Tag: slider

  • ‘A Horrible Thing’

    Judge Ups Ante in Dog Abuse Plea Deal

    Huskey Gets Probation, Restitution; Banned from Dog Ownership

    Billy Ray Huskey (second from left) and his defense attorney Robert Bruce stand before Judge Brian Gibbons Monday with Kathy Faulk of Hoof & Paw and prosecutor Melissa Heimbaugh. (Photo/Barbara Ball)
    Billy Ray Huskey (second from left) and his defense attorney Robert Bruce stand before Judge Brian Gibbons Monday with Kathy Faulk of Hoof & Paw and prosecutor Melissa Heimbaugh. (Photo/Barbara Ball)

    WINNSBORO (July 14, 2016) – The 9-month old dog who was severely injured as the result of being dragged for more than a mile behind a pickup truck by his owner last Dec. 13 had his day in court Monday.

    Charged with a felony for ill treatment to animals when he was arrested on Jan. 30, the dog’s former owner, Billy Ray Huskey, 48, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge, a misdemeanor of ill treatment to animals, which was agreed to by Assistant Sixth Circuit Solicitor Melissa Heimbaugh. Heimbaugh told the Court she felt the state would not win the felony case against Huskey with the available evidence.

    As part of Huskey’s plea agreement, Heimbaugh recommended a sentence of up to 90 days suspended jail time, a two-year probation, $2,000 in restitution to Fairfield Animal Hospital where the dog was treated for its injuries and 30 hours of community service to be served at the Fairfield Animal Shelter in Winnsboro.

    But Sixth Circuit Judge Brian Gibbons overrode that recommendation with a stiffer sentence for what he called “a horrible thing.”

    In addition to Heimbaugh’s recommendations, Gibbons also imposed three years of probation instead of two, instructed Huskey, as a condition of his probation and to take the one dog he still owned to the veterinarian to be spayed and for a wellness checkup, all at Huskey’s expense.

    Gibbons then told Huskey, “And you can never own a dog again.”

    Before imposing the sentence, Judge Gibbons told Huskey, “The State (solicitor) is right, they would have had a high burden to prove your guilt. We have no evidence of intent, so I’m giving you the benefit of the doubt, which I have to do under the law. I know you would probably take this back if you could, and you have no prior (criminal history), so I’d be inclined to go along with the state’s recommendation, except for two things: One, I want to sentence you to the maximum jail time that I can under the guidelines; and two, I’m going to give you not two years of probation but three.”

    “I’m disappointed that Mr. Huskey got so little punishment for his egregious actions,” said Laura Collins, one of the four horseback riders who rescued the injured dog and who was also one of the dog’s 50 or so supporters in the courtroom. But like others in attendance on Monday, Collins championed Gibbons for handing down a stiffer sentence than Heimbaugh had agreed to.

    Heimbaugh handed the judge two graphic photos of the dog’s injuries, on behalf of the Hoof and Paw Benevolent Society, before she described the injuries to the court:

    “. . . the dog’s bone and muscle tissue were exposed on multiple legs and on the dog’s trunk, back and feet. There were lacerations on both knees, with torn muscles and tendons. He was malnourished and dehydrated. His treatments were also extensive: surgeries on both back legs, treatment of open wounds for months and treatment for malnourishment and parasites.”

    In addition to dragging and dumping the almost lifeless dog in the woods, Heimbaugh said Huskey also left two more of his dogs, both of which were “severely malnourished and diseased to the point that they were emaciated, and one of them died of starvation the next day.”

    “You know, I see a lot of bad things in this job, holding court all over the state,” Gibbons said, addressing both the defendant and the courtroom and referencing one of his recent cases in which a mother shot her two young children. “I think I’ve seen it all, and then I walk in to this.”

    After the horseback riders rescued the dragged dog and brought him to the Fairfield Animal Hospital, veterinarian Dr. Robert Knight described the dog’s injuries as only a few hours old and indicative of having been dragged behind a vehicle. The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office initially told The Voice that there was no evidence that a crime had been committed. In the meantime, the Hoof and Paw Benevolent Society and a number of citizens in the Fairfield and Blythewood communities took up the dog’s cause and began collecting donations for its medical bills. They also raised more than $1,500 in reward money for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any person who might have dragged the dog. They also began distributing reward flyers.

