson, David Tuttle and Walter Brown Sr. sided with the residents, voting against the recommendation for commercial zoning on the road.

    A request at the same meeting by John Warren of Chapin for commercial zoning on a property he owns on the other end of Rimer Pond Road near Highway 21 was withdrawn from the agenda two days prior to the meeting.

    In a letter dated Feb. 17, Warren had sought the assistance of Blythewood Mayor J. Michael Ross to help him (Warren) obtain a commercial zoning designation. In a letter responding to Warren at the request of the Mayor, Blythewood Planning Commissioner Malcolm Gordge agreed to help Warren in his endeavor to obtain commercial zoning for the property and did not reveal that fact to a group of Rimer Pond Road residents when they came to a Blythewood Planning Commission meeting after learning about Warren’s Feb. 17 letter to the Mayor. Gordge’s letter was revealed only after The Voice asked Ross if he had responded to Warren’s letter.

    Because Warren withdrew his request, he must now wait 30 days before he can again take his request for commercial zoning before the County Planning Commission.

     

  • Travels with Charly

    Wounded Stray Homeward Bound

    Philadelphia attorney Leslie Miller greets Charly, adopted from the Fairfield County Adoption Center. Miller flew into the Fairfield County Airport in her private jet Sunday, seen in the background with the plane’s co-pilot, to fetch the Australian Shepherd and take her home.
    Philadelphia attorney Leslie Miller greets Charly, adopted from the Fairfield County Adoption Center. Miller flew into the Fairfield County Airport in her private jet Sunday, seen in the background with the plane’s co-pilot, to fetch the Australian Shepherd and take her home.

    WINNSBORO – ‘Break a leg’ is a common saying in theater meant to wish a performer good luck. Well, it apparently works for dogs, too. It certainly did for Charly.

    The black Australian Shepard puppy, at about 5 months old, was found with a severely injured back left leg last summer and taken to the Fairfield County Animal Shelter. There, with the help of shelter and adoption center staff and volunteers, Charly’s story had a fairy tale ending. She was adopted by a Philadelphia lawyer (really!) who flew in to the Fairfield County Airport Sunday in a private jet and whisked Charly away to her new home on the Main Line in Philadelphia, an area of sprawling country estates, old money and some of the wealthiest communities in the country. But more than that, to a family who loves her to pieces.

    The story unfolded last August when Sylvia Parris of Winnsboro spotted the pup hobbling along Highway 321 on three legs, her back left leg held up tight against her body. While she didn’t appear to be in pain, she could not walk on the leg. Parris put the dog in her car and took her to the Fairfield County Animal Shelter which, it turned out, was full at the time. No room for the pup.

    “So I took her home with me,” said Janice Emerson, manager of the County Adoption Center across the road from the shelter, “and she stayed with me until November when a kennel at the shelter opened up.”

    By December, there had been no improvement in the dog’s condition so Emerson decided to have the leg assessed. After the veterinarian who examined Charly suggested the leg should be amputated, Emerson heeded the advice and took to Facebook to seek donations to cover the expense of the surgery and aftercare. A woman in Charleston saw the post and called a friend in Philadelphia, attorney Leslie Miller, who had recently lost her aged, much loved black Australian Shepard. Miller was interested in the young look-alike and wanted to know more about the injury and if the shelter in Fairfield would consider seeking a second opinion as to whether the dog’s leg could be saved.

    “The woman said she would pick up the dog’s expenses, so we got a second opinion and had a second set of x-rays taken under sedation,” Emerson said. This time the findings were good. “We were told the injury was not in the leg but the hip. The ball had been knocked out of the hip socket, had healed incorrectly, but could be repaired through a rather specialized surgery,” Emerson explained.

    The dog, who the veterinarian said had probably sustained the injury as a result of being hit by a vehicle, had by then been named Charly. While the veterinarian said Charly might continue to limp after the repair, she would otherwise be able to lead a normal life on four legs.

    By late January, Charly had been placed in foster care in Blythewood in the home of Pamela Garnica. But it wasn’t long before Miller contacted Emerson to say she wanted to adopt the dog and would have the surgery performed by a veterinarian affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania. But Miller couldn’t pick Charly up until late March. Another volunteer at the Adoption Center, Robyn Owens, also of Blythewood, acted as liaison between Miller and Garnica to make transition arrangements during the ensuing two months.

