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  • Fairfield County Interim Admin’s husband accused of threatening two Fairfield elected officials

    WINNSBORO – Two Fairfield County elected officials have filed incident reports against the Fairfield County Interim Administrator’s husband for posting what the two officials called threats against them and others.

    Fairfield County Treasurer Norma Branham and Fairfield County Councilwoman Peggy Swearingen both filed incident reports on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024, against Otis Johnson, 53, the husband of the county’s Interim Administrator Laura Johnson.

    Otis Johnson’s daily Facebook posts are laced with vulgarities and veiled threats that appear to be directed at those he perceives disagree with his wife Laura or find fault with her work as the interim administrator. His targets include some Fairfield County council members, the county treasurer, county auditor, and others.

    Laura Johnson has not criticized or made any public statements regarding her husband’s posts.

    Branham recently drew Otis Johnson’s ire when she addressed council about what she sees as some of the government’s current shortcomings under Laura Johnson’s leadership and called upon council members to give the administrator search “the attention and close scrutiny it deserves.” She suggested, “The familiar may be easiest, but is not always best.”

    “I’m concerned with a pattern I have seen in some county leaders who appear to make decisions based on how the outcome will benefit them personally rather than what may be best for the county, its residents, and our shared future,” Branham continued. “To accomplish these outcomes, facts are at times distorted or at times blatantly misrepresented.”

    Following Branham’s appearance before council, Otis Johnson posted a photo of her at the podium and commented that “the county paids [sic] and [sic] independent accounting firm to do your books for more than 20 plus years.”

    On Tuesday, Branham said she planned to press charges, saying that post and others, including one in which Otis Johnson wrote, “I will come after your a**…” made her fearful and feel threatened. Even though Otis Johnson identified Branham as the county treasurer in one post, a County Magistrate ruled that the threats were not aimed directly at Branham that there was no probable cause.

    According to a spokesperson with the Fairfield County Sheriff’s, the issue has been turned over to the South Carolina Division of Law Enforcement (SLED).

    According to the incident reports, Swearingen said she believes Otis Johnson’s threats were directed at her and stem from ongoing issues between some county council members (including her) and Otis Johnson’s wife.

    Some of those posts came after Swearingen questioned Laura Johnson at the December council meeting regarding the million or so dollars Laura Johnson paid for IRS penalties and interest, when she was not authorized by council to do so.

    In another post that featured a graphic of people being pushed backward into a deep hole, Otis Johnson wrote, “[This is] what really should be done to people who insult your integrity and question your work ethics in small southern towns.”

    Laura Johnson served a little over a year as an assistant administrator at the county before retiring in June 2021. She was hired in January 2023 under a six-month contract to be the interim administrator of the county. Council voted to pay her $150,000, $10,000 more than the previous administrator who had 20 years’ experience as an administrator and who ushered in more than $100 million investment during his five years of employment with the county.

    Council members have come under fire for subsequently extending Laura Johnson’s six months contact to a full year as the search for a permanent administrator has drug out from April, 2022, until the present.

    Just hours after Branham and Swearingen filed the incident reports against Otis Johnson on Tuesday, Council Chairman Douglas Pauley – who supports Johnson – called an unexpected special meeting for the next day to select a permanent administrator.  That vote will take place hours after The Voice goes to press today, Jan. 17.

    Laura Johnson has been criticized by citizens and some council members recently for a number of financial missteps, including writing hundreds of thousands of dollars in checks to pay assessments for IRS penalties and fines last May and June without notifying most members of council about the amounts or asking for authorization until six months later on Dec. 11, 2023; being late with the current annual audit; and other county matters, including her hiring and firing practices.

    “These Facebook posts may not, under the law, be considered direct threats to my life,” Branham said, “but the posts and the photos are aimed at intimidating me, the public, and even her bosses – the council members – from criticizing Laura Johnson’s mismanagement and her ability to run an effective government,” Branham said. “Fairfield government is in critical condition.”

  • One death in crash on I-77

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – A Columbia woman who was traveling the wrong way on I-77 died in a crash with two other vehicles, according to Master Trooper Gary Miller with the S.C. Highway Patrol.

    NaShuma Knight, 43, was the sole occupant of a 2020 Ford SUV that was traveling south in the north bound lane on I-77 when it struck two other vehicles head on as they were traveling north in the same north bound land, according to Miller.

    The crash occurred about 9:10 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 6, Miller reported.

    The vehicles that were struck were a 2018 Toyota Utility Van and a 2016 Audi sedan.