    In late January, those flyers bore fruit as several witnesses came forward and identified Huskey as their neighbor and as the man they saw dragging the dog behind his white pickup truck about six weeks earlier.

    According to witness accounts, Huskey was seen dragging the dog behind his pickup truck beginning on the street where he lives, Forest Lake Circle in Mitford, and continuing to Miles Road, more than a mile away.

    Upon his Jan. 30 arrest, Huskey gave the following written statement of the dragging, which occurred on Sunday, Dec. 13, 2015.

    “. . . I put the dog on a lead and put him in the back of my truck. I was going to take the dog to the pound. I was driving down the road and my neighbor came up behind me flashing his lights and I stopped. He told me the dog jumped out and I was dragging it. I got out of the truck and picked the dog up and the dog was not moving and it did not look like it was breathing. I laid it back in the truck and took it over to some land across from Carolina Adventure World. I placed the dog in a hole and covered it with leaves and sticks. I also left two other dogs out on the property. I then drove back home.”

    “When we found the dog,” Collins told The Voice, “he was just lying there, kind of hidden under a small scrub bush, motionless, bloody and hardly able to raise his head. He was not in a hole and was not covered with sticks and leaves. And he could not have moved because he had no pads on his paws, his feet were raw and bloody, his toe nails were torn off and at least one of his legs appeared to be broken. There are so many unanswered questions. What ‘pound’ was Mr. Huskey taking the dogs to on a Sunday? Why were no charges brought for dumping those poor sick dogs? Isn’t that against the law? Why, when the judge asked the solicitor and the defense attorney where in the truck were the dogs tethered, both said they did not know?”

    Huskey’s attorney, Robert Bruce, defended Huskey’s actions in court, saying that the dogs were not starved but had worms and that twice Huskey had bought medicine but that it did not resolve the worm problem so he was taking them to the pound. However, no documentation was presented in this regard.

    After hearing from Heimbaugh and Huskey’s attorney, Judge Gibbons recognized Kathy Faulk, the Community Outreach Liaison for Hoof and Paw, and allowed her to make a statement on the dogs’ behalf (see sidebar). He also asked the group to stand and thanked them for their concern and dedication to the cause of animal welfare.

    After months of surgeries, treatment and rehabilitation at Fairfield Animal Hospital, the dragged dog has been adopted and, according to vet tech Susan Knight, is living the good life on a farm in Fairfield County. The other surviving dog is still under the care of the animal hospital and has several prospects for adoption.

    The Voice obtained information for this story from the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office through a Freedom of Information Act. More information and documentation is expected from the County Animal Shelter.

     

  • Beckwith Delivers the Goods

    Blythewood’s Andrew Beckwith and the national championship trophy he helped Coastal Carolina’s baseball squad bring home last week from Omaha.
    Blythewood’s Andrew Beckwith and the national championship trophy he helped Coastal Carolina’s baseball squad bring home last week from Omaha.

    BLYTHEWOOD (July 7, 2016) – Three years ago, he was on the short end of a two games to one disappointment. This year, they are using words like “Legend.”

    And that word is being batted around on a much larger stage than the 2103 Class 4A state baseball championship series.

    Andrew Beckwith, the former Blythewood High School Bengal who was tagged for the 4-0 loss to the Lexington Wildcats in the deciding game of the 2013 state title series, went nationwide last week when he delivered a remarkable performance in the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. The Coastal Carolina junior right-hander hurled two complete-game victories in late June, then sealed the deal last Thursday with the championship victory, going 5 2/3 innings in the 4-3 win over a different breed of Wildcats – from the University of Arizona.

    Beckwith’s performance – overall, he went 22 2/3 innings, allowing just four runs (only two of which were earned) on 19 hits and four walks with 14 strikeouts – lifted the Chanticleers to their first national title and earned him the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament award.

