Blog

  • Setting Records

    Westwood standout Ticora Gaskin continues to make leaps in track and field.

    The two-time 4A State Champion set a new South Carolina record in long jump at the SCHSL 4A State qualifiers. Gaskin now holds the record previously set in 2014 (20-2.25) at the 20-3 mark.

    She also broke Westwood’s eight-year school record of 19-6.5 and is ranked as #6 in the nation according to MileSplit.

    Gaskin also placed first in the 100m dash at 12.37 and second in the 200m dash at 25.38.

  • BZA hearing for 140 homes on Wilson Blvd. set for May 15

    BLYTHEWOOD – A special exception has been requested from the Board of Zoning Appeals for a cluster single-family development to be approved on two parcels at 11017 Wilson Boulevard in Blythewood. The property is located just south of the former Dinkins used car business on Wilson.

    Chandler Roy, representing the Pulte Group in Columbia, said 140 single-family homes are planned for the properties if the special exception is approved.

    One of the parcels (TMS # R15200-03-29) is 89.65 acres, and the other parcel (R15200-03-08) is located at the entrance to the larger parcel, and is 1.38 acres. Together the two parcels that make up 91.03 acres that are zoned D-1.

    The special exception that is being requested is 153.150 – 155, a Conservation Subdivision Design.

    “We are proposing to implement the conservation subdivision design as outlined in the ordinance,” Roy said in his application.

    Roy told The Voice that, under the conservation subdivision design, the 140 homes would be built on half the property, approximately 45 acres (less about 10 acres for roads) and the other half of the property, which is wetlands, would meet the ordinance requirements for green space.

    The proposed development, Roy said, will embrace the existing open space characteristics of the area.

    “Our design will allow for more open space to remain on the overall track by condensing the footprint of the lots and roads,” Roy stated in the application. “The standard requirements for the current zoning will result in less open space and a bigger footprint by lots and roads.”

    In 2017, the Town’s council voted to have no lots smaller than 20,000 square feet in size. The information available puts Pulte’s proposal at about 8,000 square feet per lot, more or less. 

    Roy came before the BZA On Dec. 12, 2022, with the same request, but did not have a conservation easement in place.

    Ray Fatone made a motion to defer the special exception and have the applicant come back with a conservation easement written up and a public workshop to further discuss. The motion passed 4-0.

    According to a public notice published by the Town, the BZA will hold a public hearing at 5:30 p.m., Monday, May 15, 2023, at Doko Manor, 100 Alvina Hagood Road in Blythewood.

  • Soil boring pierces Winnsboro gas lines

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – A contractor for the County’s engineer, American Engineering, pierced a Winnsboro gas line that provides natural gas to industries in the Walter Brown Industrial Park on Cook road, according to Tripp Peak, Director of the Town’s Gas/Water/Sewer Department.

    Peak said the contractor was drilling test bores for soil assessments for the interconnector line proposed to reach from the Winnsboro water treatment plant to the Commerce Industrial Park on Peach Road.

    The line was drilled into around 2 p.m. Saturday on Peach Road, about half way between Syrup Mill and McCorkle Roads. Peak reported that two holes were made in the line – one in a small line and the other in a 6-inch diameter line.

    The road was closed in the area by the Fairfield County fire service until repairs could be made about two hours later, Peak said.

  • Suspects identified in vehicle theft

    WINNSBORO – Warrants have been issued for two suspects who have been identified in a vehicle theft that occurred on Thursday, April 20, 2023, at Grand Central Shell Station in the northeastern portion of Fairfield County.

    River Masten and Robert S. Oliver, both of Charlotte, NC, were identified as being responsible for stealing a Ford pickup truck which had been left unattended in the gas station parking lot with the keys in it. They then fled the area.

    On Tuesday, April 25, 2023, Masten and Oliver were both arrested in Cherokee County for allegedly attempting to sell a stolen trailer. When arrested, they were in possession of the truck that was stolen from Fairfield County.

    Upon release from Cherokee County, Masten and Oliver will be brought back to Fairfield County and each charged with Grand Larceny.