    The driver of the Toyota and a passenger were injured and transported buy EMS to an area hospital.

    The driver of the Audi and four passengers were uninjured.

    The crash occurred just north of the Fairfield/Richland County line.

    The crash is being investigated by the S.C. Highway Patrol and the Fairfield County Coroner’s Office.

    This story was updated January 11, 2024 at 1:52 p.m.

  • One fatality in three-vehicle crash

    WINNSBORO – One person died in an early morning three-car crash on SC 34.

    Terrence Byrd, 48, of Winnsboro, died after the 2007 Honda Accord he was driving west on SC 34 sideswiped a 2023 Chevrolet pickup truck traveling east on SC 34, according to SC Highway Patrol Master Trooper Gary Miller. Miller said the Honda was then struck by a 2011 Ford Expedition that was also traveling east on SC 34,

    The Ford then left the road and hit a guard rail, Miller reported.

    The crash occurred near Ramsey Road, approximately five miles west of Winnsboro.

    Byrd was the sole occupant of the Honda. The driver of the Ford was injured and transported to an area hospital by EMS. The two passengers in the Ford were not injured. The driver and two passengers in the Chevrolet pickup were not injured.

    The crash remains under investigation by the SC Highway Patrol and the Fairfield County Coroner’s Office.

    This story was updated Jan. 11, 2024 at 1:51 p.m.

  • Winnsboro man dies in house fire

    WINNSBORO – On Saturday, December 30, 2023, Fairfield County Fire Service was dispatched to a residence on Durham Place Rd. in Winnsboro for a structure fire with an individual inside. Firefighters located the victim and Fairfield County Coroner’s Office was dispatched to the scene.

    Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill has identified the individual as Mr. Frank Turner, 63 years old, from Winnsboro. According to Hill, an autopsy has been scheduled to determine the cause of Mr. Turner’s death.

    Fairfield County Coroner’s Office and SLED continue to investigate this incident. This was the second fire fatality in Fairfield County for the year of 2023.

  • Ridgeway teen is polished weather forecaster

    RIDGEWAY – “We are tracking rain for your Sunday,” says an energetic young man in a suit, standing in front of a digital map of South Carolina.

    “As these thunderstorms are rolling through, they should drop some heavy rain, so isolated areas could be up to 2 inches, but expect, generally, between a half-an-inch and an inch-and-a-half of rain widespread.”

    It’s 17-year-old Will Rowe, giving one of his regular weather reports. For the Gray Collegiate Academy high school student, who lives in Ridgeway, forecasting the weather has been a way of life for a long time.

    “It’s just something that I’ve always had a passion for,” he says. “I’ve never considered doing anything else.”

    Will says he’s had an interest in watching weather forecast videos since he was in preschool – and, after watching weather forecasts on television with his grandmother, would play at being a weather man with an old road map and a dry erase marker.

    He says he started paying closer attention to the weather after the 2015 flood, which had a big impact in parts of South Carolina. He began looking up weather radar online, just to look at it.

    In middle school, he started creating his own forecasts, and his interest in weather forecasting prompted him to spend his 7th grade job-shadow day at the National Weather Service in Columbia. As a high school freshman, he went back for another visit and learned how to produce his own video forecast.

    It was a visit to a local news station that opened his eyes to the world of video, he says – and he chose that as his next direction.

    “At that point, I had no intention of doing anything TV-related; I simply wanted to do the science and research meteorology,” Will says, “but seeing all the cameras and all that, I just thought, ‘Hey, this is pretty cool, I can set this up,’ so I just got a camera, a green screen, got a computer, and got it going.”

    It was in the spring of 2020, during the Covid-19 pandemic, that he began making his own forecast videos and posting them on social media.

    “I knew how to forecast and stuff because I’d been to the National Weather Service,” he says, “but I just didn’t really know how big it was going to grow – and at that point – during Covid – I didn’t know if people needed to know the weather since everyone mostly stayed in side.”

    He went for it, anyway – and, as his online following grew, he acquired more equipment, including a teleprompter, a desk, and six more computer screens.

    “When I started off, I was terrible. That’s just kind of how it is,” Will says. “But I kept going. I got some tips, and it got better, and I ended up how I am today. I built better stuff, I have more technology available to me, and I acquired a bunch of connections that gave me new forecasting tips. So, it’s kind of really worked out.”

    He’s since visited the weather studios in television news stations in five states – and he’s learned things at each one that, he says have made his forecasting better.

