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  • Redhawks tap O’Connell as new head football coach

    Robert O’Connell comes to Westwood from Ridge View.

    BLYTHEWOOD – Westwood High School announced on Wednesday that Robert O’Connell will be the Redhawks’ new head football coach, effective July 1, 2022.

    O’Connell succeeds three-year coach Matt Quinn, who accepted the head football position at North Augusta High School.

    “I could not be more excited to join a school and community with the commitment to excellence, rich traditions, and unrivaled pride and passion of Westwood High School,” O’Connell said in a press release on Wednesday.

    “I am fully committed to teaching, developing and graduating elite student-athletes, winning championships and working together with our administration, parents, and community to make Westwood the premier location for high school football in the country. Our potential is unlimited, and I cannot wait to get started,” he stated.

    “Coach O’Connell is a winner, in every sense of the word,” Principal Robert Jackson said in the press release. “He is known for his character, humility, work ethic, skill set and passion for education… it’s easy to see why he’s right sized for Westwood High School.”

    O’Connell currently serves as the Defensive Coordinator, Assistant Head Coach and Assistant Athletic Director at Ridge View High School.

    Previously, O’Connell served as head coach at Richard Winn Academy in Winnsboro where his 2016 team ended the season just two wins short of a state title.  Following his stint at with the Eagles, O’Connell served as Offensive Coordinator at Irmo High School, Defensive Coordinator at Wilson High School and a defensive assistant at Wofford College.

    O’Connell holds a bachelor’s degree in General Studies from Charter Oak State College and holds a South Carolina teaching certificate for Social Studies (grades 9-12). He is married to India O’Connell and they have one son, RJ.

  • Taylor: NO water advisory has been issued for Blythewood

    WINNSBORO – Rumors have spread across Blythewood Saturday morning that there is a Winnsboro water advisory for the Blythewood customers.

    However, Winnsboro Town Manager Jason Taylor informed The Voice about 11 a.m., Saturday morning that there is no health hazard associated with the sediment residents are currently seeing in their water.

    “We encourage people to run their lines a little while and run that sediment out, and the water should clear up. There is no need to boil the water or take other precautions. No water advisory has been issued. The water is fine to drink,” Taylor said.

    “I just got off the phone with the water operator and everything is fine,” he said. “We had a break at one of our large customers on Highway 34 late on Thursday. They lost approximately three million gallons through their fire suppression system. We went down to shut their system off to keep them from continuing to loose water.

    “When that three million gallons went through our system, it basically flushed our system. That’s not a bad thing. We flush our system on a regular basis,” Taylor said. “But the break caused an unexpected, very quick flushing of our system which caused sediment in the lines to be stirred up

    “That sediment is what residents are seeing in their water right now.” Taylor said, “But it is not dangerous. If residents will let the water run a little while, it will clear up.”

  • Council majority planning third rec center

    During the last year, Council has voted to allocate $3M for new recreation centers. Monday night they voted 5-2 to lease land where they plan to build another recreation center. Pictured above is the site for the District 1 complex coming to Highway 21 in Ridgeway. | Contributed

    WINNSBORO – Mitford’s community center averages one to three people a day.

    Monticello’s averages three to five. Nobody visited either center at all in November.

    With $3M already earmarked for three rec centers in the county, council wants to spend more taxpayer money on parks and recreation.

    On Monday, council voted 5-2 to lease 8.12 acres in the North Monticello and Ladd Road area from Dominion Energy for another recreation center.

    Council members Doug Pauley and Clarence Gilbert opposed.

    “I ask this council to open your eyes and see what is needed for Fairfield County and its citizens, and not what is wanted by you for political reasons,” Pauley said.

    While the cost of the lease is only $5 annually, per the lease, Fairfield County must purchase several insurance policies to cover the property. Those policies are valued at $3 million, documents state.

    The county is also responsible for costs associated with adding any libraries, playground equipment or other amenities, the costs of which have yet to be determined.

    Pauley said the lease vote represents another instance of the council majority building projects for campaign purposes and putting them above what the county really needs. He rattled off a laundry list of those needs.

    He said the daily operating budget of the public works department was cut by 50 percent, yet the employees in that department have to do daily operations and make repairs to five county bridges that are out.