    “When I first spoke with Leslie (Miller),” Owens recalled, “she said she and her husband, Richard, would be traveling to Florida on vacation in late March and could stop and pick Charly up on their way home to Philadelphia. I explained that Fairfield County would be quite a bit out of their way,” Owens recalled. “But Leslie said, ‘Don’t worry, we’ll be in the jet.’

    “I thought, ‘O my goodness!’” Owens said.

    Emerson, Owens and Owens’ three daughters arrived early and were waiting eagerly on the tarmac with Charly when the Cessna Citation touched down at the Fairfield County Airport a little after 1 p.m. on Sunday. As the plane taxied in, both Emerson and Owens realized the moment and took turns hugging and kissing Charly good-bye. And Charly responded in kind. She had spent more than half her life with the Fairfield County Adoption Center staff and volunteers. They were her family. While the good-byes were poignant, this is what the two women and others had been working toward for months. As the plane taxied to a stop, they all walked briskly toward it.

    First out the door was Leslie Miller, her arms outstretched as she rushed across the tarmac and knelt to hug Charly. Her husband followed. Then true joy erupted as everyone hugged and began introducing themselves. Charly took it all in stride and, after a few seconds of shyness followed by 20 minutes of visiting all around, was ready to board the jet with her new, doting family.

    After Miller lifted Charlie into the plane and showed her to her accommodations for the trip – a comfy couch, no kennels here – the two returned to the open door to bid a last farewell to the folks on the ground who had made it all possible and to pose for pictures for the newspaper.

    As the plane lifted off into the clear, sunny sky, the women and Owens’ daughters waved until the plane carrying Charly was out of sight. Then they walked back to the terminal, occasionally dabbing their eyes with tissues and turning every few steps to look back at the empty sky, but smiling, clearly happy with their mission accomplished and for Charly’s unbelievably good fortune.

    Talk about breaking a leg.

     

  • Intergovernmental Meeting Hones in on Wi-Fi

    WINNSBORO – Representatives from Fairfield County’s various governing bodies broke bread together at the School District Offices on March 25 in one of the more affable intergovernmental meetings in recent years. Half of the local legislative delegation, as well as representatives from the County, School District and the towns of Jenkinsville, Ridgeway and Winnsboro provided updates on recent activities and their plans for the future over a meal of chicken, rice, macaroni and cheese, salad and cheesecake.

    From the State House

    Rep. MaryGail Douglas (D-41), Fairfield County’s voice in the State House of Representatives, told those in attendance that state budget negotiations earlier this month “almost turned into a fiasco.”

    “I’m embarrassed about that,” Douglas said. “The legislature on the House side pretty much surrendered the budget authority to the governor. There were some that she held hostage.”

    Douglas said efforts to secure a raise for state employees failed, although funds were found to cover a portion of employees’ health insurance premiums. The major issue facing the Legislature, she said, is the maintenance and repair of roads and bridges.

    “Everybody seems to have a plan for roads and bridges, but nobody wants to release the dollars to do it,” Douglas said. “The budget on the House side provided an additional $50 million from the vehicle sales tax revenue that we could (use to) leverage another $500 million in federal dollars, and our governor is not happy with that proposal either.”

    From the County

    County Council Chairwoman Carolyn Robinson (District 2) said the County should see some movement within the next month on the updated strategic plan, which will include long-term goals for proposed future revenues from the two new reactors under construction at the V.C. Summer Nuclear Station in Jenkinsville. Robinson said SCANA, the primary shareholder in the plant, was committed to seeing both reactors completed, in spite of recent delays. Reactor 2 is expected to come online in 2019, she said, with Reactor 3 to follow a year later.

    Robinson said Council was currently reviewing its noise ordinance and may also consider discussion of a gun ordinance.

    Town of Jenkinsville

    Jenkinsville Mayor Gregrey Ginyard reported that the Western Fairfield town is, through a series of recent annexations, growing along Highway 215. While thanking County Council for contributing $50,000 in matching funds to complete a sidewalk to the Jenkinsville park, Ginyard said the town also had plans to illuminate the sidewalk with street lights once the project was completed. The Mayor also said the town was exploring the possibility of constructing a new government building, which he hoped would include a library, to serve as Town Hall.

    Town of Ridgeway

    Mayor Charlene Herring bragged on the opening of Royal Greens, a hydroponic vegetable growing operation in Ridgeway, and reported on the town’s recent Rural Infrastructure Authority grant to upgrade the wastewater plant. Herring also said she was concerned over the Legislature’s talks to trim local business license taxes.