    “This whole experience has been unbelievable,” Beckwith told The Voice this week. “Winning the national title is by far better (than a state title), but you learn a lot from losing. You learn more from losing than winning.”

    Although now basking in the glow of a national crown, Beckwith clearly still carries the scars of 2013.

    “That was a tough day,” he said of the 2103 finale against the Wildcats he could not tame. “We didn’t play our best ball. We made a lot of errors. And Reagan (Lexington’s Josh Reagan, who went 11-0 in 2013) is a good pitcher.”

    Beckwith said he wasn’t the only member of the Chanticleer staff still carrying the weight of a previous letdown.

    “A.C. (Alex Cunningham) and I both lost state title games,” Beckwith said. “A.C. lost three in a row (for Byrnes High School). I can’t imagine his relief (now). When I lost one, I was devastated. I can’t imagine what it would have been like to lose three in a row. Both of us have been vindicated.”

    Vindicated in a big way, and on the same stage.

    Cunningham closed out the Chanticleers’ championship last week, striking out Ryan Haug swinging on a 3-2 pitch that stranded Wildcat runners on second and third in the bottom of the ninth. Arizona had already scored once in the inning to close the gap to a single run.

    There is also a little irony in Beckwith’s tale.

    Although he had thrown two complete-game one-run wins in the tournament, his June 24 win over TCU saw him rack up 137 pitches. The win ran his record to 14-1 (a Coastal Carolina single season best), but also meant that, at best, he would only be available for an inning or two out of the bullpen on June 29.

    But then the Baseball Gods delivered an additional day of rest for the sidewinder, pouring rain down on TD Ameritrade Park and postponing the deciding game to the following afternoon.

    “I was in the pen Wednesday,” Beckwith said. “Cunningham was going to start. Then we had the rainout and I had an extra day of rest going into Thursday. The coaches were like, ‘just get us to where we need to be’ (for the bullpen to take over).”

    Beckwith held Arizona scoreless until the bottom of the sixth when the Wildcats scraped together two unearned runs on a two-out, two-run single by Jared Oliva.

    With two runners still on, Coastal brought Bobby Holmes in from the bullpen. Holmes, who had a remarkable tournament of his own (he allowed just four earned runs in 18 2/3 innings), struck out Louis Boyd to end the inning.

    Adding to the irony and the legend, Beckwith was passed over by all 30 Major League teams in this year’s player draft. But Beckwith took that in its stride as well.

    “I completely understand,” he said. “It’s all about projectability. Obviously, the scouts saw something that I could improve on and I’ve just got to figure out what that is in my senior year. I won’t mind coming back my senior year and playing for coach (Gary) Gilmore. Everything happens for a reason. This year just wasn’t my year.”

    If only we could all have such an ‘off year.’

    And on top of everything else, Beckwith was not even a starter for the Chanticleers for the majority of the season. He got most of his work out of the pen as a middle reliever – the role he was ultimately supposed to have played in game three.

    On June 19, he got the ball against Florida – the number one team in the country. Butterflies, anyone?

    “It felt like any other baseball game,” Beckwith said. “All it is is a whole lot more people watching. You just stick with your process, stick with what you do.”

    And a lot of what he does, what he did, began in Blythewood.

    Former head baseball coach Barry Mizzell and his staff, Beckwith said, instilled the fundamentals – physically and mentally – that translated to Omaha.

    “I learned a lot of the mental game at Blythewood,” Beckwith said. “They all (Mizzell and staff) ingrained discipline, having good character and having a positive outlook on life. It has really helped me become a leader, on and off the field.”

    After spending a few days in Blythewood last week, Beckwith was back in Conway Tuesday for an instructional youth baseball camp on campus. When that wraps up, the psychology major said he’ll be spending the rest of the summer in Washington, D.C., for an internship. Meanwhile, he is still coping with celebrity.

    Beckwith said he and a few teammates stopped in the Eggs Up Grill in Myrtle Beach recently for breakfast.

