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  • Emergency broadband now available in Fairfield

    A temporary FCC Emergency Broadband Benefit program is now available to Fairfield County households who are struggling to afford internet service during the pandemic. The FCC has announced that Enrollment applications became available to consumers on May 12, 2021.

    The benefit provides:

    • Up to $50/month discount for broadband services;
    • Up to $75/month discount for households on qualifying Tribal lands; and
    • A one-time discount of up to $100 for a laptop, desktop computer, or tablet purchased through a participating provider.

    A household is eligible I even one member of the household…

    • has an income that is at or below 135 percent of the federal poverty guidelines or participates in certain government assistance programs.
    • receives benefits under the free and reduced-price school lunch or breakfast program,
    • received a federal pell grant during the current award year,
    • experienced a substantial loss of income due to job loss or furlough since Feb. 29, 2020 or
    • meets the eligibility criteria for a participating provider’s existing low-income or COVID-19 program.

    Here’s how to apply:

    1. Contact your preferred participating provider directly to learn about their application process.
    2. Go to GetEmergencyBroaband.org to submit an application and to find participating providers near you.
    3. Complete a mail-in application and send it along with proof of eligibility to: Emergency BroadBand Support Center, P. O. Box 7081, London, KY 40742.

    To learn more, call 833-511-0311 or go to fcc.gov/broadbandbenefit.

  • Council expected to vote Thursday night for Gerald Seals as interim admin

    WINNSBORO – In a third attempt in three weeks to hire an interim county administrator, Council Chairman Moses Bell has called a special meeting of council Thursday, May 20, at 6 p.m. to put forth Gerald Seals’ name for the position.

    Seals

    Seals served as county administrator for Richland County, making headlines when the county fired him in May, 2018 in a close 6-5 vote. He walked away with a $1 million settlement and resumed teaching at Newberry College where he had taught previously.

    Seals served as county administrator in Greenville County prior to coming to Richland.

    Seals is also pastor at the Living Word Church and Fellowship in Northeast Richland County.

    He is the third candidate the majority four on county council has considered for the interim job. Three weeks ago, Bell called an executive session to discuss hiring a former City of Columbia official who, it was learned, left the City after he was accused of sexual harassment. When that information was revealed to council, the majority four declined to move forward with a vote.

    Earlier this week, the majority four voted 4-3 to offer the job to former State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex. However, Rex turned down the offer on Tuesday, saying the deeply divided vote as well as the current turmoil in the county government made the job ‘not a good fit for me.’

    Council is expected to vote on Seals tomorrow (Thursday) night, though his name was not mentioned in the executive session agenda item that was sent out Wednesday afternoon. Bell announced his choice of Seals in an email he sent to county officials about 4 p.m., Wednesday, May 19.

  • Rex turns down county’s offer for interim county administrator

    Jim Rex

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Council’s search for a new administrator is heading back to the drawing board.

    A day after fielding an offer to serve as interim county administrator, former S.C. Superintendent of Education Jim Rex turned down the job.

    On Monday night, the Fairfield County Council voted 4-3 to offer Rex the position of interim administrator. Council members Clarence Gilbert, Neil Robinson and Doug Pauley voted in opposition.

    There was no discussion prior to vote, nor after it.

    Gilbert, Robinson and Pauley also voted against motions to approve the agenda, as well as to enter executive session for a “discussion concerning the position of county administrator.”

    Council members spent about 35 minutes behind closed doors.

    Rex initially said he would take a week to consider the offer, but he told The Voice on Tuesday in an exclusive interview that he was turning down the job.

    “I’ve decided not to accept the position,” he said. “It just is not a good fit. It’s not a good fit for me at this point in my life.”

    Rex noted that the split vote and the current turmoil in the government convinced him not to pursue the position.

    “The only thing that might have made me consider it differently if I had gotten a unanimous vote yesterday,” Rex, 79, added. “That 4-3 vote tells me it’s not a good fit for me at this stage of my life.”

    Now Fairfield County Council is 0-2 in its quest for an interim after Jason Taylor, the current administrator, leaves the county in June to serve as town manager for Winnsboro.

    At last month’s meeting, the council considered hiring a former Midlands area administrator, but to council that the candidate had faced complaints of sexual harassment in a previous position, according to public records reviewed by The Voice.

    Rex’s candidacy surfaced not long after Council Chairman Moses Bell reached out late last week to the former state education chief, asking him to consider filling in as an interim administrator.

    That decision didn’t sit well with other council members, including Councilman Doug Pauley, who said he didn’t learn about Rex until Friday.

    Pauley said that left little time for him and other council members to adequately prepare for Monday’s interview.

    Jay Bender, a media law attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member, said he didn’t think Fairfield County appropriately advertised that it was poised to offer Rex the position.