    “That department lacks adequate gravel, piping and other materials to maintain county roads,” Pauley said.

    “The Sheriff’s office and fire service must make do with antiquated vehicles. And what about the rising cost of gas for these vehicles?” he asked.

    “Fire service has been asking for tankers for three years,” Pauley said. “They have two with over 35 years on them. One of them caught fire while responding to a fire recently and another has a transmission problem. If the ISO came tomorrow and a tanker was not at a station, it would not qualify as a station.

    “We’ve needed a fire marshal for two years and we need four firefighters,” he said.

    “EMS needs three ambulances, and three of the ones they have, have over 350 miles. We have cut on-the-road paramedics who provide life-saving support,” Pauley continued.

    “We don’t even have a full time director to manage all these [recreation] facilities because we can’t afford to hire them,” he said.

    Without responding to Pauley’s statement, Council Chairman Moses Bell called for the vote which was 5-2.

    Later on, Bell once again took aim at the Mt. Zion contract, the subject of an unrelated agenda item following the lease vote.

    “The reason we have to spend all this money is the disastrous contract. Even lawyers advised us not to get into this contract,” Bell said, without identifying the lawyers or the circumstance.

  • Whitaker threatens to stop accepting Town’s waste

    Taylor: Town Prepared To Go To Court

    WINNSBORO – During county council’s meeting Monday night, County Administrator Malik Whitaker doubled down on the county’s position that the Town of Winnsboro owes over $60,000 in unpaid solid waste fees.

    In a letter to Winnsboro Town Manager Jason Taylor, dated Nov. 15, 2021, Whitaker wrote, “For the current fiscal year, the County has invoiced your organization approximately $35,612.01 for solid waste delivered to the County transfer station during the time period of July 1, 2021 to October 31, 2021. As of today, we have not received any payment for these waste services. We ask that you remit payment covering the balance of $35,612.01 within thirty (30) days of receipt of this letter.”

    On Monday night, Whitaker said Winnsboro now owes $61,881.75.

    “Fairfield County will be sending notice to the Town of Winnsboro that if they do not pay the fee by the end of March,” Whitaker told council members, “Fairfield County will not accept the Town’s solid waste at county facilities. So that is the county’s current position.”

    “Fairfield County charges solid waste service fees for services provided to all commercial users of the county’s solid waste transfer station,” Whitaker said. “The fees are service fees owed based on the amount of services provided and they are not a tax.”

    Winnsboro Town Council recently adopted a resolution sternly opposing the surcharge the county council had quietly inserted into the county budget.

    According to the resolution, the fee is tantamount to double billing since the county already bills Winnsboro residents for solid waste disposal via property taxes. State grants further augment the county’s solid waste budget, according to the resolution.

    For a small fee, the Town will transport the residents’ solid waste to the landfill. Fairfield County Council members did not comment further on the solid waste fees following Whitaker’s presentation.

  • Taylor: County double charging Winnsboro for waste disposal

    Town Lays Groundwork for Possible Legal Action

    WINNSBORO – Several things don’t smell right with a roughly $60,000 solid waste disposal bill that the Town of Winnsboro said it recently received from Fairfield County, according to town officials.

    Town Administrator Jason Taylor says the bill represents a double charge for a service municipal residents already pay via county property taxes – the right to dispose city-generated waste into the county landfill.

    Until now, the only extra charge town residents pay is a nominal fee to Winnsboro to recoup costs of transportation to the landfill.

    Taylor said the town actually loses money on the transportation fee. He said Fairfield County’s solid waste surcharge unfairly targets town residents while exempting county residents.

    “Outside the power plant, our citizens collectively pay more property taxes than anyone in the county,” he said.

    Taylor noted that DHEC grant money further subsidizes Fairfield County solid waste operation costs, which he said makes its surcharge all the more egregious.

    “That’s triple dipping essentially. We think this charge is invalid and inappropriate,” Taylor said.

    In response, the town recently adopted a scathing resolution that protests the fee and lays the groundwork for possible legal action.

    “The content of this particular resolution is important,” Taylor said. “We’ve crafted it in anticipation of potential legal action that may have to occur.”

