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  • After 27 years, he’s an Eagle Scout

    Standing in for Kelly Powell’s parents, Bill and Jennifer Trapp present the Eagle Scout badge to Powell. | Contributed

    BLYTHEWOOD – It is not often you hear about a wrong being righted after 27 years. 

    But on Friday, Sept. 17, that’s exactly what happened. Kelly Powell was awarded his Eagle Scout badge that was denied to him in 1994.

    The story begins sometime in 1988 when Powell was a young Boy Scout working hard to earn his merit badges in the Ridgeway/Blythewood Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Ward Troop.  Along the way, according to Travis Peake, a former Scout Master, Powell not only worked to earn his own badges, but went out of his way to help younger Scouts earn theirs.

    “Kelly was one of those boys who was always the example of how to do things right,” Peake said. “He always made sure the younger scouts were having a good time on their first camp-out away from home or while they were learning a new skill.  He always attended and helped with all the camp-outs, summer camps, service projects, regular scout meetings and merit badge classes,” Peake said. 

    Nearing the end of his Scouting career Powell launched his Eagle Scout project. 

    With the assistance of his leaders, the project – a blood drive – was planned and presented to the local Scout Committee for approval.  The committee approved the blood drive, and Powell carried it out on July 2, 1994.

    The blood drive was a big success, and Red Cross commended Powell for his organization, hard work and dedication to the project.  The next step was to present the completed project, including paperwork, to the Eagle Scout review board.

    Powell was accompanied to the review board meeting by Scout Committee member William (Bill) C. Ferguson, LTC, US Army, Retired, of Blythewood.

    “When Kelly explained his project to the board, he thoughtfully kept mentioning what his family did to help him. When asked why his family did so much he had trouble explaining himself,” Ferguson said, interceding.

    “Because it was the July 4 holiday, many Scouts were out of town, so Kelly had to rely on his family a great deal.”

    At the end of the presentation, astonishingly, one board member said he felt the project was “not good enough” even though it had been approved by the Scout Committee. 

    The Eagle Scout rank was denied Kelly Powell. He was devastated.

    The decision was appealed. 

    While a different set of board members are supposed to hear appeals, there was only one member on Powell’s appeal board – the same man who had deemed the project unworthy at the initial review. He denied the appeal.

    While this violated the Boy Scouts of America appeal procedures, there was not enough time before Powell’s 18th birthday to complete another project.  And, until this day, there is no record of the appeal hearing recorded on the local or national level. 

    Powell, disappointed, accepted his fate and continued to help other Scouts earn their Eagle awards.

    In 1997, Powell moved with his family to Idaho, but kept in touch with his Blythewood and Ridgeway Scout and church acquaintances.

    Carl Reynolds, who was the Bishop for the local ward of the Church, which sponsored Powell’s troop from 1986 to 1994, noticed a poignant post on Powell’s  Facebook page: “Of all the things I ever wanted in my life was to be an Eagle Scout.“

    “This ate at me,” Reynolds re called, “for several years.”

    In 2011, Reynolds set out to right the wrong Powell suffered. He was joined in this quest by Powell’s fellow Scouts and local Scout and church leaders.  Over the years, they never forgot the injustice that had been visited upon one of their own

    “I know in my heart that Kelly Powell deserves to be an Eagle Scout.  He always went beyond what was required of him in all things, not just in Scouting,” said Jeffery Branham who had been a Scout along with Powell.

    “To right the wrong, we had to find all the records. There were no national records of scout badges prior to 1994, so we had to trace all Kelly’s badges through a notebook Aubrey Trapp had kept of his own badges. Trapp and Powell had gotten all the same badges at the same time,” Reynolds said.

    “After years of calling and e-mailing Scout officials across the country, finally it was determined that proper procedure had not been followed in denying the project initially and in the appeal,” he said.

    On Dec. 17, 2018 five people convened for a board of review for Powell.  Within 15 minutes, the board voted to award Powell his Eagle Scout badge. 