    Bender said the agenda’s description of the executive session was “insufficient” because it didn’t state that anything about a potential hiring decision.

    “If the council decided to take action based on the chairman saying, ‘hey, I’ve got a guy,’ then that was illegal because it was not on the agenda for action,” Bender said. “There was nothing on [the agenda] that said they were going to make a decision to interview a specific person. I think the law would require that.”

    Pauley also raised concerns about Rex’s qualifications. He noted that Rex’s experience lies in public education, not county government, and said he would’ve preferred extending the interim position to Deputy County Administrator Laura Johnson, who’s also departing in June.

    “He’s stepping into some deeper waters,” Pauley said of Rex. “Going in, the water is going to be right at his head,” Pauley said. “I just want the best person for the job.”

    Despite not having county experience, Rex requested that he be compensated at the same level as Taylor.

    In lieu of receiving county benefits—he already receives state retirement benefits as the former State Superintendent of Education—Rex requested to be compensated with a cash equivalent of the benefits that Taylor receives.

    That request further soured some council members on Rex, Pauley said.

    Rex also didn’t have support from various corners of the community that have generally supported the new majority four on council.

    Winnsboro resident Tony Armstrong, a frequent critic of Fairfield County government, lambasted on social media the decision to hire Rex given his lack of county administrator experience.

    “I’m not happy about it. The new regime – the four horsemen, I call them – is making all kinds of wrong decisions,” Armstrong told The Voice following Monday night’s meeting. “How can you break in someone who’s truly green to run this county?”

    Jennifer Jenkins, president of the Fairfield County NAACP chapter, also criticized the choice, saying she would expect the person in the administrator’s seat to be well qualified. She also said Fairfield County deserves a full-time administrator, not an interim administrator who would likely serve for only a few months.

    “We should not allow anyone to stay three months,” Jenkins said. “We should hire a permanent administrator right away.”

    After Rex notified both Bell and The Voice of his decision, Bell blamed the split vote for Rex turning down the job offer,

    “There was no reason to vote against him,” Bell said. “To have council members vote against a man with impeccable character, a wealth of knowledge and experience and skills transferrable to the county administrator role, shows the shortsightedness of the council people who did not vote for him.”

    Bell said an RFP was sent out last week to look for a firm to search for candidates for the permanent administrator, but he said that could take a month or so to settle on a firm, then another four to six months to find a suitable candidate for the position.

    In the meantime, Bell said he has many candidates to choose from for the interim.

  • Shattering the wall of secrecy around Fairfield’s schools chief

    J.R. Green, superintendent of Fairfield schools, for years has sidestepped questions about his salary and his spending of public money. When he thought the local newspaper was too critical of his district, he started the taxpayer-funded Fairfield Post. | Michael Smith

    Costly travel, hefty compensation, lack of accountability uncovered

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This story was produced through a collaboration of The Post and Courier and The Voice of Fairfield County, an Uncovered partner.

    WINNSBORO — J.R. Green seethed with anger as he read an article in his local newspaper. The school district he leads was on winter break, but Green couldn’t stop fuming over the words on the page before him.

    The Voice of Fairfield County reported that Green’s district had failed to meet certain state academic benchmarks. The article cited statistics to prove it.

    Bristling at the critique, the superintendent fired off an email to his principals and school board. The missive, titled “False, Biased, and Misleading Reporting,” blasted the paper and accused its reporter of “marginalizing our students, staff, and system.”

    “I want you to share this reporting with your staff so they understand the hostile media environment we face,” Green wrote that night in December 2018.

    The fiery dispatch is emblematic of Green’s approach to uncomfortable questions and criticism during his nine years leading this high-poverty Midlands district of roughly 2,000 students.

    In public forums, he has sidestepped questions about his taxpayer-funded salary and other points of contention. For years, he has rebuffed attempts to reveal how he spends thousands of dollars in public money.

    It’s one striking example of how easily government officials in South Carolina can shield information from the public. In its investigative series Uncovered, The Post and Courier is partnering with local newspapers to help shine a light on questionable conduct, and hold the powerful to account in areas with few watchdogs.

    Across South Carolina, particularly in rural communities that have become news deserts, officials are less likely to be pressed on their decisions, and more prone to set the public agenda themselves.

    In this latest installment, a Post and Courier joint investigation with The Voice pierced the veil that shrouds Fairfield schools, one of South Carolina’s smaller, but well-funded, school districts.

    Largely thanks to tax revenue from a local nuclear power plant, Fairfield schools collect more money per student than any other district in the state.

    Year after year, top school district officials use a hefty chunk of the money for travel to pricey conferences at tourist resorts across South Carolina and the country, the newspapers found.