    Will Rowe, left, with WIS Chief Meterologist Adam Clark, anchors Dawndy Plank and Greg Adaline, and Sports Director Rick Henry. | Contributed

    His audience primarily views his forecast videos on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/WillsWx/, and he says he also has a regular following on YouTube.

    He says he’s tried other platforms, but Facebook is the one that’s given him the most consistent views – and it seems to be one his viewers are comfortable with.

    He creates his weather forecasts for South Carolina in four regions that line up roughly with the state’s major television markets: the upstate (centered around Greenville/Spartanburg), the midlands (centered around the Columbia area), the PeeDee region (centered around Myrtle Beach), and the low country (centered around Charleston).

    Right now, he says, Will’s Weather brings in about $600 a month from local advertising sponsors plus a varying amount from Facebook, which pays him based on the number of comments, likes, shares, and video watches.

    The money it generates is part of what’s enabled him to pay for his weather station gear, he says, but he’s also had a lot of support from his dad, who’s helped him fund his passion.

    Now a high school senior, he’s looking forward to a career in weather. His plans after graduation include pursuing a college degree – and ultimately a doctorate in atmospheric science – while continuing to operate his online weather station and, hopefully, landing a paid weather internship.

    Whether his career path after college graduation takes him to a job at a television news station or further development of his own online weather following, he forecasts a weather-focused future.

    “My ultimate goal is to be a severe weather research meteorologist. I want to develop new technologies for severe weather tracking,” he says. “That’s something that I want to do because I think it’s very important that we have the most up-to-date and most advanced technology so we can get the important information that we need for severe weather.”

    Of course, right now he’s also still enjoying his last year of high school. He plays football at Gray Collegiate Academy, a public charter school in West Columbia, and his team recently played in the 2A state championship, where they lost by one touchdown.

    While he’s certainly thought about playing football at the college level, he says in the long run, a career in weather forecasting may prove to be more lucrative.

    “I think I’d rather stick to my career path,” he says, “since I’m already making money, and I already have a straight line to what I want to do.”

    As his following on Will’s Weather continues to grow, he acknowledges that it might not be all that long before the online and television worlds converge.

    “Talking to all of these news stations, they are relying strictly on the website and social media push so that they can keep the viewers and still keep the followers,” he says, “because you can’t assume that local TV is still going to be around in the next 20 or 30 years.”

    And while there’s also concern in the weather world about the potential for computers and artificial intelligence to dominate the world of weather forecasting, he says there are elements of a good, accurate weather forecast that, right now, machines just can’t match.

    Unlike weather apps, which just spit out data based on a single, ever-changing weather model, Will says a human weather forecaster can draw on multiple weather models and data sets, plus apply a broader understanding of seasonal and typical weather patterns in each location that the models don’t account for – ultimately creating forecasts that are more accurate and reliable.

    But the biggest takeaway from his experience that he’d like to share with other young people is this …you don’t have to wait to grow up to pursue your dreams.

    “If you’re passionate about something, you don’t have to wait until you get a degree to start doing what you want to do,” he says.

    “You don’t have to say, ‘Oh, well, I can’t do that yet.’ If you just put your foot in the door, I guarantee there’s something somewhere that’s at least related to what you want to do.”

  • Stidham retires as Director of Voter Registration & Elections

    Deputy Director Jackie Beaver Promoted to Top Job

    WINNSBORO – The Director of Fairfield County Voter Registration and Elections, Debby Stidham, has announced her retirement effective Dec. 31, 2023.

    Stidham

    Stidham has been with Fairfield County since 1999. She started as an appointee by the Fairfield County Legislative Delegation. In 2002, she was promoted to Clerk. In 2005, she was promoted to Deputy Director of Voter Registration and Elections. In 2006, Stidham was promoted to Director by the Voter Registration and Elections Board.

    Stidham said she had one goal when she took over in 2006, “The goal of maintaining the integrity of this office. Each director and board before me set that precedence and I was proud to continue in their footsteps.”

    Ask how she plans to spend her retirement, Stidham said, “My main goal is to enjoy every moment of this precious life we have been given.”

    Beaver

    The Fairfield County Voter Registration and Elections Board also announced they have appointed Jackie Beaver to replace Stidham as the new Director, effective Jan. 1, 2024.

    Beaver has been with the department and currently serves as Deputy Director.

    Beaver said her commitment is to continue the standard of excellence set by Stidham and her staff.

    “My number one priority is to maintain the integrity and respect of this office, this position and that of democracy as a whole,” Beaver said.