    “We were making plans to get Kelly back to Blythewood for the presentation when COVID hit,” Reynolds said. “We wanted to award it to him here where he earned it.”

    Finally, last week, Powell arrived in town and was awarded his Eagle Scout badge before many of his former Scout friends and church members.

    “I want to say thank you to my parents, fellow scouts and my sister Emily,” Powell said to those in attendance “I am in shock and awe of this award. Spending time with the Scouts whether it was camping or going to the mall is something I will always cherish,” he said.

  • Blythewood Town Council mandates masks

    BLYTHEWOOD – During a special called meeting last week, council voted 4 – 1 to approve an emergency mask ordinance that is, according to Town Administrator Carroll Williamson, largely like the one recently passed by Richland County and similar to the one the Town enacted last year. Councilman Eddie Baughman voted against the ordinance.

    One difference in this ordinance and the county’s is that the Blythewood ordinance does not apply to schools, Williamson said.

    The ordinance requires masks to be worn in all commercial establishments for the next 60 days.

    Councilman Brock asked how the ordinance will apply to the Oktoberfest.

    “There would be no exception for the event,” Williamson said.

    As for enforcement of the ordinance at Oktoberfest, Williamson said, “We will make sure they do everything they can to comply with the ordnance.”

    He said, however, that there are no enforcement plans specifically.

    “It does say every effort will be made for voluntary compliance,” Williamson said.

    Brock suggested an amendment that would alleviate the businesses from having to fund special protections by providing the town’s businesses with all necessary hand sanitizer, masks and face coverings as reasonably requested.

    Councilman Larry Griffin asked, “Are we doing this just to do it? Or are we going to enforce it?”

    Council did not address fines which are listed in the ordinance as $25 for noncompliance. Business owners/managers of restaurants, retail stores, salons, grocery stores, and pharmacies in the Town must require their employees to wear a face covering and can be fined up to $100 if their employees do not comply with the ordinance.


    General Mask Mandate

    1. All persons entering a commercial establishment in the Town must wear a face covering, which covers the mouth and nose, while inside the establishment. A face covering must also be worn in situations where distances between people change frequently such as a busy sidewalk, waiting area, or popular outdoor area where it is impractical or impossible to maintain six feet of distance at all times. This paragraph does not apply to religious establishments or schools. However, the use of face coverings is recommended during religious and school activities as well.

    2. All restaurants, retail stores, salons, grocery stores, and pharmacies in the Town must require their employees to wear a face covering, which covers the mouth and nose, at all times while having face to face interaction with the public.

    3. Any person who is unable to safely wear a face covering due to age, an underlying health condition, or is unable to remove the face covering without the assistance of others is exempt from this Ordinance.

    4. Face coverings are not required in the following circumstances:

    • In personal vehicles;
    • When a person is alone in enclosed spaces; during outdoor physical activity, provided the active person maintains a minimum of six (6) feet from other people at all times;
    • When a person is alone or only with other household members;
    • While drinking, eating or smoking;
    • When wearing a face covering causes or aggravates a health condition.
    • When wearing a face covering would prevent the receipt of personal services.
    • When a person is 10 years of age or younger.

    5. A person who fails to comply with Paragraph 1 of this Ordinance shall be guilty of a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of not more than $25.00. A person who fails to comply with Paragraph 2 of this Ordinance shall be guilty of a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of not more than $100.00.

    6. Each day of a continuing violation of this Ordinance shall be considered a separate and distinct offense. In addition to the fines established by this paragraph, repeated violations of this Ordinance by a person who owns, manages, operates or otherwise controls a business subject to this Ordinance may, subject to all procedural protections set forth in the Town Code, result in the suspension or revocation of any occupancy permit or business license issued to a business where the repeated violations occurred. Repeated violations of this Ordinance are additionally hereby declared to be a public nuisance, which may be abated by the Town by restraining order, preliminary and permanent injunction, or other means provided for by the laws of this State. The foregoing notwithstanding, every effort shall be made to bring the business into voluntary compliance with the terms of this Ordinance prior to the issuance of any citation. For the purposes of Paragraph 2 of this Ordinance, “person” shall be defined as any individual associated with the business who has the control or authority and ability to enforce the social distancing requirements of the Ordinance within the business, such as an owner, manager or supervisor. “Person” may also include an employee or other designee that is present at the business but does not have the title of manager, supervisor, etc., but has the authority and ability to ensure that the requirements of this Ordinance are met while the business is open to the public.