    Between 2017 and 2020, Green’s office and Fairfield’s seven board members charged taxpayers for trips just about every month during the school calendar. That included dozens of trips to conferences at waterfront resorts in Charleston, Myrtle Beach and Hilton Head.

    The annual bill for those and other trips? Nearly $50,000 — enough money to cover the salary of an additional classroom instructor.

    With a $192,000 salary and his own $42,000 discretionary account, Green also charges the public for his district travel.

    At the same time, the board has extended Green fat bonuses, contingent upon Green receiving passing grades in thin annual evaluations that lack measurable goals.

    The one-page forms are filled out anonymously by board members and leave little room for comments or discussion — less rigorous than some first grade report cards.

    That’s contributed to a vacuum of accountability in Fairfield, a community that does not have a daily newspaper.

    The Voice publishes weekly, holding the district to account when student performance dips, or when top officials attempt to obscure their public spending. Green views that reporting – on scores, his evaluation and spending and his failure to disclose an out-of-state, overnight school-sponsored trip to the board – as an attack on the district.

    In response, Green has warned district employees against speaking to The Voice, directing them, for the last two years, to send any information for The Voice (student achievements, honors, etc.) to the school’s human resources department for approval to be forwarded to The Voice. That information never gets forwarded. Then, Green took the matter a step further: He started the district’s own publication.

    The Fairfield Post is distributed weekly around the county, often filled with campaign advertisements or columns penned by politicians.

    “The Post is an opportunity to really lift up the good things that are happening,” Green said.

    Taxpayers underwrite the costs, to the tune of $27,000 a year.

    Fairfield schools Superintendent J.R. Green (right) celebrates after being named Superintendent of the Year by the S.C. Association of School Administrators. | Photo: Joe Seibles

    Green, whom the S.C. Association of School Administrators named the 2021 S.C. Superintendent of the Year, did agree to speak with The Post and Courier. He then conducted a lengthy discussion of the newspaper’s collaboration with The Voice at a May 11 school board meeting.

    When reporters arrived, he asked them to leave, citing the district’s social distancing rules in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Still, a livestream broadcast Green’s remarks to the board — a defiant rant that stretched nearly 40 minutes. He fiercely defended the district’s spending of taxpayer money. He roundly criticized the state’s education statistics, which he described as an incomplete picture of the district’s progress with students.

    Green also accused a reporter of questioning him because he is Black, describing this and other reporting by The Post and Courier as a suspicious effort to target people of color.

    In other conversations with a reporter, Green stressed one point above all: He despises and distrusts The Voice. When asked to cite examples of the newspaper’s reporting, Green pointed to what he insists was a demeaning tweet sent by a Voice freelancer in 2019, months after he had cut ties with the newspaper. Otherwise, he only spoke generally about coverage he described as negative.

    “I have confessed in (church) that there is animosity in my heart,” he said about the newspaper and its publisher. “I have to pray that the Lord removes it.”

    Fairfield County School District Superintendent J.R. Green. The Voice/Provided
    ‘Change the culture’

    Green didn’t always quarrel with the local newspaper.

    Community Turns Out to Meet New Superintendent,” read the headline in The Voice, above a photo of Green smiling for a photographer when the district hired him in 2012.

    Green carries three degrees, as well as a doctorate in education leadership from the University of South Carolina. As a principal and assistant superintendent in Chesterfield County, he helped a high school bring up its grades on its state report card, and hit its year-over-year targets for improving student performance.

    Meanwhile, Fairfield schools were rocked by extreme turnover in the district’s top position. Before Green arrived, Fairfield cycled through 12 superintendents in 20 years amid a period of dysfunction among the board. Local residents called the district South Carolina’s “graveyard for superintendents.”

    The surrounding community also faced disruptions. Once-bustling Winnsboro, the county seat, hosted the headquarters of Uniroyal Tire Company. But the town lost businesses, jobs and eventually its hospital after the construction of Interstate 77 bypassed the community in the 1970s. The surrounding countryside remains largely rural, dotted with rolling pastures and horse and cattle farms.

    Fairfield’s teachers and administrators educate a student body where school officials say nearly 90 percent of the children qualify for free or reduced lunch.

    Green vowed to “change the culture” in an area that needed help. He stressed teamwork and an open relationship with the community. He has maintained a visible presence, regularly making appearances in front of television cameras for local news programs.

    But eventually, some of those promises were tested as Green’s decision-making came under tighter scrutiny.

    First, board members questioned why more than two dozen out-of-state and overnight trips were planned for student groups in 2015, including travel to New York City, Puerto Rico and the Bahamas. Board members questioned how much those trips would cost taxpayers. Green said he didn’t know. The board authorized the trips anyway.

    Some board members also pressed Green on his use of the superintendent’s fund, roughly $42,000 in taxpayer money. Green has broad discretion to spend the money each year as he chooses.

