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  • Authority maps megasite infrastructure

    On March 13, the Town of Winnsboro’s new Pump Station on the Broad River was turned on for testing. The Town of Winnsboro funded this approximately $12 million dollar project, encompassing a new raw water intake pipe and construction of this pump station, with a State Revolving Fund State Drinking Water loan through the EPA.

    WINNSBORO – Now that the initial paperwork is mostly finished, Fairfield County’s water and sewer plan is flowing closer to completion.

    At the second meeting of the Fairfield Joint Water and Sewer Authority on Monday, the group received detailed reports covering everything from environmental impacts, roads to laying water and sewer pipes.

    “They’re not in as [bad] shape as I thought,” said Neil Robinson, chair of Fairfield County Council and an authority board member. “They’re still going to need a lot of improvements.”

    Formed earlier this year, the authority’s goal is to bolster the county’s water and sewer system, particularly at the mega-site, a 1,113-acre parcel east of I-77 at exit 41 that the county has designated as an industrial hub.

    By installing proper infrastructure, Fairfield County and Winnsboro town officials believe it will make the megasite more enticing to industries interested in launching operations here.

    The authority predicts flow demand at the megasite to be about 1.11 million gallons per day.

    Another 1.09 million gallons per day would be needed to serve the Weyerhaeuser property to the north, totaling 2.2 million gallons per day for both properties, according to engineering estimates.

    The Town of Winnsboro, the area’s largest water provider, is currently permitted for 1.6 million gallons per day, but only has an available capacity of about 540,000 gallons, roughly half the projected capacity needs at the megasite.

    Prepping the megasite for industry will require a two-step process, officials said.

    In the early stages, the Town of Ridgeway would facilitate the construction of temporary water service while an outside party would use a “pump and haul” method to transport wastewater to an outside location for disposal.

    DHEC approval would be required for the latter process.

    “Initially temporary service is needed for what we call trailer city,” said Lisa Muzekari, also with Thomas & Hutton. “We are going to have a significant amount of workers on site, therefore water and sewer service needs to be provided for those employees while they are on site working.”

    Long-term, the Town of Winnsboro would play an integral role in establishing permanent infrastructure, Muzekari said.

    Water service would be provided by the Winnsboro water treatment plant. New distribution lines and an elevated water tank would be needed.

    The Town of Winnsboro wastewater plant would initially handle sewer services, but only temporarily.

    “A future wastewater treatment plant would be needed to accommodate the full build out of the mega site and any other development in the area,” Muzekari said.

    While ensuring sufficient infrastructure needed to entice industry is in place, expanding water and sewer also lays the foundation for potential residential growth, Muzekari noted.

    “Right now the proposed lines are to serve the megasite,” she said. “But the plant capacity is up to 2 [million gallons per day] with potential for 4 [million gallons per day]. Expanding for 4 [million gallons per day] would allow for that additional development.”

    Cost estimates for the proposed upgrades weren’t available, though Muzekari said she’s using a 2 million gallon per day facility as a baseline.

    Roads are another component of the megasite infrastructure formula.

    The site already benefits from interstate access; it’s located off I-77 between exits 34 and 41. A proposed interchange could improve that access.

    Brad Sanderson, also with Thomas & Hutton, said one interchange option is a divergent diamond pattern. The other would be a cloverleaf design, which he said would be built in the vicinity of Old Camden Road.

    There haven’t been any glitches from an environmental standpoint. Sanderson said a preliminary review looking at the Weyerhaeuser tract just north of the megasite found no problems with wetlands or negative impacts on protected species.

    He also said Thomas & Sutton is continuing with evaluating site work, utility and transportation costs.

    “We’re just trying to figure out the overall development cost for a large development at this site,” Sanderson said.

    Monday’s meeting also comes on the heels of recent investigative reports about the state of South Carolina’s water system.

    Officials at Monday night’s water and sewer authority meeting noted that Winnsboro’s water is of high quality.

    County Administrator Jason Taylor said statewide, authorities like the Fairfield group are becoming more common.

    “The state itself is pushing hard and heavy to move from small individual systems,” Taylor said. [The state is] “trying to more rationally provide water and sewer services.”

    In other business, the authority also voted to continue an agreement with the Pope Flynn Group law firm. Attorney C.D. Rhodes with the firm has been assisting the authority.

    Since the authority has yet to collect revenues, the deal approved Monday night continues the existing arrangement in which the county pays 75 percent and the town 25 percent.

    “It’s a basic continuation of the arrangement,” said authority chair and Winnsboro Mayor Roger Gaddy.