    “That’s about 25 percent of our little budget of Ridgeway and that has a great impact,” Herring said. “We’ve had the local government fund reduced over the years and we don’t need another attack because any time we have to pay for something we have to bring back services from our people because we can’t afford that.”

    Douglas said she would keep an eye on any bills moving forward, but said she didn’t think it would get much traction.

    “It is being discussed heavily among our friends on the opposite side of the aisle,” Douglas said. “They can’t seem to come to any agreement and I don’t think that it’s going to fly on that side of the House.”

    Town of Winnsboro

    Mayor Roger Gaddy reported that as Winnsboro prepares for its upcoming budget discussions, Council will be looking once again at a possible increase in water rates, as well as a possible impact fee for new taps.

    Gaddy said the town had acquired a grant to develop a walking trail around the Mt. Zion Green, while the Friends of Mt. Zion Institute had begun putting plywood over the broken windows on the old school building, painting the plywood to look like windows.

    “That thing’s been an eyesore for a very long time,” Gaddy said. “I’ve been mayor 10 years and I said it would be torn down in nine months (after being elected). Sometimes you’ve got to be careful what you promise.”

    Gaddy also reported on Winnsboro’s plans to acquire a bond to extend a water line to the Broad River, withdraw water there and pump it back to the reservoir.

    “We’ve gone through the permitting process with DHEC (Department of Health and Environmental Control) to draw 8 million gallons a day,” Gaddy said. “The time period for public comment has passed, so we look forward to getting that permit from DHEC sometime in the near future.”

    Gaddy said the Town had an option on the property along the river where the lines will begin. Once Winnsboro secures the permit from DHEC, Gaddy said, the engineering process will take approximately six months, after which the Town will take out the bond and begin putting out bids for construction. Early estimates placed the cost of the project between $12 and $13 million.

    “We hope that 8 million gallons per day,” Gaddy said, “based on what our engineering consultants tell us, should hold us for 20 or 25 years for the future needs for commercial and residential development in Fairfield County and northeast Richland County.”

    Fairfield County School District

    Dr. J.R. Green, Superintendent of Fairfield County Schools, said the District would begin holding workshops on April 21 for their 2015-2016 budget. Green said he expected to see no operational millage increase this year.

    The new Career and Technology Center (CTC), under construction between Fairfield Central High School and Fairfield Middle School, had faced some delays because of winter weather, but is expected to be ready for the 2015-2016 school year. Green said four new programs – Barbering, Firefighting/EMT, Project Lead the Way Engineering and Biomedical Science (an extension of the Nursing program) – had been added to the CTC curriculum.

    Responding to a question from Mayor Gaddy, Green said the District plans to renovate the old Career Center site and use it as the new headquarters for the Transportation and Maintenance departments, as well as the new home for Gordon Odyssey Academy, which includes the District’s behavioral modification program and adult education.

    “Gordon Odyssey Academy is in very bad shape,” Green said, “and as excited as I am to see this new career center go up, I am probably equally as excited about the fact that we have the opportunity to move Gordon Odyssey Academy from where it is and put it in a facility that is in much much better shape.”

    Green also reported that all students in grades 3-12 now have their own personal learning devices in the form of new Google Chromebooks. That report sparked a discussion of the potential for county-wide internet access.

    Currently, Green said, the District is partnering with local churches, installing Wi-Fi internet in churches that agree to open their doors to students and allow them to access the internet there. This partnership has helped address the relatively small number of students who do not have internet access at home.

    “I think our partnership with local churches is a good short-term solution,” Green said, “but I think long-term we would love to see a partnership between County Council and Jenkinsville, all of the entities, to see if we can have broadband access throughout our entire county.”

    Green said he would like to see all of the governing bodies sit down with local internet providers and devise a plan. The new revenues projected from the V.C. Summer reactors, Green said, could make that plan a reality.

    “It doesn’t matter how much money we have,” Robinson said, “we’ve got to get past the Public Service Commission. We have so many providers in the county and they all are very territorial, so you’ve got to get past all that as well.”

    But County Councilman Kamau Marcharia (District 4) said countywide internet was exactly the kind of collective effort intergovernmental meetings were designed to tackle.

    “At intergovernmental meetings, we have come together and one of the things I’ve heard all these years is ‘what can we all do collectively to move this county forward?’” Marcharia said. “That’s it, right there. That’s something we all can work on and get our heads together to serve the public, if we agree to do it.”

    With the next intergovernmental meeting scheduled for June 15 and hosted by County Council, Marcharia suggested representatives of each local body get together in the interim to discuss an internet plan. Mayor Herring recommended Green to head up the informal subcommittee.