    While deliberating the district’s budget in 2017, then-board member Annie McDaniel asked why the board couldn’t get more details on his discretionary spending.

    Green said he’d only share the information if the board voted to ask for it. Another board member at the time, Paula Hartman, pressed further.

    Paula Hartman said she was one of only a few Fairfield County School District board members who ever questioned the superintendent’s spending and performance. | Photo: Michael Smith

    “Does that mean that you won’t give us that information?” Hartman asked.

    “That means if the board directs me to provide it, I will,” Green said.

    Beth Reid, then the board’s chair, suggested Hartman submit an inquiry under the S.C. Freedom of Information Act.

    “If a person from the audience asked for that information, could they get it?” Hartman asked.

    “Yes,” Reid answered.

    “Then why can’t I?” Hartman asked.

    A lack of access

    The state’s open records law is supposed to allow for the free flow of public information, so any media outlet or citizen can easily see how their government is operating and spending the public’s money.

    But the FOIA law is riddled with loopholes that officials can exploit to shield unsavory information from public view.

    After a 2017 amendment to the

    law, government agencies — for the first time — were allowed to charge residents and news outlets for costs that officials associate with retrieving or redacting documents.

    But with vague guidelines, the amounts calculated by the government can far surpass what the average citizen can afford — hundreds, even thousands, of dollars.

    At the same time, officials may freely ignore direct questions from citizens. Instead, they can insist that information only be released if requested under FOIA. That way, they keep public information in the dark for weeks, or even months.

    The flaws in the system present major roadblocks for cash-strapped local newspapers around the state, including The Voice of Fairfield County.

    After lashing out at the newspaper’s coverage of the district’s student performance in 2018, Green has not agreed to an interview with the newspaper in more than two years, and has blocked other attempts by the newspaper to gain information for stories that highlight the schools. 

    The end result is dwindling accountability, and an environment that limits the local newspaper’s ability to carry out its First Amendment duties, said Lynn Teague, vice president of the South Carolina League of Women Voters.

    “It sounds totally unacceptable,” Teague said. “If I were a taxpayer in Fairfield, I would find it unacceptable.”

    Green said The Voice is at fault for its poor relationship with him. He pointed to a 2019, incident that occurred long after he broke off communication with The Voice over reports on the school’s test scores.

    After the state education department named a Fairfield instructor S.C. Teacher of the Year, a tweet from a Voice freelancer noted that Green sits on the same panel that selects the award.

    Green took the remark as a slight that suggested the Fairfield teacher did not earn her recognition. “Simply despicable!!” he tweeted at the time.

    The Voice’s publisher responded, “FCSD is rightfully proud of her accomplishment, as is all of Fairfield County.”

    But Green told his employees that he does not trust The Voice — and that they should not either.

    Fairfield schools superintendent J.R. Green. | Michael Smith
    A steep fee

    In 2019, The Voice requested access to records documenting two years of Green’s discretionary spending — an issue that had continued to divide members of the board.

    After waiting 10 business days to respond, the maximum allowed under state law, Green insisted the information would cost $338. The Voice couldn’t afford to pay.

    State law allows governments to waive fees and release public information for free, so The Voice asked Green to reconsider.

    He waited another two weeks, then refused. He also rejected the newspaper’s requests to inspect the records in person, something reporters often do to avoid the costs of copying documents.

    Asked about the matter by The Post and Courier, Green said he’s merely doing what the law allows him to do.

    The Voice has a team of freelancers and one full-time editor and the publisher, who declines a salary. The publisher also supplements a roughly $150,000 annual budget by occasionally paying for rent and other expenses out of her own pocket.

    Ultimately, The Voice dropped its request.

    The newspaper agreed to partner with The Post and Courier on this article, in part, in an effort to obtain Green’s spending records — originally sought nearly two years ago.

    When The Post and Courier sent its own request, for travel expenses from 2017-20, Green agreed to turn them over without a charge.

    No discussion

    The records show a steady drip of travel expenses for Green and his assistant. There’s also a bulk of purchases related to a Bow Tie Club trip (for the district’s teenage boys), led by Green, to Louisville, Ky., in 2019. While board approval is required for trips costing over $600, overnight trips and out-of-state trips, Green did not ask the board to approve the Louisville trip in advance, as is required for all three travel criteria. When later asked about the trip’s expenses at a board meeting, Green said he couldn’t recall details.

    The actual cost to taxpayers? More than $10,100. That included lodging at the downtown Marriott; a $3,850 tour bus for students; and more than $700 in charges at the Louisville Slugger Museum, the Muhammad Ali Center and the world-famous Churchill Downs horse racing track, home of the Kentucky Derby. Green told The Post and Courier those expenses only covered costs of admission.