  • Kelly Mill student arrested after bringing gun to school

    BLYTHEWOOD – A 14-year-old student with a gun was arrested at Kelly Mill Middle School today, a sheriff’s spokesman said.

    Another student reported the gun to an administrator who notified the school’s resource officer, according to sheriff’s reports.

    After the officer approached the unnamed student and asked him to lift is jacket, an unloaded 9mm handgun was allegedly found stuffed in the waist of the student’s pants, according to the report.

    The student was arrested and taken to the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center.

    In a media release, Richland School District Two Director of Communications Libby Roof, said the District had sent an email to parents of students at the school notifying them of the incident.

    “The student did not threaten anyone or indicate he planned to use the weapon against anyone,” Roof said.

    The story will be updated as more information is available.

  • Council retreat open to public

    BLYTHEWOOD – The community is invited to the Town Council’s planning retreat on Saturday, March 16, from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m., at Doko Manor.

    “We always invite the community to all of our meetings, but I especially like them to come to our annual spring retreat. That’s when we plan for the next year, and I think everyone in the community should have input into that planning,” Mayor J. Michael Ross said.

    Topics of discussion include the budget, town planning, the Winnsboro/Blythewood water agreement, Richland County road projects, business signage and more, a town press release stated.

    A Taste of Blythewood will be featured at noon, featuring fare donated by some of Blythewood’s restaurants. Lunch is open to all who attend the retreat.

    Doko Manor is located in the town park adjacent to Town Hall. For more information, call 803-754-0501.

  • Ridgeway Girl Scout donates cookies to homeless

    Haley Autry’s cat, Willow, assists as Haley shows off the growing stack of Girl Scout cookies that she plans to donate to Oliver Gospel Mission residents. | Barbara Ball

    RIDGEWAY – If a Ridgeway Girl Scout named Haley Autry, 9, knocks on your front door selling Girl Scout cookies, you might want to order a couple of extra boxes. She has plans for them – great plans.

    A fourth grader at Richard Winn Academy, Haley was busy selling cookies door to door recently when a neighbor and friend of Haley’s family decided that, instead of purchasing cookies to eat, she would buy some from Haley and donate them to the residents of Oliver Gospel Mission in downtown Columbia.

    Later that day Haley asked her mom, Jennifer, if she, too, could organize a cookie donation for the mission.

    “Since homeless people probably can’t afford to buy the cookies,” Haley told her mom, “I want to make sure they get them.”  She settled on Oliver Gospel Mission as her charity of choice.

    As Haley busied about selling Girl Scout cookies, she asked each of her customers if they would like to purchase a box for the homeless. She set a goal of 100 donations and even made a video with a sales pitch and posted it on Facebook.

    Her sales pitch was apparently hard to turn down.

    She passed her goal in no time and continued collecting cookie donations until she had 200 boxes.

    Her friend offered to deliver the cookies to Oliver Gospel Mission for Haley sometime next month.

    “She is so excited for them to be delivered,” Jennifer Autry said of her daughter’s cookie philanthropy.

    But Haley isn’t finished doing good. Now she’s collecting boxes of cookies for first responders.

    “I’ve collected 30 so far,” she said.

    “It’s amazing what she’s been able to do,” Autry said of her daughter. “And we are very proud of her.”

  • BHS teacher finalist for SC’s top teacher

    Blythewood High School principal Matt Sherman, left, State Superintendent of Education Molly Spearman and Richland Two Superintendent Barron Davis, right, congratulate Sue Weems, center right, for being named a finalist for SC Teacher of the Year. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – Blythewood High School English teacher Sue Weems got a big surprise Tuesday morning when State Superintendent of Education Molly Spearman made an unexpected stop at the high school to announce that Weems has being named one of five finalists for the South Carolina Teacher of the Year award.

    Richland Two School Superintendent Barron Davis presented Weems with flowers and Blythewood High School Principal Matt Sherman presented her with a bouquet of balloons.

    Weems was also presented a $10,000 check as she faced a bank of television and newspaper cameras. She will now go on to the next stage of competition that will culminate in the crowning of the South Carolina Teacher of the Year at a Gala on May 8 in Columbia.

    “Sue has spent her career meeting the needs of each individual student and challenging them to be their very best,” Spearman said. “Her experience in both K-12 and higher education is an invaluable tool that helps her identify with her students and show them what is possible.”

    Spearman also noted that Weem’s husband, who is in the military, is deployed in San Diego. Libby Roof, Richland Two’s Chief Communications Officer, tried to make phone contact with Weem’s husband so Weems could give him the good news, however, he could not be reached.

    Weems, a tenth and eleventh grade English teacher, and a Blythewood resident, is the published author of fifty original short stories for students in kindergarten through sixth grade.