  • Town attorney resigns; councilmen not notified

    BLYTHEWOOD – Town Attorney Shannon Burnett has resigned her position with the town, according to emails exchanged between Councilman Donald Brock and Town Administrator Carroll Williamson on Tuesday, almost a week after sources say Burnett’s resignation letter was received by Williamson.

    Burnett

    When Williamson was asked for a copy of Burnett’s resignation letter, Mayor Bryan Franklin considered the request as “harassment and intimidation” of Williamson and sent an angry email to Brock (see below) expressing his dismay, asking Brock to resign his council seat.

    Rumors had been circulating since Thursday, Sept. 16, that Burnett had submitted her resignation Wednesday afternoon, Sept 15. The Voice was unable to independently verify that timeline.

    On Tuesday, Sept. 21, Brock sent an email to Williamson asking if Burnett had, indeed, resigned and, if she had, why had the council not been notified.

    Williamson responded that Burnett had sent her resignation to both him and Mayor Bryan Franklin, but offered no other information about the resignation except that he assumed Burnett had notified council.

    “I emailed Mr. Williamson again, asking him to forward Ms. Burnett’s letter to the full council. So far I have not received the letter or any further correspondence from Mr. Williamson on the subject,” Brock said.

    Two other council members told The Voice that they also had not been notified by anyone at town hall about Burnett’s resignation the previous week.

    By law, council is responsible for hiring and firing both the town administrator and the municipal attorney. The Town Administrator is responsible for hiring and firing all other town employees.

    On Tuesday, The Voice sent the following email to Williamson:  “I was informed last week that Shannon Burnett has submitted her resignation. I just now learned that you have confirmed that. Could you send me a copy of her resignation letter?”

    Late Tuesday evening, Franklin sent a fiery email to Brock, admonishing both him and The Voice for “harassing and intimidating” Williamson over the issue.

    The above email was the only email The Voice sent to Williamson concerning Burnett’s letter.

    Once Burnett’s letter was received by town hall, it became public information.  The complete thread of emails exchanged between Brock, Williamson and Franklin on Tuesday is printed in the column at below. Brock shared the thread with both The Voice and The Country Chronicle.

    Burnett and Williamson have each been employed by the Town less than a year. Burnett was hired in October, 2020, and Williamson was hired in January, 2021.

    Since the first of 2021, the Town has been beset by council drama and was sued in June by MPA Strategies marketing firm after Franklin failed to timely turn over responsive documents to an FOIA request submitted by MPA Strategies’ attorney Joseph Dickey, Jr., on April 15, 2021.


    Mayor Franklin Takes Off the Gloves

    The following is an email exchange in which Councilman Brock asked for a copy of Town Attorney Shannon Burnett’s resignation letter to be shared with council members six days after it was submitted to Franklin and the town administrator.

    From: Donald Brock

    To: Carroll Williamson

    Mr. Williamson,

     It’s been brought to my attention that Ms. Burnett submitted her letter of resignation last Thursday.

    First question: is this accurate?

    If so, why has Council not been informed of this upcoming personnel change?

    Councilman Brock

    —– —– —– —– —–

    From: Carroll Williamson

    To: Donald Brock

    Councilman Brock,

    Yes, Ms. Burnett submitted her resignation letter to the Mayor and me.  Since she was hired by Town Council, I assumed she was notifying all of you as well.  I apologize for the miscommunication.

    Later this morning, I am speaking with the MASC attorney Eric Shytle to get his feedback on advertising and hiring her replacement.  I’ll keep you all updated as the process proceeds.