    “We got a standing ovation,” he said. “It was really cool, but you’ve got to stay humble and not let it get to your head.”

     

  • Fanning Surges to Runoff Victory

    Mike Fanning
    Mike Fanning

    WINNSBORO (June 29, 2016) – In a dramatic swing from the June 14 Democratic Primary numbers, challenger Mike Fanning ousted two-term District 17 State Sen. Creighton Coleman from the ticket in Tuesday night’s runoff by nearly 13 percentage points. Fanning will face Republican Mark Palmer of York in the Nov. 8 general election.

    The swing came largely in Coleman’s home county of Fairfield.

    On June 14, Coleman edged Fanning 2,281 votes (49.01 percent) to 2,066 (44.39 percent) in a three-man race that included Morgan Bruce Reeves, who picked up 307 votes. Tuesday night, however, Fanning upped his game for 2,583 votes (57.64 percent) to Coleman’s 1,898 (42.36 percent).

    And the bleeding didn’t stop there.

    Both candidates lost votes in Chester County, where on June 14 Coleman topped Fanning 2,097 (52.24 percent) to 1,681 (41.88 percent), and where Reeves accounted for 236 votes, but Coleman experienced the biggest drop-off. Fanning squeaked by in Chester Tuesday night 1,447 (51.11 percent) to 1,384 (48.89 percent).

    Coleman also dropped votes in York County. On June 14, Fanning trounced Coleman 583 (56.66 percent) to 379 (36.83 percent), while Reeves picked up 67 votes. Tuesday night, Fanning increased his margin, 644 votes (64.59 percent) while Coleman’s totals fell to 353 (35.41 percent).

    District-wide, Fanning outpaced Coleman 4,674 (56.25 percent) to 3,635 (43.75 percent).

    Between the June 14 Primary and Tuesday’s runoff, Coleman dropped 940 votes, while Fanning picked up 344 votes.

    Voter turnout was also lower Tuesday than in the June 14 Primary, which traditionally favors the incumbent. Tuesday, that tradition was turned on its head.

    Turnout in Fairfield County Tuesday was 29.02 percent, down from 31.44 percent two weeks ago. In Chester County, turnout was down to 13.87 percent from 21.61 percent on June 14. In York, turnout was a dismal 3.11 percent, down from 10.62 percent two weeks ago.

    The Voice reached out to both candidates after Tuesday’s results, but neither returned phone calls before press time.

     

  • Farm-to-Table … Delicious!

    Around 75 people gathered for dinner last week on the promenade behind the Town Clock.
    Around 75 people gathered for dinner last week on the promenade behind the Town Clock.

    WINNSBORO (June 23, 2016) – If you missed it, you missed the event of the season in downtown Winnsboro.

    About 75 people attended Winnsboro’s first annual Farm-to-Table dinner sponsored and organized by the Fairfield Chamber of Commerce. It was the kick-off event for Fairfield County’s third annual Ag + Art Tour.

    The evening began at 6 p.m. on the promenade behind the Clock Tower with a strumming guitar, a wine bar, iced watermelon punch, appetizers served from large trays before dinner – and, ah, the dinner! Seated at long formal tables that stretched the length of the promenade, diners enjoyed choice local produce prepared by local chefs and served by the most attentive volunteer wait staff.

    And all this was followed with Norma Branham’s sour creme pound cake served with o-so-sweet fresh-picked peaches and blueberries.

    “It was just a wonderful evening and the food was so delicious,” Chamber president Terry Vickers said. “It was so much fun and I think everyone who came had a lovely time. It was a joint effort by a lot of people in the community who donated food, time and lots of work. I would like to thank all of our citizens who made it possible.”

    *Look for more photos of the Ag + Art tour in next week’s edition of The Voice.

     

  • Crash Alters Cross-Country Charity Trek

    With her riding partner seriously injured, Kristy Massey makes an abridged ride across the U.S.
    With her riding partner seriously injured, Kristy Massey makes an abridged ride across the U.S.