    Hartman, one of the board members, unsuccessfully sought details about that trip. Green also rebuffed her attempts to learn how much he earns each year.

    “We never got any information we wanted,” Hartman said.

    At a 2018 board meeting, Hartman pressed for details of Green’s compensation. By that point, his salary had steadily increased over six years. His board-approved contract also entitled him to tens of thousands of dollars in annual contributions to his retirement account.

    But when Hartman asked him how much money he made, Green said he didn’t know.

    Now, Green’s salary has ballooned to more than $192,000. No superintendent of such a small district in South Carolina makes more, according to the most recent data from the state. Including his retirement benefits, his overall taxpayer-funded compensation is above $225,000.

    Green told The Post and Courier he has agreed to freeze his benefits package at its current level.

    “That’s what my spirit led me to do,” he said.

    Pricey trips

    Other records obtained by The Post and Courier show even more expenses — these charged by Fairfield’s seven board members for their travel.

    In just over three years, board members charged taxpayers more than $123,000 in expenses for travel to conferences, including $52,900 in out-of-state travel.

    It also included nearly 70 trips to waterfront resorts in Charleston, Myrtle Beach and Hilton Head. During school years, one or more school board members attended a conference just about every month, the records show.

    The board’s travel between 2017-19 averaged $41,200 a year. By comparison, in the last full fiscal year before the pandemic, the board of Greenville schools spent less than $37,000 on travel. That board oversees the largest district in South Carolina. And it has 12 members, five more than Fairfield.

    Fairfield board members disclosed their trips in reports provided during regular meetings. But they had little to add to inquiries from The Post and Courier. Most did not respond to phone messages and emailed questions about their travel.

    Fairfield County School Board Chairman Henry Miller defended the district’s contract with J.R. Green, saying the superintendent has been worth every penny given the instability that preceded him. | Michael Smith

    The board’s chair, Henry Miller, has charged the most in recent years — more than $31,500, records show. He did not return voicemails, but defended the travel in a written response.

    “Investing in training and professional development is a vital component to becoming a more effective school board member,” he said.

    Another sitting board member, Sylvia Harrison, spent more than $27,000, records show. She also briefly defended her travel. But after learning the newspaper was partnering with The Voice, Harrison said she wasn’t interested in a reporter’s questions.

    “This is what you all do,” Harrison said. “It didn’t work for (The Voice) and it’s not going to work for you.”

    Few comments

    Green is supposed to receive more scrutiny during his annual evaluations from the board. But year after year he glides through the process, often without being pressed publicly on any aspect of his performance.

    The board conducts its year-end discussions with Green behind closed doors. Then, board members submit one-page rubrics with benchmarks as vague as “community engagement.” The evaluations do not point to any measurable goals.

    Board members do not have to sign their names, nor are they required to offer specific comments on how well the superintendent stacked up. Some leave no comments at all.

    By comparison, Fairfield’s neighbor in Richland County School District Two, board members there evaluate their superintendent with six-page forms using far more detailed metrics.

    State Representative Annie McDaniel, who sat on the school board from 2000-18, said Fairfield used to use a similar process. But some time during Green’s tenure the board pushed for a change.

    “We went to a one-pager,” McDaniel said. “I wasn’t a fan of it, even though I thought that Dr. Green was doing some good things in the district,” she added.

    Meanwhile, though the state has adjusted its metrics, Fairfield schools have about the same overall ‘average’ rating as when Green took the helm eight years ago.

    In an interview, Green defended the district’s work with students and stressed that top officials continue to make changes. Most recently, after poor ratings in 2019, Green replaced the middle school principal.

    “I’m never satisfied,” he said. “We recognize that we still have progress to be made.”

    ‘Negative’ coverage

    Ultimately, it was the low ratings for Fairfield Middle School, and other middling district metrics, that were the subject of The Voice article in 2018 that set Green off.

    He blasted the publication in his email to principals and other staff. Two months later, he took the matter a step further: He started Fairfield school district’s own newspaper, The Fairfield Post.

    The newspaper features bylines from students. But with articles on community events and local elections, its coverage stretches well beyond the walls of Fairfield schools.

    As Green puts it, “Anyone can submit a story.”

    Local politicians regularly oblige. An early issue included a half-page editorial on education policy, written by state Sen. Mike Fanning. Another edition contained an unsigned feature on Green, after he received a special recognition from USC.

    Throughout 2020, inside pages were filled with campaign advertisements and other content submitted by McDaniel, Winnsboro Mayor John McMeekin and Fairfield school board candidates.

    Sen. Greg Hembree, the state senate education chair, told The Post and Courier that Green has waded into murky ethical territory, where the public underwrites a news publication with little ability to keep it from becoming a “propaganda arm” of the district.