    Carroll

    —– —– —– —– —–

    From: Donald Brock

    To: Carroll Williamson

    Thank you for confirming.  Ms. Burnett may have reach out to others but not me, which is why I inquired. 

    Also, thank you for being proactive in the upcoming search for our next town attorney.  I will look forward to updates at our next meeting on the 27th.

    Furthermore, I will be emailing you a list of items that I feel need addressing on the 27th.

    Thanks

    dB

    —– —– —– —– —–

    From: Carroll Williamson

    To: Donald Brock

    Councilman Brock,

     The most effective way to get items on the agenda is to send them to the Mayor first since he sets the agenda.  Then he will notify me.  Otherwise, it just adds another step in the process.

    Thank you.

    Carroll

    —– —– —– —– —–

    From: Donald Brock

    To: Carroll Williamson

    That’s fine. I will be more than happy to copy the Mayor and all other members of Council. 

    Finally, since you stated that the Town Attorney works for the Council, will you please send her letter of resignation to the full Council?  I believe it’s in everyone’s best interest that we all see it. 

    Councilman Brock

    —– —– —– —– —–

    From: Bryan Franklin

    To: Donald Brock

    Councilman Brock,

      Please allow our Town Administrator the opportunity to run the town. You and Barbara Ball need to stop intimidating and bullying him. Ever since you have been elected, you have become quite the distraction. In fact, my recent research has indicated your actions have cost the town of Blythewood around $40,000.00 in frivolous and unnecessary legal fees due to your unscrupulous activities and dishonest actions (I hope will soon be proven in court). I anticipate this amount may rise to $100,000 or more. I hope you will be held personally accountable for any misdeeds at the next election, regardless of who your political strategist is. The public deserves to know – I really hope you haven’t deleted any emails…the town’s day in court is coming.

       As for Ms. Burnett: Did you reach out to her? You certainly didn’t attempt to contact me. She delivered her letter so that the Town Administrator and I (as the Mayor) could begin discussing a good transition to  best keep the Town covered – doing our job. Your job is to interview and vote for her potential replacement. Did you and your apparent media strategist/partner Barbara Ball even think that Ms. Burnett may want to publicly present her resignation? If you had bothered to pick up the phone and call her, you would have learned she wanted to address the Council first. Barbara Ball is also asking for Shannon’s letter – I wonder how she heard about it? Shame on you both for trying to spin this, apparently promoting your own agendas. This conduct would normally be shocking, but given what you are both seemingly trying to do, I guess it’s really not…it’s actually becoming expected and routine…and sad.

       Before you cost our Town more money with your alliances that damage Blythewood, promote yourself and your corrupt media accomplices, and fantasize about remaining a representative of the people, please have enough honor to do the right thing and resign. You no longer enjoy my trust and confidence to serve as a council member because of what I perceive to be devious (and hopefully soon to be disclosed) plots. Bottom line, stop attacking the Town’s employees as they work to protect this Town.

    Sincerely,

    ~Mayor Bryan Franklin

  • Parent not charged in hot car deaths of twins

    COLUMBIA – A Blythewood parent will not be charged in the death of 20-month old twin boys who died after being left in a hot car for more than nine hours, Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said during a press conference Tuesday morning.

    “It didn’t happen on purpose,” Lott said. “He (the father) didn’t mean to do it. God, he didn’t mean to do it. He’s got to live with this for the rest of his life.”

    Richland County Coroner Naida Rutherford disclosed on Sept. 2, that the identical twins brothers, Brayden and Brycen McDaniel, had likely died of hyperthermia. That was confirmed in the Tuesday press conference.

    Lott said an investigation into the deaths determined it was an accident.

    “We did an intensive investigation,” he said. “No questions left unanswered.”

    Lott said the father went to the Sunshine House Early Learning Academy about 5:30 p.m. on Sept. 1, to pick up the twins who were enrolled in the day care, and was told the twins were not there.