    Fairfield County Administrator Malik Whitaker could not be reached for comment.

    The solid waste surcharge quietly found its way into the county’s 2022 budget last spring.

    The Winnsboro resolution says the county failed to give town officials an opportunity to participate in creating the fee, which violates state’s Solid Waste Policy and Management Act.

    It also says the county has failed to contract solid waste services with the town. Further, the county is engaging in double taxation of town residents, according to the resolution.

    “[T]he Town vehemently protests the implementation of a solid waste disposal fee as imposed by the Fairfield County Council,” the resolution states.

    A source familiar with the surcharge said County Council Chairman Moses Bell discussed the billing issue during executive session of the Feb. 14 council meeting. Bell also directed Whitaker and county attorney Charles Boykin to craft a letter demanding payment and threatening to cut off the town’s landfill access if Winnsboro leaders fail to pay, the source said.

    Bell couldn’t be reached for comment.

    On Tuesday, Bell answered when The Voice telephoned him but the call immediately disconnected when the reporter identified himself.

    Taylor said he hadn’t received any demand letters as of Tuesday. He did say he’s discussed the surcharge controversy with Whitaker, but declined to delve into specifics.

    “It was a productive conversation where we both stated our arguments,” Taylor said.

    Directing county officials during executive session to write a demand letter and send it to the town likely violated provisions of the S.C. Freedom of Information Act, according to a media law expert.

    At the Feb. 14 meeting, the only vote Fairfield County Council members cast after exiting executive session involved the expenditure of federal stimulus money, according to a video posted on the county’s official YouTube channel.

    “No action was taken in executive session,” Bell stated in the recording.

    However, directing county leaders in executive session to author a demand letter violates FOIA in at least two ways, said Jay Bender, an attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member.

    Committing to a course of action in executive session – whether directly or via straw poll – violates FOIA. The directive to pen a demand letter also should’ve received a public vote, Bender said.

    “It doesn’t matter if you call it a straw poll or you call it scratching your nose, if you’re committing to a course of action, that’s illegal,” he said. “I think the Town of Winnsboro has a claim and citizens have a claim against that process.”

  • BAR ok’s Taco Bell, asks council to require COA for LED lights

    BLYTHEWOOD – After a few questions about color and materials that will be used in the construction of a Taco Bell that is planned or Blythewood Road, the Board of Architectural Review (BAR) voted unanimously to approve a certificate of appropriateness for the restaurant.

    Following the meeting, one of three presenters, Bob Wiseman, representing Flynn Restaurant Group,  told The Voice that he expected construction to begin within 60 days and that the restaurant should be open in early fall. The restaurant will be located at 209 Blythewood Road, next to Zaxby’s.

    BAR’s Plan to limit LED

    In other business, the board discussed limiting the use of LED window lighting in the commercial areas of the town, but it was not on the agenda to be voted on.

    It was the third time the board has suggested cracking down on LED window lighting that has cropped up in windows of at least one business in town.

    In December, Town Council voted against limiting LED lighting after two black-owned businesses told council they had been harassed by town employees to remove their LED lighting even though there was no town ordinance against it.

    In January, the BAR pursued limiting LED lighting again, requesting Williamson to provide draft language and to bring the board additional images of business window signs with LED lights.

    That draft, included these suggested revisions to the sign ordinance: “Lighted signs for advertising (not incidental signs like “Open” or “Closed”) must receive a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Board of Architectural Review” and “Lighted window signs for advertising must receive a Certificate of Appropriateness. Incidental signs (like “open” and “closed” can be reviewed administratively to ensure compliance.”

    Continuing the discussion Monday night in a new attempt to prohibit most LED lighting in the windows of commercial buildings, chairman Jim McLean asked, “Is there a need for the BAR to regulate anything beyond the open/closed aspects of signage?”

     “Do we want to ask the town [council] to write an ordinance to give us [the BAR] the say-so on essentially, what is acceptable,” Mclean asked. “It doesn’t mean it won’t be permitted, but it gives us say-so on what the possibilities are.”-

    McLean acknowledged that the board would not be able to vote since the matter was not listed for action on the agenda.