    Green told The Post and Courier he has no editorial control over the newspaper. He only reads and encourages the publication. Politicians pay for their advertising space, Green said.

    Not everyone is convinced The Fairfield Post is a good idea.

    Teague, with the League of Women Voters, said she’s not sure the arrangement is legal.

    “The paper is a public resource, and it is being used for campaign purposes,” she said.

    Green insists he did not start The Post to compete with The Voice.

    “I’m not stopping them from writing anything,” he said, but neither is any information allowed to be released from the district to The Voice.

    Harrison, the board member, also defended The Post while railing against coverage in The Voice.

    She told The Post and Courier, “If it’s not positive, I don’t read it.”

    After hanging up on a reporter, Harrison took to Facebook that evening to alert her followers about what she described as the latest example of biased news reporting. She insisted she had no intention of reading this article.

    Besides, she added, “We have our own newspaper.”

    Until Green shut off all communications with The Voice in 2018, it regularly printed feel-good features about the district’s students, teachers and school activities. This photo illustrated a front-page feature story about the school’s second cohort of STEM graduates flying to Spain for a weeklong trip as part of the STEM program. | Contributed

    Joseph Cranney

    Joseph Cranney is an investigative reporter in Columbia, with a focus on government corruption and injustices in the criminal legal system. He can be reached securely by Proton mail at jcranney@prontonmail.com or on Signal at 215-285-9083.

    Avery Wilks

    Avery G. Wilks is an investigative reporter based in Columbia. The USC Honors College graduate was named the 2018 S.C. Journalist of the Year for his reporting on South Carolina’s nuclear fiasco and abuses within the state’s electric cooperatives.

    Barbara Ball

    Barbara Ball is the publisher of The Voice of Fairfield County and The Voice of Blythewood. Ball received the South Carolina Press Association’s Jay Bender Award for Assertive Journalism in 2018 and 2019. She can be reached at barbara@blythewoodonline.com.

  • Man found dead in a Winnsboro motel

    WINNSBORO – Winnsboro Department of Public Safety (WDPS) officers were called to the Fairfield Motel on the 321 N. Bypass Friday morning about 10:30 a.m. after motel employees found a middle-aged man dead on the floor in one of the motel’s rooms, according to officials.

    While officers say foul play is not suspected, the man’s cause of death is not yet known. The coroner has not yet released the man’s name.

    Sources said the man had stayed overnight in the motel and was found unresponsive when employees went to check on the room after the time the man was scheduled to check out.

    The death is being investigated by the WDPS.

    This is a developing story. More information will be published when it becomes available.

  • Bell considering educator Jim Rex as interim county administrator

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Council Chairman Moses Bell has scheduled a special called meeting for 6 p.m., Monday evening to consider his nominee to serve as interim county administrator.

    Jim Rex

    “[The] agenda will consist of a executive session item to include an interview and discussion with Dr. Jim Rex to potentially serve as interim county administrator for Fairfield County,” Bell wrote in an email to all council members a little after noon Friday.

    “If approved by council to serve as interim county administrator, he will bring a wealth of experience and knowledge to this role,” Bell wrote in the email. “Dr. Rex has a prestigious professional career and will be able to support any ongoing and new economic development efforts the county has or may have in the future.”

    Rex, 79, served as South Carolina Superintendent of Education, and lives on Lake Wateree. Both he and his wife, Sue, supported Fairfield County Councilwoman Shirley Greene in her campaign for council in November. The Rexes are also staunch backers of Superintendent Dr. J.R. Green’s proposed Teacher Village. Rex is founder of a new political party – the American Party of South Carolina.

    Rex holds a bachelor’s degree in English, a master’s degree in education administration, and a doctorate degree in curriculum and instruction from the University of Toledo.

    Prior to his position as SC Superintendent of Education, Rex was an English teacher and football coach in Ohio, the dean of education at Winthrop University, the dean of education at Coastal Carolina University, president of Columbia College, vice president for development and alumni relations and vice president of university advancement at the University of South Carolina.

  • Co-op board election set for May 17-21

    BLYTHEWOOD/WINNSBORO– For the second year in a row, the election of Fairfield Electric Cooperative board members and the annual meeting will be a drive-thru affair. But that’s not expected to dampen member voters from showing up.

    Until last year, the draw for the annual meeting has been popular giveaways: – a free used car, lawn mowers, free electricity, various $50 – $200 gift cards and a nice door prize for everyone who attends. But this year, like last, it’s a peaked interest in who gets elected to the co-op’s board that is more likely to bring out the crowds.

    After the public became aware three years ago that board members had extended a nearly $1.8 million golden parachute to its former CEO, William Hart, their interest in the elections grew. Two candidates campaigned against the posh pensions and cozy compensation packages provided board members and CEO’s in the past. Both candidates prevailed by good margins over the incumbents.