    “He (the father) went to look for them. He went back to the car and that’s when he found them,” Lott said. “He did some things to try to save them, but it was too late.”

    Deputies and EMS were called and paramedics pronounced the twins dead at the scene.

    According to Rutherford, the twins died of a type of hyperthermia.

    “A body temperature of 104 or 105 can cause febrile seizures and death, so with the heat index in that care at 120, as we believe, so it didn’t take long.

    Rutherford asked the community to pray for the twins’ family.


    BLYTHEWOOD – Prince Brycen George Ashford McDaniel and Prince Brayden Sha’Ron Ashford McDaniel were beacons of light that came in to this world on December 23, 2019 in Columbia, South Carolina.  Their parents, Elmore and LaTrice, couldn’t have ask for anything more beautiful and precious than those angelic little “Sweet Peas.” Their earthly presence brought blissful delight to everyone who came in contact with their happy little spirits. They departed this life peacefully together on September 1, 2021.

    Brycen and Brayden enjoyed learning with their teachers and playing with their friends at the Sunshine House.

    They were fun-loving little boys, with smiles that could light up an entire room. They enjoyed laughing, giving wet kisses, singing, listening to their Daddy and PaPa play jazzy tunes on the saxophone and dancing to music from Earth, Wind and Fire and Frankie Beverly and Maze. Yes, they were wise way beyond their years.

    They were preceded in death by: their grandparents, Sharon Miller Jamison, Sallie K. McDaniel and Elmore Ashford.

    Brycen and Brayden leaves to mourn their passing: loving parents, Elmore Ashford McDaniel and LaTrice Jamison McDaniel of Blythewood , SC; sisters, Alayisha McDaniel, Morgan McDaniel and Maddison McDaniel of Blythewood, SC; brother, Blake Elmore Ashford McDaniel of Blythewood; grandfather, George Jamison of Summerville, SC; special grandparents, Barbara and (PaPa) John Wright of Orangeburg, SC; aunts; Joann Johnson, Sandra Jean McDaniel, Jerometha McDaniel, Mary Vivian McDaniel, Trician Davis and Christie(Earl) Hudgins, all of  Columbia; uncles, Christopher G. (LaTowya) Jamison of Summerville, SC,  Frankie J. McDaniel, and Lawrence Ashford of Columbia; God sister, Shadai K. English of Blythewood, SC; and a host of loving relatives and dear friends who will always cherish their beautiful memories.

    Obituary: Bostick-Tompkins Funeral Home

  • State awards $30 million for internet

    More Than 1,000 Fairfield Homes to Receive Internet in Next 18 Months

    WINNSBORO – Act 175 aimed to plug Internet coverage gaps in South Carolina’s rural areas, including Fairfield County.

    While full coverage remains elusive a year later, the state has taken strides toward expanding and enhancing service, according to state officials.

    On Monday night, representatives from the state’s Office of Regulatory Staff outlined ways the agency has worked to improve online access, as well as other forms of communication.

    Internet Progress

    “There’s a lot of work that’s going to be happening in Fairfield County over the next 18 months,” said Jim Stritzinger, director of the state Office of Regulatory Staff’s broadband office” We hope your residents will be happy with that.”

    Gov. Henry McMaster signed Act 175 into law in October 2020. Part of the act included funding to provide grants to applicants to help subsidize qualifying broadband projects.

    But the law also has limitations. It merely says that the state or electric cooperative may take steps to enhance broadband service, but doesn’t mandate it.

    “This act does not convey or confer any implied or express grant of authority to an investor-owned electric utility to provide broadband facilities or broadband services,” the act states.

    In spite of the disclaimer, progress has been made.

    Stritzinger said about 3,000 people and a little more than 2,000 homes currently lack broadband service in Fairfield County.

    By October 2022, he anticipates those figures will fall to about 1,600 residents and 864 homes, largely due to $30 million in grants awarded in July.

    The ORS initiative operates in tandem with the S.C. Department in grants awarded in July.