    MISSOURI (June 23, 2016) – It was supposed to be the trip of a lifetime, and for a good cause. But Fate intervened at the last minute, temporarily derailing The Wandering Project.

    Blythewood resident and Voice photographer Kristy Kimball Massey and her high school pal, Donita Walters, of Kokomo, Ind., had been planning their cross-country bicycle trek for more than a year. They were going to dip their tires in the Pacific Ocean in San Francisco on May 29, then head east through 10 states in a journey of more than 3,700 miles.

    In addition to being a great adventure, the trip was going to raise money for the Homes for Our Troops charity, with a goal of $1 per mile.

    Five days before the trip was to being, however, while out on one last training ride, Walters was struck by a car that was traveling at 60 miles an hour. She suffered a broken neck and pelvis and was hospitalized.

    The good news, Massey reported to The Voice this week, is that Walters is making an astonishing recovery. She was released from the hospital last week, Massey said, but she has a long road to recovery. It may be a year and a half before she is back in riding shape.

    But, Massey said, Walters is already “making plans for us to fulfill the entire ride when she is fully recovered in two years.”

    The tragic incident, meanwhile, left Massey with a decision to make. Continue the full cross-country ride as planned, attempt a scaled-down version of the trip or bail out altogether?

    After much soul-searching, Massey said she opted for a modified ride, setting a distance challenge in each of the 10 states through which the pair originally planned to ride.

    On June 1, Massey set out from San Francisco, rode through the Redwood Forest and part of Death Valley in California. In Nevada, she braved the Valley of Fire, where temperatures soared to 114 degrees. In Utah, she completed 85 miles of her 100-mile goal before extreme heat and strong headwinds forced her off the road. In Colorado, Massey climbed 10,222 feet up to the Lizard Pass. A few days later, she crossed Monarch Pass at 11,312 feet.

    The weather as Massey crossed Kansas nearly blew her, bike and all, into the ditch, but she made it across the flatlands relatively unscathed.

    At last report, Massey was waiting out a heavy rain storm somewhere in Missouri. From there, she will hit Illinois, Kentucky and Virginia before finishing the trip in North Carolina some time around July 1.

    The fundraising, Massey reported, has been the one plan that didn’t go awry.

    “We have met the original fundraising goal of $3,800, or $1 per mile we were riding,” Massey told The Voice via email this week. “Even with the modified ride plans we are still receiving donation for Homes for Our Troops, which has been awesome! We can’t thank everyone enough! If there are those who would still like to donate, please do so on our donation page at www.wanderingproject.com.”

     

  • Committee Proposes New County Courthouse

    FF Courthouse copyWINNSBORO (June 23, 2016) – It appears that there is a new plan for what to do about Fairfield County’s beautiful but aging County Courthouse.

    An ad hoc committee of the Fairfield County Council – consisting of Chairwoman Carolyn Robinson and Council members Kamau Marcharia and Dan W. Ruff – along with county administrator Jason Taylor and Deputy Council Administrator Davis Anderson met Tuesday night to discuss options for temporarily relocating the courthouse.

    The current courthouse, designed by famous architect Robert Mills and built in 1823 – 1824, has major mechanical and environmental problems. For example, the air conditioning system in the building is 50 years old, according to Anderson.

    Robinson recited some of the history of their efforts since 2013 to find a solution. The initial thought was to renovate The Hon Building as temporary location for the courthouse while the historic courthouse could be renovated. However, the cost of retro-fitting a temporary building for the courthouse increased to the point of being “unheard-of,” Robinson said, and that option has now been tabled.

    Instead, the committee agreed, with input from Taylor and Anderson, that they would present the following plan to the full Council for approval at its next meeting on June 27. The County will propose to build a new building on 1.54 acres it already owns just down from the courthouse on S. Congress Street in Winnsboro. There are already two County buildings for the Zoning and Planning Commission and Magistrates Court at that location.

    If the full Council approves this concept, the next step would be to get the approval of the 6th Circuit Court Judge, the Clerk of Court and the Chief Justice of the S.C. Supreme Court. Robinson emphasized that the County had to obtain the buy-in of these three individuals for any plans to proceed.