    As the meeting drew to a close, School Board member Henry Miller (District 3) offered a word of caution on working together, which, he said, “is what these meetings are all about.”

    “But I don’t know anything about Ridgeway,” Miller said. “I’m just a School Board member. If you ask me about schools, I can tell you something. But each one of us, we need to stay in our lanes. I’m not telling you to not ask questions. But if we all stay in our lanes and work collectively together, we can get something done. That’s the key. But you can’t run the schools and I can’t run County Council. I can’t run the town of Jenkinsville. We’ve got to work together.”

     

  • Mistrial in 2011 Murder Case

    WINNSBORO – In the second time in as many tries, the Sixth Circuit Solicitor’s Office has failed to get a conviction against the man charged with the 2011 murder of 18-year-old Rodrickous Ramon Wood.

    Judge Brian Gibbons declared a mistrial in proceedings that wrapped up at the Fairfield County Courthouse on March 26 as a jury failed to produce a verdict against Stacy Ramon Hunter. A trial in October of 2013 resulted in a hung jury.

    Riley Maxwell, Assistant Solicitor, would not comment in detail, calling the case “pending” as a result of last week’s outcome.

    “It means we’re back to square one,” Maxwell said.

    Wood was found by a Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputy in a parking lot behind the former Sammy Jo’s restaurant off Kincaid Bridge Road near the Highway 321 Bypass N. in Winnsboro on May 1, 2011. Deputies had responded to the area just after midnight in response to a report of gunshots fired after patrons of a private party were exiting the former All-in-One events center nearby.

    According to the incident report, Wood, of 169 Flora Circle, Winnsboro, was surrounded by a small crowd of people who were trying to assist him. When the deputy approached the scene, he found Wood’s chest area covered in blood and called for an ambulance.

    Witnesses reportedly told investigators that Hunter, who was 17 at the time of the murder, was in the passenger seat of a gray Nissan Maxima leaving the area after the party and that Hunter extended his body out of the passenger-side window, sat on the door and fired several shots over the roof of the Maxima and into the crowd as the car sped away. One of those shots struck Wood in the chest.

    Wood was taken by ambulance to the Fairfield Memorial Hospital emergency room where he was later pronounced dead.

    Hunter, of 4417 Hawthorne Ave., Columbia, was arrested a short time later and charged with murder.

     

  • An Industrious Group –

    IMG_2584 copy

    S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt addressed Blythewood’s first Industry Appreciation Breakfast on Tuesday at The Manor. About 40 invited guests from area industries heard Hitt warn that when industry comes knocking, towns and counties must be ready if they are to attract the jobs. He also said companies locate in communities and look first at what those communities have to offer. “If you don’t have it,” Hitt said, “they’ll move on. You must be ready, have a plan and be flexible.” Hitt added that 70 percent of industries looking for locations want a ready building to move into. “If you’re not ready,” Hitt said, “you’ll miss out.”

     

  • Blythewood Begins Zoning for Industry

    Ordinance Passes First Reading

    BLYTHEWOOD – Town Council took the first step Monday evening in a newly energized effort to bring industry to Blythewood. It passed first reading on a Limited Industrial Two (LI-2) zoning district that will allow a wider variety and greater intensity of manufacturing uses than the Town’s current Limited Industrial District (LI), Ed Parler, the Town’s Economic Development consultant told Council.

    The uses allowed in the ordinance run the gamut from tire manufacturing, machine shops, textile industries and testing laboratories to public relations agencies, cafeterias, full service restaurants and business support services. But Parler said LI-2 zoning would not allow the most intense manufacturing uses of the Basic Industrial (BI) district such as foundry and smelting operations. Distribution centers have also been eliminated. Conditional uses allowed include sale of manufactured homes and motor vehicle repair garages.

    While the ordinance, as written, calls for a building height limit of 35 feet, Parler asked Council to increase that to a 100-foot height limit (equivalent to 8-9 stories), adding that Richland County has no height limit for its industrial and manufacturing facilities. After some discussion, Councilman Tom Utroska made the motion to amend the ordinance to allow a height limit of 50 feet, to which Council unanimously agreed. Councilman Bob Mangone was absent.

    Parler said he planned to take the request for the 100-foot limit back to the Planning Commission at its April 6 meeting. If the Commission approves the additional height the request will be sent to Council as an amendment to the second and final reading of the ordinance at Council’s April 27 meeting, Parler said. In addition to any additional height Council might approve, the Town’s Board of Appeals can grant an additional 10 feet of height as a special exception. However, in an interview with The Voice, Parler said he and Richland County will look at additional changes to the height and other restrictions before the ordinance goes back to Council.