    The ORS initiative operates in tandem with the S.C. Department of Commerce. While expanding broadband to ordinary residents is the primary goal, economic development is another incentive.

    “As a council member, you would want to target those areas to make sure you get them connected as rapidly as possible,” Stritzinger said.

    Federal grants will further close the internet connectivity gap.

    $3M USDA Grant

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture recently awarded $3 million to Fairfield County to enhance broadband service, which is in addition to the state investment.

    “We’re nowhere close to done in Fairfield County,” Stritzinger said. “The mission is … for all your residents to have service. We’re off to a really good start.”

    ORS representatives also talked about the agency’s equipment distribution program. The program provides no cost phone services for South Carolina residents facing speech or hearing challenges.

    With COVID-19 limiting human interaction, the program’s benefits become quite clear, said Casi Sims, a program coordinator with ORS.

    “During the pandemic, communication is very important, especially over the phone,” Sims said. “People are shut in their homes and it affects their quality of life.”

    Options include phones that amplify audio, phones with captioning (which converts audio to text), or an iPad.

    Sims said the devices are valuable educational tools, noting school speech pathologists utilize the devices.

    “The good thing about getting an iPad from our program is the student doesn’t have to turn it in at the end of the school year,” she said. “They can keep it and are progressing; they are not regressing over the summer.”

    Settling Hospital Debt

    In other business, after a lengthy executive session, the council voted to accept an offer from Fairfield Memorial Hospital to settle debts with the county. Of the $1.256 million the hospital owes the county, the board offered to pay the county $628,000.

    Council members voted 5-1 to approve, with Councilman Neil Robinson opposing. Councilman Mikel Trapp was absent.

    As early as April, some council members had hoped to strike a deal with the hospital board to settle debts for as much as $750,000.

    Before the vote, Council Chairman Moses Bell asked how much patient debt it forgave.

    Tim Mitchell, chief financial officer with the hospital, told council members that when the hospital was operating, it “wrote off $7 million dollars a year in patient debt.”

    Council Likely Violated FOIA

    The council also added a previously unpublished executive session item to the agenda for the purpose of receiving legal advice in the county’s ongoing lawsuit against Alliance Consulting Engineers, Wiley Easton Construction Company, and Employers Mutual Casualty Company.

    Filed in February 2020, the suit relates to work performed at the Fairfield Commerce Center.

    County attorney Charles Boykin asked to add the discussion item after saying he received new information about the case earlier in the day at 3:15 p.m.

    Jay Bender, an attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member, said the executive session likely violated the state’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

    Bender said last minute agenda additions, including executive session items, are impermissible unless the council first votes to amend the agenda to include the agenda item by a supermajority vote which, on the seven-member Fairfield council, would be five votes.

    Only after that’s done can public bodies then vote to enter executive session to discuss the item that’s added, Bender said.

    No action was taken on the lawsuit discussion.

  • Local online sexual predators arrested

    LEXINGTON – More than a dozen law enforcement agencies have worked together on a month-long operation targeting adults accused of contacting children online for sexual activity.

    Seventeen men have been arrested as part of the operation. Another man is wanted on charges stemming from messages exchanged with law enforcement officers posing as minors on social media apps.

    Among those arrested and charged are a man from Winnsboro and a man from Blythewood.

    Willie Manning, 57, of Winnsboro was charged with criminal solicitation of a minor, sexual exploitation of a minor

    Misael Quezada, 31, of Blythewood – criminal solicitation of a minor

    Willie Manning, 57, of Winnsboro was charged with criminal solicitation of a minor, sexual exploitation of a minor

    Lexington County Sheriff Jay Koon said. “Officers pretended to be underage teenagers as the suspects messaged them through apps. Some even had phone conversations with officers,” Lexington County Sheriff Jay Koon said. “After the suspect asked to meet with ‘the child,’ detectives were staged at a predetermined meeting spot to arrest them.”

    Most of the messages featured sexually explicit language and images, according to Koon.