    Once that is accomplished, the next steps would be to meet with the engineers and architects on building plans and designs and to determine costs.

    When the new building is finished, the functions of the courthouse could be relocated there while the County fixes up the historic courthouse. The County already has $1.6 million earmarked for these renovations.

     

  • Mayor: Saving Mt. Zion Would Require County Money

    Mt-Zion_IMG_3312 copyWINNSBORO (June 23, 2016) – As part of his report to fellow elected officials at Monday night’s Intergovernmental meeting at the Midlands Tech QuickJobs campus, Winnsboro Mayor Roger Gaddy told County Council that if the Mt. Zion Institute property was going to be saved, the County would have to get into the game.

    Winnsboro retained ownership of the school property, located at 205 N. Walnut St., last March after efforts to stabilize and restore the buildings there by the Friends of Mt. Zion Institute came up short of contractual deadlines. A proposal from the Banyan Foundation to convert the school building into market-level senior living apartments has since met with strong neighborhood opposition and has to date not progressed.

    The Town has held off on demolishing the buildings on the site, Gaddy said, until the details of the County’s long-range strategic plan can be made available.

    “I think we tried a developer – that didn’t work. We tried private citizens – that didn’t work,” Gaddy said Monday. “I think we’ve kind of bent over backwards to do what we could to save some of that facility, but I think the reality is it’s extremely expensive.”

    Monday night, Gaddy told County Council members that the County’s long-ranger planners, T.Y. Lin International, had, during their early planning stages, told the Town they thought it was important to save the Mt. Zion School property.

    Gaddy said he did not agree with T.Y. Lin’s initial assessment of the property, but added that saving the auditorium, at least, might be a possibility – but not without help from the County.

    “Being a realist, we know that if there is anything that wants to be done, we would have to have input – i.e. money – from the County for that,” Gaddy said. “I put this out because I would like County Council to think about that. If they don’t have any inclination, desire or ability to help with any significant funding of anything that this study might recommend, we would appreciate them letting us know and we’ll get rid of that eyesore.”

    The final draft of the T.Y. Lin study, the County reported later during Monday night’s meeting, was due on July 11. A 30-day review period will follow, the County said, and the final document will be available by Aug. 15.

    “Winnsboro certainly does not have the funds or ability to be able to do any significant renovations,” Gaddy said. “It would be nice to maybe save a minimal part of it, but if there’s not any significant viable partnership that can be done with that, then I have no problem, neither does the rest of Town Council, with making more green out of it.”

    Water Updates

    Gaddy also reported that the Broad River water project was running “a couple of months” behind schedule. The holdup, he said, was in securing all the necessary easements to run the water line from the river and into the Town’s reservoir. Gaddy estimated that half of the easements had been acquired, but for the rest, condemnation procedures would be necessary.

    The Town is also in the process of securing a $6 million bond for utility infrastructure improvements, Gaddy said.

    “Most small towns our size, their infrastructure – water, sewer – most of the stuff under the ground has been there for quite some time,” Gaddy said. “For years we’ve been doing a lot of patchwork, so hopefully we can do larger stretches of infrastructure and get it to where it’s up to snuff and we don’t have as many problems with it.”

    Gaddy also reported that the Town’s efforts to put in a permanent pump station in Blythewood in order to supply water for the Fairfield Commerce Park had run into a snag.

    “We haven’t hit a brick wall, but we have hit some speed bumps in that that were fairly steep,” he said. “(We’ve) run into easement problems with BB&T Bank and some contractual issues, and also trying to secure some property (where we can locate the) pump station. We’ll make progress on that and we’ll get that done, but it’s been somewhat arduous at best and slower than anticipated.”

     

  • Get Down on the Farm with Ag + Art Tour

    This whimsically painted ‘flower bed’ made from discarded items, was featured in artist Christy Buchanan’s painted garden during Fairfield County’s Ag & Art Tour last year.
    This whimsically painted ‘flower bed’ made from discarded items, was featured in artist Christy Buchanan’s painted garden during Fairfield County’s Ag & Art Tour last year.