     “Is it the wishes of the board to have it [LED lighting] as a certificate of appropriateness for all lighted window signs beyond open/closed signs?” Town Administrator Carroll Williamson asked.

     “That would be my position, and if anything needs to be grandfathered in, it should be considered,” he said.

     “Based on comments the board has made, it’s unanimous,” McLean said to Williamson.

     “If I could just work with you, Mr. Chairman, and draft language, then we can work on a process for that,” Williamson said.

    Following the meeting, Williamson confirmed to The Voice that the proposed ordinance to require LED lighting to have a certificate of occupancy will not be on the town council agenda Monday night.

  • Taco Bell to request COA in Blythewood

    NOTICE – CORRECTED DATE OF TACO BELL appearance before BW Board of Architectural Review The Blythewood Board of Architectural Review will consider a Certificate of Appropriateness for a Taco Bell Tuesday, Feb. 22 (not Monday, Feb. 21 as printed in the Feb. 17 issue of The Voice) at The Manor. 

    BLYTHEWOOD – Plans for a Taco Bell with a drive-thru will go before the Board of Architectural Review on Tuesday, Feb. 22, to be considered for a certificate of appropriateness.

    The applicant, National Restaurant Designers, is representing the owner, Flynn Restaurant Group, in its request to develop approximately 1.1 acres for the construction of a 1.944 square foot restaurant with a drive-thru lane, according to the application.

    The property, located at 209 Blythewood Road, is in the Town Center (TC) District.

    If approved, the restaurant will sit between Zaxby’s and Blythewood Dentistry.

    The Town requires a buffer between adjoining commercially zoned lots in the Town Center District to be a minimum of 10 feet in width, or 7 feet if a wall, fence or berm is used between adjoining properties on both sides and to the rear.

    This will be the second time since 2018 that Taco Bell has considered opening a franchise in Blythewood.

     The Board of Architectural Review will meet at 5:30 p.m., Monday evening at the Manor to review the application. The meeting is open to the public and will be live streamed and available on YouTube via the town’s website, townofblythewoodsc.gov.

  • Fairfield County Council agenda blunders multiply

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Council once again had to pull an agenda item at the last minute after failing to follow proper meeting procedures.

    At Monday night’s meeting, the council tabled third reading of an ordinance relating to the sale of property within the Fairfield County industrial park.

    The reason? Council had never held a second reading.

    Ordinance 784 received first reading by title only on January 10. The measure would grant a first right of refusal over the sale of a parcel within the commerce center.

    Councilman Doug Pauley called attention to the agenda gaffe.

    “I would like to know who is responsible on the agenda team to make sure these agendas are correct,” Pauley said. “We need to make sure that we are providing our citizens with all the information necessary.”

    Council chairman Moses Bell never addressed the vague descriptions of properties and the lack of other information on several ordinances.

    Bell did acknowledge the council failed to give second reading to Ordinance 784, and supported tabling the measure until after a second reading is held.

    “You are absolutely correct,” Bell said. “So tonight, we’re going to table [the ordinance] until we get the second reading. You’re right.”

    Pauley also pointed out that agenda errors unnecessarily cost taxpayers money. These mistakes force Fairfield to buy multiple advertisements at extra cost to the county. Pauley also noted that the county is publishing public hearing notices in the newspaper three times when they are only required to publish them one time, 15 days prior to the public hearing. That, Pauley said, is also an unnecessary extra cost to tax payers.

    Bell replied to that feedback with a mere “thank you.”

    Recurring theme

    Council failed to approve third and final reading of Ordinance 787 amending the appropriation of funds from the American Rescue Plan due to the lack of a second. After discussing it in executive session later that evening, council voted 5-2 to approve it, with Councilmen Mikel Trapp and Tim Roseborough voting against.

    The ordinance oversight is the latest in a series of procedural blunders over the last several months relating to the agenda.

    At the January 10 meeting, council members delayed second reading of a lease agreement with Dominion Energy for a public recreation area because virtually no details had been made available to council members prior to the vote.

    “We need to see the proposed lease agreement with Dominion on the property,” Pauley wrote in an email to Bell.

    “It’s hard to vote on a lease agreement when you haven’t seen it. If this is second reading why does it not show the full ordinance and only shows title only?”