    “The intent of these suspects during these communications is clear,” Koon said. “They were trying to persuade, entice or coerce someone they reasonably believed to be under the age of 18 to engage in sexual activity.”

    No children were ever used or placed in danger during the operation, according to Koon.

    “This operation is the result of strong relationships among law enforcement at the federal, state and local levels.” Koon said. “I’d like to thank Attorney General Alan Wilson for making members of his office available for this operation as part of his continued commitment to local law enforcement.”

    As members of the state’s Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, the U.S. Secret Service, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Cayce Department of Public Safety, the Mount Pleasant Police Department, the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office, the Orangeburg County Sheriff’s Office, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office and the Aiken Department of Public Safety also participated in the operation, according to Koon.

    Koon said more arrests are expected as investigators pursue charges against other suspects identified during the operation.

  • One dies after motorcycle crash in Fairfield County

    LAKE WATEREE – Jackie Ronald Burchett, 58, of Great Falls, was killed in a crash on Saturday, Sept. 11, about 10:30 p.m. near Lake Wateree.

    The motorcycle was traveling south on Wateree Road when it went off the roadway to the left, struck a ditch and ejected the operator, according to Master Trooper David Jones.

    The operator died after being transported by EMS from the scene to an area hospital, Jones reported.

    A cause of death has not been determined this time and is pending autopsy. The accident remains under investigation by Fairfield County Coroner’s Office and South Carolina Highway Patrol.

  • Four candidates file for two Blythewood council seats

    BLYTHEWOOD – Four town residents have filed to run for two at-large seats on town council in the upcoming Nov. 2 municipal elections. The filing period ended Tuesday at 5 p.m.

    Larry Griffin

    Filing to run for the four-year term on council are: incumbents Larry Griffin and Sloan Griffin, Planning Commission Chairman Rich McKenrick and Cobblestone Park resident Roxann Henagan.

    Larry D. Griffin, 67, a resident of Langford Road, was first elected to town council in 2015 to fill the remaining two years of Councilman Bob Massa’s four-year term after Massa moved away. Griffin was then elected to a full four-year term in 2017. He is the president of the Bethel-Hanberry Athletic Alumni Association and owns GEM Financial Resources.

    Sloan Griffin

    Sloan J. Griffin, III, 35, a resident of Cobblestone Park, was first elected to council in February, 2020, to fill the remaining two years of a four-year term vacated by Brian Franklin after he was elected mayor. Griffin has served on the town’s planning commission and is now seeking his first full four-year term on council. He is the Emergency Manager for SCDOT.

    Roxann Henagan, 52, a resident of Cobblestone Park, is making her first run at public office. Henagan is an author and describes herself as one who provides advocacy support for education.

    Roxann Henagan

    Rich McKenrich, 55, is a resident of Ashley Oaks neighborhood, and is seeking his first term on town council. He has served on the town’ planning commission for three years and is currently the chairman of the planning commission, is the Blythewood appointee to the TPAC Committee and serves as the HOA president for Ashley Oaks phases 4-7.  He works in new construction sales.

    The Voice will publish campaign statements from each candidate in a coming issue.

    McKendrick

    Register to Vote

    The last day to register to vote in person for this election is Saturday, Oct. 2, 2021 by 12 noon. Voter registration by mail must be postmarked no later than Monday Oct. 4, 2021. Voter Registration on line, fax or email must be entered no later than Sunday, Oct. 3, 2021 at 11:59 pm. To register to vote or to obtain absentee ballots, contact the Richland County Voter Registration Office, 2020 Hampton Street, Columbia, S.C. Absentee ballots may be requested by calling the Voter Registration Office at 576-2240. In-Person absentee voting will begin Monday, Oct. 4, 2021 at 2020 Hampton Street.

    The Polls will be open from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. The polling place for all precincts in this election–Blythewood 1, Blythewood 2, Blythewood 3, Longcreek, and Ridgeway (Fairfield County)—is:

    Blythewood Park

    126 Boney Road

    Blythewood, SC 29016

    The results of the election shall be determined according to the plurality method.  