    “Mrs. Weems possesses an innate ability to inspire students’ success,” said Richland Two superintendent Dr. Baron Davis. “Her own experiences including being the child of educators, mother of four and a military spouse who has lived in many locales, has shaped her approach and teaching philosophy. Her students benefit from her abilities to tailor her teaching style to meet the individual needs of each learner and to make connections with all of her students. Richland Two is extremely proud of Mrs. Weems,” Davis said.

    Weems said she considers her most profound legacy to be that she deeply understands her students and individualizes instruction to meet their needs. She said her teaching mantra is “care, connect and challenge.”

    The teacher selected for the State Teacher of the Year will receive a total of $25,000 and will be provided with a brand new BMW to use while serving for one year as a roving ambassador providing mentoring, attending speaking engagements, working with teacher cadets and teaching fellows, leading the State Teacher Forum and serving as the state spokesperson for over 50,000 educators.

  • FCHS teacher finalist for SC’S Top Teacher

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield Central High School teacher Chanda Jefferson was surprised at her school today when State Superintendent of Education Molly Spearman arrived unexpectedly in Jefferson’s room to announce that she has been selected as one of five finalists for the South Carolina Teacher of the Year award.

    Jefferson was then presented with a bouquet of flowers, another bouquet of balloons and a check for $10,000.

    “Chanda is an exceptional educator who has not only worked to ensure her own students are successful but has also given of her time and energy so that students across our state have high quality Biology opportunities,” Spearman said. “Chanda’s commitment to increasing the rigor in both her classroom and classrooms across South Carolina should be commended.”

    A ninth through twelfth grade Biology teacher at Fairfield Central, Chanda has worked on both the local and state levels to increase student performance of the South Carolina Biology I End-of-Course exam. In 2014, she received the Outstanding Biology Teacher for South Carolina Award presented by the National Association of Biology Teachers. She was one of twenty teachers to receive the Princeton University Fellowship for Teachers and one of three teachers to receive the Amazon Educator Academy Scholarship. Harvard University invited Jefferson to be a guest speaker for the 74th Annual Society of Developmental Biology Conference.

    Outside of the classroom, Jefferson has served as an Education Network Partner for the National Human Genome Research Institute, helping to plan a National DNA Day Celebration in South Carolina.

    Spearman praised Jefferson for catering to each student’s individual learning style and using hands on activities; incorporating social media, scientific modeling, inquiry, and STEM techniques in her lessons.

    Jefferson will next compete for South Carolina Teacher of the Year at the annual Gala, to be held on May 8 in Columbia where the overall winner will be crowned.

  • Sheriff: Church burglaries on rise

    WINNSBORO – A recent rash of burglaries in vehicles parked in church parking lots during worship services has prompted Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery to issue an advisory encouraging citizens and church members to be vigilant for suspicious activity on church properties in the county.

    Someone burglarized a vehicle at a church in the Jenkinsville community on Sunday, March 10, stealing money and a pocketbook containing bank cards, the Sheriff’s office reported. The subject used the bank cards a short time later at the Dollar General in the Blair area.

    Similar thefts also occurred in Lancaster County that same morning and are believed to have been committed by the same person, the Sheriff said. Surveillance cameras captured images of the suspect and his vehicle, believed to be a dark, possibly blue, Chevrolet Impala.

    Catalytic converters (exhaust system parts) have also been taken from church vans/buses parked at several churches in Fairfield County in the past few weeks.

    Sheriff Montgomery said he does not know if the suspect is involved with these thefts.

    “We encourage everyone to be extra vigilant for suspicious activity at area churches and to contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141 if any suspicious activity is observed,” Montgomery said. “We also ask that anyone who recognizes the individual, or vehicle to contact us.”

  • SC board suspends BHS teacher

    COLUMBIA – The South Carolina State Board of Education has suspended the teaching license of a Blythewood High School teacher after he was accused of being in a closed closet alone with a female student on several occasions.

    Kevin Smalls had been employed by Richland County School District Two since 2014 as an engineering and robotics teacher. On Jan. 25, 2017, a female student reported the allegations to school officials, and the District placed Smalls on administrative leave.

    After investigations by Richland School District Two administrators and Blythewood High School administrators, law enforcement was notified. Smalls voluntarily resigned his position in the District, effective March 13, 2017, according to a statement released by the District.

    Smalls requested a hearing that was held in October 2017 before the State Board of Education.

    “The hearing officer found that Smalls’ conduct warranted action against his certificate, as he was alone with a student behind closed doors on multiple occasions,” according to a Feb. 12 order signed by the State Board of Education Chair Del-Gratia Jones.