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY (June 15, 2016) – The rural, fair fields of Fairfield County will be busy with visitors this Saturday and Sunday during the County’s third year participating in the Ag + Art Farm Tours. Terry Vickers, President of the Fairfield Chamber of Commerce, said this year’s exhibits are going to top everything tour visitors have seen in past years.

    Bit and Annabelle, the Barbados Blackbelly Sheep, and their family will greet guests at Gypsy Wind Farm, as will Mangalitsa pigs with long, curly hair. A number of artists will be on site – one will be milling white, yellow and blue grits in a stone-ground grist mill.

    Magnolia Farm in Ridgeway dates back to the early 1800s with the original smoke house, barn and chicken coops still on site. The farm is home to The Barclay School with its curriculum for students who learn differently. Their raised-bed garden is configured as a sun. The students have cured hams hanging in the smoke house, and their farm animals include pigs, horses and goats. The kids will be making goat’s milk cheese. Samples of cheese and fudge will be available for tasting. The children’s art will be available for sale as well as the works of Plein Air Painters Yongue, Holland and Finch.

    Visit Forevermore Farm’s exotic miniature Zebu cows and Pygmy Dwarf goats and chickens of all kinds. A backyard critter encounter featuring a ferret habitat, baby cows, baby goats and chickens is a must for everyone. Artisans on site include Matthew Dickerson’s Dulcimer Music Concert on both Saturday and Sunday at 2 and 5 p.m. One Eye Ink, an acrylic painter, will be presenting on-going painting demonstrations both days.

    Triple J Farm is relatively new and produces grass-fed beef using controlled grazing. It also features pastured poultry and fresh eggs. Katie Langdale of Rosewood Farm will be featured in a freestyle riding performance with her Andalusian horse, Maluso II, on Saturday at 11 a.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Artist Julie Rambo will use barn tin for canvas and barn wood for frames. Julie is a three-time first place winner at the S.C. State Fair.

    For the whimsical in all of us, The She Garden will be a popular spot again this year at the Painted Picket. This fun studio space offers unusual garden creations including a thriving container garden in file cabinet drawers and a wine bottle house with a live herb garden on the roof. Also of interest are several free-range chickens and ducks, handcrafted honey, goat’s milk products with 100 percent essential oils in Earth-friendly packaging. And meet the goats as well. NaNa’s Art will be on hand cleaning, burning and drilling gourds in preparation for de’coupage and embellishment. Brenda Tobin-Flood will also be at The She Garden selling her Ruby’s Naturals dog, cat and horse treats made from all-natural, human-grade organic ingredients.

    Kick off for the Ag + Art Farm Tour will be a Farm-to-Table Dinner on June 16. Ingredients will be supplied many of the farm sites. Tickets are available online at eventbrite.com. For information, call 803-635-4242.

     

  • Runoff Likely in State Senate Race

    Sen. Creighton Coleman
    Sen. Creighton Coleman
    Mike Fanning
    Mike Fanning

    WINNSBORO/BLYTHEWOOD (June 15, 2016) – Voters across South Carolina went to the polls Tuesday for the statewide primaries, and at the end of the day, in one hotly contested local race, nothing was decided.

    In unofficial results in the Democratic race for the District 17 State Senate seat, incumbent Sen. Creighton Coleman came 92 votes shy of clearing the 50-percent-plus-1-vote majority threshold in the three-man contest. Unless those 92 votes can be found among provisional ballots across the district when local election commissions hold their canvassing Friday morning, Coleman will be headed for a runoff on June 28 with challenger Mike Fanning.

    Coleman racked up 4,575 votes (49.05 percent) Tuesday across a district that includes Fairfield and Chester counties and part of York County. Fanning, meanwhile, tallied 4,330 votes (44.65 percent), while Morgan Bruce Reeves was good for just 610 votes (6.29 percent).