    At 9 a.m. on Election Day, the absentee ballot return envelopes will be examined at the Richland County Voter Registration and Elections office, 2020 Hampton Street, Columbia.

    The Richland County Board of Elections and Voter Registration will hold a hearing on Thursday, Nov. 4, at 9 a.m. at 2020 Hampton Street, Columbia to determine the validity of ballots challenged, if any, in this election.

  • Four arrested after shooting at Cuz’s corner

    WDPS investigator Oren Gadson in hazmat protection, processes truck for drugs. | Photos: Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – A Fairfield County Sheriff’s deputy was reported to have passed out Sunday evening from substances the deputy encountered while searching a pickup truck that had reportedly been involved in a shootout earlier in the evening.

    The deputy was immediately administered Narcon by fellow officers and transported to a local hospital and later released, according to sources.

    The incident began when Winnsboro Public Safety Officers responded to shots fired at the Cuz’s Corner convenience store on S. Congress Street about 7 p.m., Sunday evening.

    The responding officers reported being approached in the street by an individual who stated that someone driving a gray pickup truck shot at two black males, then drove off towards Columbia Road.

    Two shell casings were recovered, and security footage from the convenience store camera showed the driver firing shots from the pickup truck at two black males in a black or dark gray Dodge Durango.

    In the meantime, county deputies stopped the suspects in a gray truck at the POP’s store across from McDonald’s. Justin David Loner, 40, driver of the truck, was arrested and taken to the Fairfield County Detention Center.

    After the deputy was reportedly overcome while searching the truck, a tow truck was called to transport the truck to the Town of Winnsboro impound for processing under safe conditions.

    Three other suspects were also arrested in the incident: William Smith, 51; Herman Tee Gear, 38; and Alysa Shan Putnam, 19. All are residents of Winnsboro and are being held in the Fairfield County Detention Center.

    Investigators say they were not able to find the two black males who were being shot at.

    Gadson recovers packets of white powder, syringes, a handgun and drug paraphernalia from the truck.

    Hazmat Processing

    On Tuesday, Sept. 7, WDPS Investigator Oren Gadson, wearing hazmat protection, processed the gray Chevrolet truck at the WDPS storage lot, recovering packets of white powder that officers say could be fentanyl. Syringes, a handgun, various drug paraphanelia and other items were also recovered from the truck.

    As WDPS Chief John Seibles observed the processing, he commented about the deputy who was overcome from just breathing something while searching the truck.

    “This is dangerous stuff. Most people don’t realize just how dangerous some of these drugs can be,” Seibles said in an interview with The Voice.

    “Both children and adults can get involved in drugs, and family members have no idea about it. But a person can bring something into the house accidentally, just a grain of fentanyl, and a family member can touch it or breathe it and pass out. By the time the ambulance arrives, if they don’t have Narcan, the family member could be dead,” he said.

    “We encourage everyone who knows about someone getting involved with these drugs to let us know so we can take care of it,” Seibles said. “Friends and family members are our best resources to find out what’s going on. They play a vital role in helping us stem some of these things before something bad happens.”

    No incident report was available from the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office. The incident continues to be under investigation by the Winnsboro Department of Public Safety.

  • Elgin father dies after vehicle overturns near Lake Carolina

    BLYTHEWOOD – Harlon Drew, 25, of Elgin, was killed in a one-car crash that occurred on 25-Mile Creek Road near Kelly Mill Road at 9:55 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 2, according to the Kershaw County Coroner David West.

    The 2004 Chevrolet Tahoe, driven by Drew, was traveling north on 25-Mill Creek Road when it ran off the road to the left and overturned, according to Master Trooper Nick Pye of the S. C. Highway Department.

    Drew, who was not wearing a seatbelt, was ejected from the SUV and was transported to a local hospital where he later succumbed to his injuries.

    There was no word on what caused the SUV to veer off the road. The collision is being investigated by the S. C. Highway Patrol.