    In 2017, Hart’s final full year with the co-op, he received $520,353 in total compensation, according to the co-op’s federal tax return. The 2018 tax return pegged Hart’s total compensation at $2,123,633.  According to one board member, the IRS fined the co-op $200,000 for excessive compensation to Hart.

    While the board has made a number of reforms since the $1.8 million vote, more are in the works, such as the way candidates run for office.

    “Until now, each candidate has to campaign for votes throughout the entire co-op coverage area,” Vice-President of Member Services Doug Payne said. “Beginning next year, they will only have to campaign in their own district.”

    Candidates for District 1 (in the order listed on the ballot) are incumbent Johnny Roberts and challenger Eddie Branham. Calvin Jay Smith, who is listed on the ballot for District 1, has dropped out of the race. Running for District 2 are, incumbent Joe Sharpe and challenger Ronald Friday. District 3 contenders are Gen Palmer and Mike Good.

    The race for open seats in three districts will be decided this year by co-op members at four different voting venues on five different days. The drive-thru registration and voting portion of the annual meeting will be held May 17-20, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. and on May 21, from 7 a.m. – 12 noon at the following locations: May 17 (Chester), May 18 (Lugoff), May 19 (Blythewood), May 20 & 21 (Winnsboro at the Fairfield Electric Cooperative office, 3129 Highway 321 N.)

    The business meeting and raffle on May 21 will be livestreamed on the co-op’s website. Only the board, committee representatives and key staff will attend.

  • Griffin girls finish 2nd in region

    COLUMBIA – At the Region 4-3A meet, the Griffin girls team finished in second place behind Mid-Carolina, while the Griffin Boys placed last, but junior Joshua Mosley continued to dominate in the distance events, pulling first place finishes in the 800m run (2:11.12), the 1600m run (5:01.97) and the 3200m run (10:42.20).

    Other top-five finishes for the boys were:

    • Evelino Reyes-Hawes finished second in high jump for the Griffins at 5-8.
    • Tydarion Grier: 100m dash (5th place, 11.13) and long jump (5th place, 19-4.5)
    • 4x100m relay team: Stepheno Gadsden, Stephon Gadsden, Christopher Jackson, Tydarion Grier (3rd place, 43.92)
    • 4x800m relay team: Evelino Reyes-Hawes, Hank White, Derek Cammon, Owen Wilson (4th place, 9:50.41)
    • Mosley, Reyes-Hawes, and the 4×100 and 4×800 relay teams qualified for Upper State this weekend

    Sharmelle Holmes highlighted the Griffin girls team with first place finishes in the 100m dash (12.09), the 200m dash (25.33) and the 400m dash (1:00.88).

    Fairfield’s relay team of Tamerra English, Natalia Gray, Anaya Peay and Holmes placed first in the 4x100m relay finals with a time of 50.53.

    The Griffin girls also saw a handful of second place finishes. Tamerra English placed second in the 100m hurdles. The 4x400m relay team of Celysha Jackson, Teairra McDuffie, Anaya Peay and Ericka Kelly placed second, and the 4×800 relay team of Jackson, McDuffie, English and SaKira Hayes also finished second.

    Other top-five finishers for the girls were:

    • Natalia Gray: 100m dash (5th place, 13.17)
    • SaKira Hayes: 1600m run (3rd place, 6:26.26) and 3200m run (5th place, 16:42.58)
    • Tanisha English: high jump (5th place, 4-2) and shot put (5th place, 26-6)
    • Tamerra English: javelin (3rd place, 67-2)
    • Ericka Kelly: shot put (3rd place, 28-6) and javelin (5th place, 56-9.5)

    Holmes, Hayes, Tamerra English, Gray, Kelly, Tanisha English, and the 4×100, 4×400 and 4x800m relay teams qualified for 3A Upper State.

    The Griffins head to Upper State this weekend in hopes of qualifying for the State meet next weekend.

  • National Day of Prayer

    WINNSBORO – Churches and community members in Fairfield County came together last Wednesday at Fortune Springs Park for a National Day of Prayer service.

    Rev. Rebekah Carpenter, pastor of Sion Presbyterian, Rev. Ethan Brown, pastor of Stephen Greene Baptist, Jerry Spence, member of Gordon Memorial Methodist, Bishop Jeffrey Williams, pastor of Jesus Christ’s Church, Dr. Craig Bailey, pastor of First Baptist, Rev. Steve Elkins, pastor of First United Methodist, Steve McDonald, member of First United Methodist, and Larry Guyton, member of Gordon Memorial, led prayers for the church, families, education, entertainment, government, military, law enforcement, and businesses.