    In Fairfield County, Coleman edged Fanning 2,281 votes (49.01 percent) to 2,066 (44.39 percent). Reeves picked up 307 votes (6.60 percent). Coleman fared better in Chester County, where he outpaced Fanning 2,097 votes (52.24 percent) to 1,681 (41.88 percent), while Reeves earned 236 votes (5.88 percent). Fanning did his damage in York County, where he earned 583 votes (56.66 percent) to Coleman’s 379 (36.83 percent). Reeves grabbed 67 votes (6.51 percent).

    According to the Fairfield County Voter Registration Office, in a three-person race the winner must pick up any amount above 50 percent of the total votes cast.

    Counties will certify their results Friday morning before sending them to the state. After the state also certifies the results, the State Election Commission will call for any necessary runoffs.

    Other Fairfield County Races

    Sheriff

    Will Montgomery will get another four years as Fairfield County Sheriff, beating out Marvin Willis 3,732 votes (79.93 percent) to 937 (20.07 percent) in the Democratic Primary. Montgomery is in the home stretch of the final two years of the slot left vacant when former Sheriff Herman Young resigned in 2014. No Republican filed for the race.

    Clerk of Court

    Judy Bonds, the Deputy Clerk of Court for the last 15 years, bested Dorothy Belton 2,384 votes (51.26 percent) to 2,267 (48.74 percent) in the Democratic Primary. With no Republican on the ticket, Bonds will be the County’s new Clerk of Court.

    Coroner

    After two terms on the job, Barkley Ramsey came up short Tuesday in the Democratic Primary, falling to Chris Hill, a Sheriff’s deputy, 2,660 votes (57.76 percent) to 1,945 (42.24 percent). There were also no Republicans on this ticket.

    Blythewood

    In Richland County races impacting Blythewood, Gwen Kennedy won the Democratic Primary for the District 7 County Council seat, topping Keith Bailey 2,143 votes (59.56 percent) to 1,455 (40.44 percent). In the Democratic Primary for the District 9 County Council seat, Calvin Chip Jackson beat out Julie-Ann Dixon 1,877 votes (60.57 percent) to 1,222 (39.43 percent). No Republicans were on either of those tickets.

    In the Democratic Primary for the District 19 seat in the State Senate, John Scott Jr. beat Torrey Rush 5,792 (61.84 percent) to 3,574 (38.16 percent). In the Democratic Primary for the District 77 seat in the State House, Joe McEachern won big over Raymond Mars, 3,747 votes (80.91 percent) to 844 (19.09 percent). There were also no Republican Primaries for these races.

     

  • Council OK’s Road Repair

    Great North Rd map conv copyWINNSBORO (June 9, 2016) – During last week’s Fairfield County Council meeting, Interim Administrator Milton Pope requested that Council move repairs to the Great North Road to the top of the road repair priority list. The item had been favorably voted out of committee earlier in the day, he said.

    The estimated cost of $83,000 would be taken from the road maintenance fund. Also, he noted, contractors have already been deployed and are working on surface treatment on county dirt roads, so they would not have to be redeployed.

    Council voted unanimously to approve this request, but not until after some discussion. Councilman Billy Smith (District 7) pointed out that this road was in such bad condition that it was a serious safety concern.

    However, Councilman Kamau Marcharia (District 4) commented that he too had been to meetings about this road, “but it seems like it takes priority over many, many roads and bridges that have been washed out.” He wanted to know why this road takes priority over other roads which also have safety issues.

    Chairwoman Carolyn B. Robinson (District 2) pointed out that this was one of the roads initially paved when the road paving program started because it has the worst possible numbers in the entire county for paved roads, and this is taking care only of the parts that were damaged.

    “But it is a safety issue the way the road is buckled. If you go out there and drive at night you will probably have an accident and damage your car,” Robinson said.

    Smith said he understood Marcharia’s point but the condition of the road was so bad that it needed priority.

    Marcharia again pointed out that there were many roads in the county that needed repair.

    The vote passed 5-1. Reached by email after the meeting, Davis Anderson, Fairfield County Deputy Administrator, told The Voice the County Road Program has a budget of $123,570 for this fiscal year.