  • Innes: We need more vet care, staff & a decent shelter

    On hand for Fairfield County Animal Control Director Bob Innes’ presentation on the urgent needs for the animals at the Fairfield shelter last month were: Kathy Faulk, President of HoofandPaw SC; Miss Williamsburg Amanda Peterson; Fairfield County Councilman Dan Ruff; Innes; and Councilwoman Peggy Swearingen. Peterson’s platform during her campaign for Miss South Carolina is Peace for Paws, which brings awareness to animal cruelty and the importance of animal rescue.

    WINNSBORO – During public comment time at the April 10 county council meeting, Kathy Faulk, president of Hoof and Paw SC, asked council to consider doing more for the animals in Fairfield County. As an example of how a county can improve the lives of its animals, Faulk pointed to the City of Aiken’s animal ordinance.

    In 2005 when the city adopted the ordinance, it spent $80,000 to house and care for 667 abused, neglected and stray dogs.

    By 2015, the city’s population had increased by 2,600 residents but the number of dogs in the shelter had dropped to 383 and the cost to care for those dogs dropped to $64,000.

    By 2018, the shelter population had dropped to 252.

    “That’s because of the ordinance they adopted in 2005,” Faulk said. “Fairfield needs to consider adopting such an ordinance.”

    On April 19, Fairfield Animal Control Director Bob Innes addressed the conundrum Fairfield’s shelter faces with a stricter animal control ordinance during a Fairfield County public services and development committee meeting in this speech:

    I think the Aiken City ordinance, which is very progressive, is a good ordinance. Dogs must be fixed, registered, microchipped, etc., which is great. And it would be good for this county once we are in a position to actually enforce such an ordinance. But we’re not there yet.

    There’s no point bringing in more laws, if we can’t enforce them. With an ordinance like Aiken’s, we would be bringing in a lot more animals and, right now, we wouldn’t have the staff or the room to take care of them.

    We Need More Staff

    Aiken County has six animal control officers, 12 full time staff and 15 part time staff at their animal shelter. We have four people: a director, two animal control officers and a secretary at the moment. We’ve had two job positions open since July of last year that we’re trying to fill.

    We’ve been severely understaffed for the last two years when the county let our temps go. We struggle with overcrowding in the shelter, plus we don’t have enough staff or a proper facility. These things should have been done years ago. When I first came here in 2016, the administration had vision at that time. Then council changed. But if we would have stayed on the right path, we wouldn’t be where we are today.

    Our full time animal control officers never get a full weekend off. They have to work five and a half to six days a week. Many people don’t realize how stressful this job is. l deal with it daily. It’s extremely difficult with only four people in my department. We struggle every single day. I’ve asked for one more temp in this budget coming up. I can’t get more than that because the county hasn’t got the money.

    It takes three animal control officers to cover 710 square miles. That’s how big this county is. Since July of last year, there’s been two officers plus me. And I’m supposed to also be doing my regular job.

    We Need a Vet

    We desperately need a veterinary service that’s open five days a week. Or we could build a facility with a vet employed by the county. A vet clinic would generate money for the county. We all discussed this four or five years ago, and so the four or five years are down the road now.  At this very moment in time we only have the use of one veterinarian who can spare only three hours a week to fix our animals. And he does as many as he can in that time. Aiken County employs a vet for 30 hours a week.

    We take in both Winnsboro’s animals and the county’s, but Winnsboro has only just started to pay the county for taking care of their animals.

    We Need a New Facility

    The first thing we need before we adopt more ordinances is a new facility. Without that, you can change every law you want in the book, but If you don’t have the staff and space, you can’t enforce them, and nothing improves.

    We do need to have stronger laws to have animals fixed, to be microchipped so we know who they belong to when we pick them up. We do need to stop the breeding of dogs – that is especially important for this county because the overbreeding is the problem.

    But you can’t change conditions with stricter laws unless we’ve got a plan. And a plan should be to build a facility and work your way up, and then you can enforce tighter laws.

    I’m bursting at the seams up the road with animals. You know, times are so tough now.

    We Need Investment

    The problem with Fairfield is we don’t invest in our [animal control] department. We call upon the sheriff’s department so many times during a week to deal with what’s going on with animals in the county, but they’re short staffed, too. We just need this county to rethink and do the right thing by our animals.