    Sarah Bryant, member of First United Methodist, read scripture.  Rena Spence, member of Gordon Memorial, was the soloist. Marylynn Kinley,  Jerry Spence and Rena Spence also sang as a trio. Rev. Ben Herlong, pastor of Gordon Memorial, led the program. 

  • Fairfield County gets $99M in settlement with Dominion

    “We were never looking for a cash settlement. We were looking for projects that would lay the groundwork for the expansion and improvement of Fairfield County as well as economic development.”

    Jason Taylor, Fairfield County Administrator

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County council voted Monday night to accept a settlement with Dominion Energy stemming from the cancelled V.C. Summer nuclear construction project and the fee in lieu of taxes agreement entered into by the parties in July of 2010.

    The settlement ends nearly four years of extensive negotiations between Dominion and the county with County Administrator Jason Taylor and the county’s Economic Development Director Ty Davenport spearheading the negotiations for the county.

    “We never liked to approach this as a punitive action against Dominion,” Taylor said. “We knew we had to move forward with Dominion in a partner-like relationship. They have a nuclear power plant here and they are a power provider here. We needed a positive relationship moving forward. We approached this asking how we could get an equitable settlement that’s a win-win for both of us. So they’re reinvesting in their territory (Fairfield County) to create tax payers for us, rate payers for them and jobs for our citizens which means a better quality of life for our citizens. That’s how we can truly move forward together in a partnership.

    “We were never looking for a cash settlement,” Taylor said. “We were looking for projects that would lay the groundwork for the expansion and improvement of Fairfield County as well as economic development.”

     “Three years and two councils ago we made a commitment to the citizens to press this issue and see it through, and today that occurred,” Billy Smith, county council chair when the lawsuit was initiated, told The Voice after the meeting in a phone call from Louisiana. “The outcome is not perfect, but is in large part a win-win for all. The County will be able to undertake some strategic projects long overdue and neglected, and Dominion should benefit from the County’s growth in its territory. Credit is due to all involved. Now the real work of getting these projects right begins.”

    Those projects include a new wastewater treatment plant near the Broad River, upgrades to the industrial park at the Fairfield Commerce Center and extensive work on the I-77 mega-site. Dominion also committed to a group of community development projects for Ridgeway as well as five years of bond payment relief for the $24 million Fairfield Facilities Corporation bond that current council member Mikel Trapp helped pass in 2013.

    “Fairfield County enjoyed a long fruitful relationship with SCE&G for many years prior to cancellation of the nuclear project, and we at the county look forward to a long, fruitful and mutually beneficial relationship with Dominion Energy for many years to come,” Taylor said.

    It was a priority for Taylor to finalize the settlement before he leaves his county administrator’s position in June to assume the Town Manager’s position at the Town of Winnsboro.

    But Taylor not only had to negotiate with Dominion, he had to also negotiate a settlement that the four majority voting bloc on council – Moses Bell, Mikel Trapp, Shirley Green and Tim Roseborough – would vote to accept.

    “It’s a win-win for Fairfield and Dominion Energy,” Davenport said. “Fairfield benefits because this investment will increase the number of jobs and homes in the county, and Dominion benefits because companies locating in Fairfield County will need energy.”

    “Dominion Energy had some of the best lawyers in the country representing it on this case, and because of their vision and hard work we were able to craft an incredibly unique agreement that benefits both our client and theirs,” said Jack McKenzie, one of the attorneys representing Fairfield County.  “Ten years from now, neither side will remember this as a settlement of a lawsuit, but as the establishment of a partnership that succeeded in improving both the lives of the citizens of Fairfield County and the bottom line for the stockholders of Dominion Energy.” 

    “I am very impressed with Dominion Energy and the care with which it handled this litigation,” current County Council Chair Moses Bell said in a prepared statement.  “It is clear that Dominion is committed to becoming a friend to South Carolina and particularly Fairfield County.  I think it’s time that we all move on from the utility bashing that has taken place over the past three years, and continue to develop plans for our future together so that we all benefit.”

    Below is a breakdown of the settlement in projects and cash:

    $45,690,118 – Wastewater treatment plant  

    $6,475,000 – Grading of the mega-site   

    $3,196,000 – Grading of the Commerce Center    

    $1,750,000 – Escrow for rate relief (economic development)  

    $2,000,000 – Spec Bldg. – Parcel 9 at Commerce Center 

    $2,200,000 – Teachers’ Village

    $7,550,920 – Bond payments (for 5 years of payments for 2013 $24M bond) 

    $2,500,000 – Ridgeway Park and Rec Center 

    $1,000,000 – Martin Luther King Monument on Mt. Zion grounds 

    $27,112,500 – Cash (payments to attorneys)

    $99,474,538 – TOTAL                   

    This is a breaking story. More information will be provided as it becomes available.