  • Ridgeway Mayor resigns effective end of year

    RIDGEWAY – Ridgeway Mayor Heath Cookendorfer has resigned after nine years in the town government. His resignation will be effective Dec. 29, after his final town council meeting of the year.

    Cookendorfer

    Cookendorfer said he is resigning for personal reasons and will be moving back to his hometown in Kentucky by the end of the year.

    “I have truly enjoyed serving the town and working with the people here in Ridgeway,” Cookendorfer said. “While I am moving on, I am pleased to say that the town hall is well-manned now. We have a new part time administrator and a new town clerk who, I know, will be a big help to the new mayor and council.

    “I loved it here, but I’m looking forward to returning to my roots,” he said. “That’s something I think everyone really wants to do at some time in their life. I wish the town well and I know it has a bright future.”

    Mayor Pro Tem Don Prioleau will be serving as interim mayor until the election in April.

    Cookendorfer was first elected to office in 2014, when he ran as a write-in candidate for the Ridgeway Town Council. In 2018, he won the mayor’s seat with a 10-point margin.

    He won re-election as mayor in 2022, in a deeply divided race, when he and two candidates for town council ran as a block and won as a block.

    Since the town’s next regular election will happen in April, 2024, Fairfield County Voter Registration Director Jackie Beaver said there will be no need to hold a special election to fill the mayor’s post.

    The Election will be held April 2, 2024. The filing opens at 12:00 noon on January 22, 2024. It closes at 12:00 noon on Friday, February 2, 2024. Two Council seats are open as well.

  • Winnsboro man dies in Tuesday fire

    WINNSBORO – On Tuesday, December 19, Fairfield County Fire Service was dispatched to a residence on Keyhole Dr. in Winnsboro  for a structure fire with an individual inside.

    Firefighters located the victim and Fairfield County Coroner’s Office was dispatched to the scene.

    Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill has identified the individual as Mr. Wardell Jeter, 83, from Winnsboro. According to Hill, an autopsy has been scheduled to determine the cause of Mr. Jeter’s death.

    Fairfield County Coroner’s Office and SLED continue to investigate this incident.

  • Stained glass window walking tour set for Dec. 17

    Bethel ARP Church | Photos: Martha Ladd

    WINNSBORO – The Fairfield County Chamber of Commerce and several churches in the community are sponsoring a walking tour of the stained glass windows of five churches in downtown Winnsboro.

    There will be five staggered 30-45 minute tours of the windows on Sunday, Dec. 17, at 6 p.m., 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 7:30 p.m., and 8 p.m. Tour participants are reminded to wear comfortable shoes and to dress for the weather.

    Each tour will accommodate from 20 to 25 walkers.

    Churches on the tour include these five Winnsboro Churches:

    1. Bethel ARP Church – 101 North Zion St.
    2. First United Methodist Church – 109 West College St.
    3. Sion Presbyterian Church – 116 West Washington St.
    4.  Washington Street Baptist Church – 101 South Vanderhorst St.
    5. St. John’s Episcopal Church – 301 West Liberty St.
    St. John’s Episcopal Church will be the final stop on the tour.

    Community fellowship and animal welfare are the target beneficiaries of the event. Cash donations for the tour and the donations of luminaries are greatly appreciated and will go to support Because of Roscoe’s spay/neuter (SNIP) program.

    A matching donation of $5,000 is being generously offered by a Fairfield County resident. Donation boxes are available on site at the Bethel ARP church.

    Luminaries are available for purchase from any merchant shop along Congress.

    For information about the tour, email: tracy@chamberfc.com. To purchase luminaries from the Historic Winnsboro Downtown Merchants, call 803-519-6065.

    While the tour is free, registration is required.

  • Kids in Parks walking trail opens in Winnsboro

    Fairfield Forward cuts the ribbon on its new walking trail. | Photos: Martha Ladd

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield Forward celebrated the grand opening of the Kids in Parks Walking Trail, on Dec. 6, in the heart of historic Downtown Winnsboro, located at 141 S. Congress Street.

    The trail has been designed to take visitors on a journey through the town’s history, with several historical stops along the way. From the early days of the town’s founding to its growth and development, the trail offers a unique opportunity for both children and adults to learn about the history of Winnsboro.

    Thanks to Fairfield Forward’s Duke Endowment grant, this project became possible. The trail will be a valuable educational resource for the community, with an interactive way for children to explore and learn about the town’s history. It is expected to be a resource and fun adventure for families, schools, and history buffs alike, and a great way to celebrate the town’s heritage.

    Follow the self-guided trail with a brochure from the first stop.