    I’ve got 20 dogs down here, a whole one side of our kennels across the road. They’re all court case dogs. I can’t do anything with them until their owners have been to court. And that could be another year.

    If we want to progress, we need investment. Nothing’s going to happen unless we invest. I’ve seen animal abuse and neglect in this county go up over the last two years. And it’s getting worse and worse and worse. Much of the public just does not care. We’re picking dogs up daily with more and more injuries, etc.

    And then I have people come down here to the shelter and tell me that all I need is a couple of windows put in the building and to get rid of my temporary help. That was a decision made by a previous council. It’s so frustrating.

     I’m sure I’ve come across as being strong headed about this, but when you deal with it every single day, and the staff is worn out, and every day we take in more and more abused, neglected and stray animals it sometimes gets unbearable.

    In spite of all this, we’ve actually helped moved this county forward in seven years – from bringing in $6,000 a year with a euthanasia number that was 65 percent, to bringing in $280K last year. That’s a big difference, but even though we brought that money in, none of it has been put into the department. No investment whatsoever. I’ve spent $34,000 trying to improve what I’ve got down the road and every dime of that has come from donations from generous people who want to help. 

    The animals down at the shelter at this very moment in time are all perfectly good dogs and they are all adoptable. But they need more vet care, more staff and a new shelter. That’s the bottom line.

  • Rotarians Step Up

    Photo: Contributed

    WINNSBORO – Winnsboro Rotarians (standing) Claudia Avery, Clementine Wood, J.R. Green, Ar­thur Lathan, Eric Robinson, Marilyn Butler, Jim Mulen and (seated) Sarah McMaster volunteered during the club’s Shealy’s BBQ scholarship fundraiser last month.

  • Shooting suspects arrested; drugs, guns seized

    WINNSBORO – Three adults and one juvenile have been ar­rested for a shooting-related in­cident that occurred in the South Winnsboro area of Fairfield County.

    On Monday, April 24, 2023, Fair­field County Sheriff’s Deputies responded to a shooting incident that occurred near the intersec­tion of Fagan and Doty Roads where a vehicle was struck by gunfire. Upon arrival at the scene, deputies contained the area and initiated an in­vestigation. Dep­uties determined that the shooting suspects were in a mobile home near where the shooting inci­dent occurred and obtained a search warrant for that residence.

    A search of the residence yielded 24 firearms (handguns, rifles, and shotguns), several thousand rounds of ammunition, quantities of illegal drugs, to in­clude cocaine, cocaine base (“crack”), and over 7 pounds of marijuana, a bal­listic vest, and over $2,400 US Currency. Three of the seized firearms were sto­len and several had been con­verted to fully automatic.

    The three adults who were in­side of the residence were charged with multiple drug offenses, mul­tiple Stolen Firearms offenses, and multiple counts of Unlaw­ful Possession of a Machine Gun. The juvenile will be charged with these offenses as well.

    This investigation is still on-go­ing and more charges are ex­pected, to include the discharg­ing of a firearm into the victim’s vehicle.

  • RVHS student fight leads to stabbing

    BLYTHEWOOD – After a fight out­side a Ridge View High School class­room late Tuesday morning, two 16-year–old male students were injured and a 17-year-old male stu­dent was later arrested and charged with attempted murder, according to the Richland County Sheriff’s De­partment. It was reported late Tues­day that 17-year-old will be tried as an adult.

    The 17-year-old student is accused of stabbing one of the 16-year-old males several times in the upper body before running from the scene. The 16-year-old suffered puncture wounds and was taken to an area hospital, according to Richland Two media spokesper­son Ishmael Tate.

    There was no update on the stu­dent’s condition at press time on Tuesday, but Tate said the student was conscious when he arrived at an area hospital.

    Another 16-year-old student suf­fered a minor injury but did not go to the hospital, the sheriff’s depart­

  • Developers request rezoning for 1400 houses, apts in BW 29016

    Developer Kevin Steelman will go before Richland County Council on April 25, to request the rezoning of 90.79 acres at the intersection of Kelly Mill and EJW Roads to build 198 homes. | Graphic: Ashley Ghere

    BLYTHEWOOD – Two developers will go before Richland County Council on April 25 to request rezoning for two residential developments totaling 1,400 homes, town homes and apartments in Blythewood 29016.