    “We want to know exactly what height we can get to in the end,” Parler said. “We need a very clear definition before the process starts.”

    While the ordinance before Council is a text amendment that only establishes the zoning district on paper and does not target a particular piece of property, Parler said the text ordinance is needed for the rezoning of a specific 600-acre tract in Blythewood that Richland County has its eye on for an industry it says is interested. The tract is bordered by Northpoint Industrial Park to the south, I-77 on the east, Lorick Road on the north and Ashley Oaks subdivision on the west. The property is known locally as the Barnett property and is owned by the Barnett family.

    “Be assured,” Parler told Council, “that if you establish this LI-2 zoning district, you will immediately receive a zoning request for LI-2 zoning for this 600-acre property and the applicant will be Richland County.”

     

  • Royal Greenery –

    Royal Greens copy

    Royal Greens, Ridgeway’s new wholesale/retail hydroponic plant business, opened its doors at 200 E. Church St. last week to a huge crowd including Alex English, left, and his wife Vanessa of Blythewood and Fairfield County Councilman Marion Robinson, right. With them are manager of operations Chip Harriford, next to Robinson, and his son Scott. The Charm building, which houses the growing operation, will be the national headquarters for the business that will supply greens and other organically grown vegetables to Whole Foods, U.S. Foods, Sysco and other food stores and suppliers.

     

  • Pure Roadside America

    Sorry, señor: Pedro says the Hat is closed. But everything else is wide open at South of the Border.
    Sorry, señor: Pedro says the Hat is closed. But everything else is wide open at South of the Border.

    DILLON — When the concept of the summer vacation stormed America in the late 1940s, it fired up the imagination of people stuck on the road to “there.” Dreamers created roadside attractions to snare all that loose change rolling right past them. That other change, however, caught up with them. All these years later, all across the United States in the middle of nowhere, you’ll see aging spectacles that gave highways character, rest stops that kids refused to let their parents pass. Visit these relics of the road and you can hear rust crackling. Cars roll on by and maintenance funds ride with them. Roadside attractions, welcome to the end of the road.

    Two hours to the east you can see a most unique roadside attraction, South of the Border. Recently I drove to Apex, N.C. My daughter, Becky, and her two children went with me to visit my other daughter. Becky left Atlanta earlier at 7 a.m. By 3 p.m., the children had been in a car for over seven hours. To say they were restless is an understatement.

    As soon as we left I-20 for I-95 crazy billboards appeared, hyping a pseudo-Mexican character, “Pedro.” Fluorescent orange, green, red and yellow text, suggestive of the tropics, covered the billboards and campy word play added a corn pone element. One billboard held a huge link sausage, reading: “You never sausage a place. (You’re always a wiener at Pedro’s.)”

    The star of South of the Border is the 165-foot high Sombrero Tower. The kids had never seen South of the Border. As we approached North Carolina, the Sombrero Tower rose into the Pee Dee sky. “Y’all want to climb the tower?” I asked. I don’t have to tell you the answer.

    Pulling in I felt we were driving back into the 1950s. We parked and went into the building over which the Sombrero Tower reaches skyward. I asked the attendant if we could climb the tower. “It’s closed,” she said. “Probably always will be.”

    Perhaps maintenance funds had dried up. Disappointment set in. I had taken my daughters up the tower when they were children and I wanted to repeat this bit of family history. Plus it would have done the kids good to burn some energy. After throwing some money in one of those “grab a stuffed toy with a claw” games, we left.

    South of the Border is the first thing southbound Northerners see of South Carolina. Their first impression of the state, known for Charleston, mountains and its haunted lowcountry, is that of a campy Mexican village. Despite the kitsch, I like the place and am glad the politically correct crowd leaves it alone. Maybe they think it will become a ghost town from Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road.”

    The old magic persists. When my grandkids saw the place they thought they had landed in Disney World. I suggest you visit this one-time oasis that sprang from beer, fireworks, reptiles and more. See roadside Americana in the making.

    If You Go …

    Make it to I-20, then I-95 north, and look for the signs. If you cross the N.C. state line, amazingly you somehow missed SOB.

    www.thesouthoftheborder.com

    Learn more about Tom Poland, a Southern writer, and his work at www.tompoland.net. Email day-trip ideas to him at tompol@earthlink.net.