    Bell agreed, leading to the measure being pulled. It’s not come back up for a follow-up vote.

    “You are absolutely right,” Bell responded. “Since the ordinance is not complete it will come off the agenda.”

    Also in January, The Voice called attention to another omission, this one relating to a rezoning request that failed to identify the property.

    Bell initially said that the property information was on the agenda. But when The Voice noted the information was missing, Bell stated it was included in the council’s agenda packet, which isn’t readily available to the public. 

    Bell later apologized and said it “would not happen in the future.”

    More missing information

    Despite Bell’s pledge in January, several properties on the Feb. 14 agenda were not sufficiently identified subject to a public vote.

    While some Commerce Center related measures on Monday night’s agenda identified pertinent parcels, the public notices published in advance of the meeting did not.

    During a series of votes, council voted to spend $500,000 to build a new spec building, did not vote on Ordinance 786 the sale of two undeveloped properties in the Commerce Center and also did not vote on Orinance 785 to ease design restrictions for structures that might be built on those properties.

    A buyer called Windy Hill Development had offered to buy the two Commerce Center parcels. County officials have said the sale would make the commerce center more conducive to development.

    On Monday night, county resident Landrum Johnson voiced concerns that the buyer seems to be receiving special treatment. He also thought the sale price was low.

    “That sale seems to be done without restrictions, which seems to invite potential abuse of the neighborhood. It doesn’t seem appropriate,” Johnson said.

    During public comment, Ridgeway resident Randy Bright said the ordinances on the agenda continue to illustrate the council’s willy-nilly approach to budgetary and planning matters.

    “We don’t even know where we stand financially. We haven’t done an audit in over a year,” Bright said. “Now and then we quote a one-day figure of the fund balance, which is mostly meaningless.”

  • Whitaker: We’re in a mini crisis

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County is facing a financial “mini crisis” after failing to timely file required financial statements. That failure has resulted in the county’s FY2021 audit being held up, according to emails obtained by The Voice.

    In an email to council members, County Administrator Malik Whitaker said the county is six months tardy in submitting its audits, potentially jeopardizing critical infrastructure projects dependent on state money.

     “We have a mini-crisis situation with our audits being six months behind,” Whitaker wrote in an email to council members on Feb. 1. “Our team is committed to getting us through this situation with lessons learned so this will not happen again. Your patience is appreciated. I will keep your [sic] posted.”

    However, the S.C. Comptroller General’s Office is withholding payments to Fairfield pending receipt of the required financial statements, according to the S.C. Rural Infrastructure Authority, or RIA.

    Among the Fairfield County projects potentially impacted is a proposed water main project at Peach Road, said Kendra Wilkerson, a program manager with the RIA.

    “We have been informed that the [Comptroller General’s] office is currently withholding state payments to a number of counties, including Fairfield, pending receipt of FY21 financial statements,” Wilkerson said via email to Fairfield County leaders.

    “So, if you submit a request for payment to RIA for the Peach Road Water Main project (RIA grant R-21-2057), that payment will be withheld until this situation is resolved with the CG’s office,” the email continues. “RIA does not have any control over this situation, but we wanted to make sure you were aware of it.”

    Whitaker said the county is working on an 18-day action plan to bring its financials up to speed.

    “I have committed our finance team to a February 28th deadline for submitting our audited statements to the State,” Whitaker said. “We now have an action plan with weekly steps and two accountability meetings a week.”

    Council chairman Moses Bell called the county’s predicament “unacceptable.”

    Councilman Doug Pauley suggested that the loss of top tier county employees over the last year has exacerbated matters.

    Since the installation of the current council, there have been a number of high profile resignations. Those resignations were most of the top county administration officials.

    They include former County Administrator Jason Taylor, former Assistant Administrator Laura Johnson, former county attorney Tommy Morgan,  former Clerk to Council Patti Davis, former Community Services Director Chris Clausen, former County Parks & Recreation Director Russell Price and former Building Official Chris Netherton.

    “We lost Laura, who was a big help in getting things like this done, and now all of it falls on [Finance Director] Ann [Bass],” Pauley said. “She now has to answer the many demands for information from council members and new members of the administration.”