    198 Homes on Kelly Mill

    Applicant Kevin Steelman, president of Land Tech, a residential land developer in Columbia, is requesting council to rezone 90.79 acres on Kelly Mill Road from Rural (RU) to residential Estate (RS-E).

    The property is located at the intersection of EJW and Kelly Mill Roads in Blythewood.

    As many as 197 homes are recommend for that acreage, according to the agenda’s information packet. Steelman said at a community meeting that he plans to build 198.

    According to the agenda packet, the RS-E zoning district is intended for single-family detached dwelling on large ‘estate’ lots with a low to medium density. The minimum lot area is 20,000 square feet.

    Staff recommended disapproval of the rezoning request, noting that the proposed rezoning is not consistent with the objectives outlined in the Comprehensive Plan.

    However, at their Dec. 5, 2022 meeting, the Richland County Planning Commission disagreed, saying the request is appropriate to promote smart growth in the area for the schools and traffic, and recommended approval to County Council.

    In February, Richland County council members Derrek Pugh (District 2) and Jessica Mackey (Dist. 9) invited members of the Blythewood community to attend a town hall meeting with Steelman and county planning staff to discuss the rezoning of the property.

    Steelman told residents who attended the meeting that, if the rezoning is approved, he plans to build 198 single-family detached homes on large ‘estate’ lots, or 2.18 units per acre. Rural zoning would allow 1.32 units per acre.

    He said the neighborhood would be similar to the Autumn Pond neighborhood he developed at the intersection of Rimer Pond and Hardscrabble Roads. The home prices, he said, would range from $400,000 to $500,000 and would feature hardy plank and vinyl siding.

    Residents in attendance pushed back with questions about traffic, overbuilding, lack of teachers, already overburdened schools, lack of proper infrastructure and more.

    Steelman countered that the reason the district is having difficulty hiring teachers is because there aren’t places for them to live. He also said the new industries coming to Blythewood are counting on their employees having places to live. He said his development will help to accommodate that need.

    Kelly Bush, who lives in Lake Carolina, disagreed.

    “You can’t make me believe that your neighborhood has to be built to accommodate all these new employees,” Bush said. “I don’t know why Richland County can’t look at the infrastructure they have – roads, schools, everything – and determine if the services are there. If not, deny the building permit and stop building.”

    Michael Watts, a lifelong resident of Rimer Pond Road agreed with Bush.

    “In my mind, it’s time to just say, ‘Stop building out here,’” Watts said. “Just stop for a little while. Get together with the people who live here and pay the taxes. I appreciate Derrek Pugh and the new council members who have gone out on a limb against the powerful interests of the developers and real estate agents to say no to housing projects out here. We have plenty of lots available already, planned and approved by the county for the new employees coming here,” he said.

    Steelman said that Rimer Pond Road traffic is not anywhere near capacity, and that without more new homes, their taxes will go up.

    “This development is too much, too soon, too fast for us,” said Tracy Cooper of Crickentree neighborhood, which is adjacent to the proposed rezoning.

    1,200 Multi-family Units

    In a separate request at the same April 25 council meeting, developer Bill Theus will ask council to amend the Planned Development District (PDD) zoning on 55.2 Commercial/Industrial zoned acres, between Wilson Blvd. (State Highway 21) and I-77, to a Mixed Use land use classification to allow both single-family and multi-family residential uses. The applicant also requests that the overall residential dwelling unit count be raised from 900 to 1,200 to allow for a maximum density of 300 units in the Mixed Use land use classification.

    Both the planning staff and the Planning Commission have recommended approval to county council.

    Both the Steelman and the Theus rezoning requests will be heard by council during a zoning public hearing to be held at 7 p.m., Tuesday, April 25 at county council chambers, 2020 Harden Street in Columbia. This meeting is the only time the public will be allowed to speak for or against the rezonings. To speak, arrive a few minutes early and sign in to speak.

    The agenda and information packet are available by googling Richland County S.C. County Council meeting agenda.