    “The state board finds that the evidence presented demonstrates Smalls acted in an unprofessional manner,” the order stated.

    “There were no other complaints reported to administration regarding Mr. Smalls,” Richland Two Chief Communications Officer Libby Roof wrote in an email released to the media.

    Small’s license was ordered suspended for 60 days, from Feb. 12 to April 13, 2019, the order states.

  • Joint water authority board sets sail

    The new board of the county and town’s joint water/sewer authority met during an organizational meeting to elect officers, discuss incorporation and receive an engineering update. Attending the meeting were C. D. Rhodes, III, clockwise left, attorney with Pope Flynn, who represents the new joint water/sewer authority board; County Administrator Jason Taylor; Deputy County Administrator Davis Anderson; Winnsboro Town Attorney John Fantry; County Economic Development Director Ty Davenport, County Clerk Patti Locklair Davis; Mayor Roger Gaddy; Town Manager Don Wood; Fairfield County resident and engineer Kyle T. Crager, senior project manager of water/wastewater operations for Michel Baker International and County Council Chairman Neal Robinson.

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County is gathering all the trappings to lure big industry and with it, more jobs.

    It has interstate access, a megasite roughly equidistant between Columbia and Charlotte and a $2 million state grant targeting infrastructure for that site.

    Now the county and town have created a joint water authority – the Fairfield Joint Water and Sewer System – whose mission it is to facilitate infrastructure growth at the I-77 megasite.

    “I’m excited because it just shows growth for the town and the county,” said Fairfield County Council Chairman Neil Robinson. “I was told we were delusional just thinking about this, but I think we’re on the right path.”

    Appointments of a five-member board were made Monday night and board officers were elected. Plans are to meet monthly, with the next meeting scheduled for March 20.

    Winnsboro Mayor Roger Gaddy was named the Authority’s board chairman and Robinson was named vice-chair. Other members include Fairfield County Administrator Jason Taylor (treasurer), Winnsboro Town Manager Don Wood and Fairfield County resident and engineer Kyle Crager, senior project manager of water/wastewater operations for Michel Baker International.

    “We have to address water and sewer issues if we’re going to grow,” Taylor said. “Without water and sewer the county cannot realize its full potential.”

    Talk of forming a water authority has occurred on and off for the past four years, but gained steam in the past year.

    The S.C. Department of Commerce recently pumped $2 million into the megasite, seed money that will fund an engineering study with the ultimate goal of building a wastewater facility at the I-77 megasite.

    To that end, the state requested that an authority be formed.

    Moving forward, the authority said a critical first step involves mapping out existing infrastructure in the county. The board tentatively plans to review those plans at the next meeting.

    “I think it would be important to see all the plans that have been done on the sewer and at the same time work on the water so we’re all up to speed,” Gaddy said. “I think it’s important for us to all be on the same page and prioritize things.”

    Taylor suggested reaching out to other water providers as the authority’s work moves forward.

    Taylor said at this point, merely mapping the size and location of current water and sewer lines is a prerequisite in developing infrastructure at the megasite.

    “With all of these little fractured systems, it’s not necessarily a rational way to provide infrastructure to the county,” Taylor said. “We’re going to start approaching other providers of water and sewer and see if there’s an opportunity to work with them.

  • Cooking fire destroys home

    Cooking fire destroys Ridgeway home. | Fairfield County Fire Service

     

    RIDGEWAY – A cooking fire that broke out in the kitchen of a mobile home a little after 3 p.m. on March 2 destroyed the home, located on Reese Lane in Ridgeway.

    The home was being rented by a couple and their four-month-old daughter.

    The mother told the fire service that she was cooking in the kitchen when her baby started crying in another part of the home, according to the incident report.

    The mother said she went to check on the baby and when she came back into the kitchen, “the whole place was in flames,” according to the report. She then grabbed her baby and ran from the house.

    Three other stations were called to the home, which was fully engulfed.

    “Cooking related incidents are the leading cause of house fires nationwide,” Fairfield County Fire Service Director Jason Pope said. “We just want to caution folks to stay in the kitchen while you’re frying, grilling, boiling or broiling food. Use a timer to remind you if you are simmering, baking or roasting food. And keep anything that can catch fire – oven mitts, wooden utensils, food packaging, towels or curtains – away from your stovetop,” Pope said. Another suggestion, he said, is to keep a lid nearby to smother small grease fires.

    “And if a fire starts, just get out,” he said, “close the door behind you to help contain the fire, and call 911 or the local emergency number after you leave. If you try to fight the fire, be sure others are getting out and that you have a clear way out.”

    “For an oven fire, turn off the heat and keep the door closed,” Pope said.