    During citizen comments, Ridgeway resident Randy Bright blamed council’s willy-nilly approach to budgetary and planning matters.

    “We don’t even know where we stand financially. We haven’t done an audit in over a year,” Bright said. “Now and then we quote a one-day figure of the fund balance, which is mostly meaningless.”

    Though not directly addressing the money being withheld by the state, Councilman Clarence Gilbert said on Monday that employee morale is worsening.

    Gilbert suggested hiring an outside firm to anonymously poll staff about morale issues and how to solve them.

    “It’s obvious that our county government is suffering from low employee morale,” Gilbert said. “Good or bad morale is contagious. If the soldiers are not happy, then the generals will fall on their face.”

  • Rezoning requested for storage units in BW

    BLYTHEWOOD – Blythewood planning commissioners recommended approving one commercial zoning request and postponed another during Monday’s monthly meeting.

    The commission unanimously voted to recommend rezoning 4.1 acres at Wilson Boulevard and Farrow Road from Rural District to Community Commercial District/Architectural Overall District.

    Blythewood Town Council will have the final say.

    Shannon Burnett, an outside attorney for the Town, represented property owners Cheryl and Carlos Bullock. She said they want to build possibly a nice sit-down restaurant at the site.

    Burnett told the commissioners that the landowners’ business plans would “offer something of value” to the town.

    “When we look at things that Blythewood wants, one thing we hear is possibly a nicer restaurant or something that would be a good gathering place,” she said. “It’s a good hook in that area that could be beneficial for our town.”

    Burnett noted her clients have lived in the town for decades and have only the best intentions in mind.

    “They have no desire to use this in a way to diminish the value of anybody’s property or bring any ill-repute to the town,” Burnett said. “It could be a good entryway into our town and it could be well-used.”

    Commissioner Edward Kessler voiced concerns about traffic congestion. He suggested a professional office building might be a better alternative.

    “It’s a busy intersection. It’s a heavily trafficked area,” he said. “Another restaurant or facility going in could pose some traffic concerns or issues.”

    Burnett said an office building is “definitely on the table,” but added her clients are primarily interested in building a restaurant.

    “I’ve had so many people over the years say it would be nice to have a sit-down restaurant that’s not a chain,” Burnett said, adding that the proposed restaurant would have two entrances to alleviate congestion.

    Town Administrator Carroll Williamson said the town’s comprehensive plan future land use map classifies the area as commercial neighborhood retail. He added the requested zoning is listed as a compatible zoning district.

    “It does meet the requirements of the comprehensive plan and future land use map,” Williamson said, adding the town’s board of architectural review would also have to sign off on the proposed building.

    In other business, the commission postponed a similar request that would rezone 7.08 acres in the 11000 block of Wilson Boulevard. Commissioners said the applicant wants to build a self-storage facility on the property.

    Rhett Kelley, an agent for the contractor, said his client couldn’t attend the meeting due to illness.

    Kelley couldn’t provide many details about the proposed land use, prompting commissioners to postpone voting. He did stand in support of his client’s proposal.

    “The best use, in my opinion, is a commercial use,” Kelley said.

    The property to the north of the site is zoned Rural, to the east is Neighborhood Commercial, to the south is Community Commercial and to the west is Development District.

    Williamson said the town’s comprehensive plan doesn’t list the Community Commercial zoning as a compatible zoning district, but he also noted the plan’s land use map lists some nearby properties as commercial.

    “It’s just a concern to be looked at,” Williamson said.

    The Community Commercial zone does allow self-storage facilities.

    Blythewood resident Robert McLean, who said he has purchased land adjoining the proposed self-storage site, spoke in opposition to the request.

    While McLean said he thinks the town needs self-storage facilities, he didn’t think the proposed Wilson Boulevard site is proper.

    “I would implore the planning commission to take into consideration the existing rural nature of that particular part of Blythewood,” McLean said. “Let’s look at retaining the rural charm that we have. I honestly can’t think of anything that is more of an antithesis of what Blythewood represents in terms of development than a possible storage unit or use of space such as that.”

    Commission chairman Malcolm Gordge said the panel would likely revisit the self-storage development in March.