Daily Archives: 12/29/2015
Swinney, Clemson make dream come true for Six Mile girl
By Rocky Nimmons
Publisher
rnimmons@thepccourier.com
CLEMSON — With the team currently in South Florida preparing for the Orange Bowl and its first College Football Playoff appearance, the Clemson Tigers are in position to cap the greatest season in program history.
Led by Dabo Swinney, named national coach of the year by several different services, the Tigers have already gone 13-0 and won an Atlantic Coast Conference championship to earn a trip to their CFP semifinal matchup with Oklahoma in Miami on Thursday, but all these accomplishments pale in comparison to what really makes Clemson great.
Greatness does not always come on the football field. More times than not, it comes from the heart, and this group of Tigers have more heart than many can imagine. Six Mile resident Kathryn Hicks and her family can vouch for that.
Hicks, 23, is a Tiger. Her blood runneth orange, like so many other fans that love Clemson.
Kathryn has been wheelchair-bound since birth, so for her and her family, going to see the Tigers in person at Death Valley on a Football Saturday is a tough ordeal.
“Kathryn is such a dedicated fan, and I hope to get her to some games this next season, but we do watch on TV or listen on the radio,” her mother, Karen, said. “Her late papa Carlos Holliday was a huge Clemson fan.”
When Kathryn heard that Clemson quarterback Deshaun Watson was going to be on the cover of an upcoming Sports Illustrated magazine, she immediately wanted a copy for her collection. She asked her mother if she could get a copy; but demand was so high that she just couldn’t find one locally before all the books were sold out in the area.
“I put on Facebook that if anyone found one to please let me know, and a family member found Kathryn two copies while on a trip to Myrtle Beach,” her mother said.
The books came to Kathryn in the mail, putting her on a mission. She thought it would be impossible to get them signed by Watson.
That is where Daniel High School football coach Randy Robinson stepped in. The Hicks family, who are also faithful Daniel fans, knew that Swinney’s sons play football at Daniel and enlisted Robinson’s help to see if Kathryn’s mission could be fulfilled.
“I called Randy Robinson, because I knew that if anyone could get her magazines signed for her, it would be him,” Karen said.
Robinson immediately went to work mentioning Kathryn to Swinney and asking if he could somehow get her magazines signed.
Not only was Swinney happy to get the signature Kathryn wanted, he asked to meet her as well.
“Dabo said he was busy but that he would get back with Randy on what day would be good for him,” Karen said. “When we got the news and told Kathryn about it, she was so excited but didn’t want to get her hopes up too much because we do realize that he was really, really busy right now.”
That is when the heart of the Tigers showed.
“When later talking to Randy, he was telling me that he received a call from Dabo right before the Wake Forest game,” Karen said. “Randy said that he looked down and saw (Swinney’s) name come up and thought he may have called him by mistake, because it was around 1:30 and the game was supposed to start at 3:30.
“Dabo just wanted Randy to let Kathryn know that he hadn’t forgotten about her.”
That spoke volumes to the Hicks family.
“He was fixing to start a huge game, but being so thoughtful and thinking about Kathryn and just letting her know that he had not forgotten about her — how many would do something like that? That was amazing to me,” Karen said.
After Clemson took care of Wake Forest to complete an undefeated regular-season conference slate, then traveled to rival South Carolina and won to finish a perfect 12-0 through the regular season and followed it up with an ACC Championship game win over North Carolina, Kathryn finally got her chance to meet with Swinney and the undefeated Tigers as they went through an early bowl practice on Dec. 15.
The family was blessed with an unusually warm December day.
“I was afraid that the weather would not be good for Kathryn to get out, but it was perfect,” Karen said. “Dabo even said that God had a hand in this visit, because He gave us such a beautiful day.”
The Hicks family got to watch the team go through practice, and that was amazing for Kathryn, her mother said.
“They ran by us, and we thought, ‘My goodness, these guys are way bigger in person than they are on TV,’” she said with a laugh.
The icing on the cake was when Swinney himself came by to have a touching conversation with Kathryn.
“Dabo came over and talked to Kathryn and was so nice to her,” Karen said. “He bent down in front of her at her level, just talking in general and was talking about how God made her for a purpose and that he was letting her know what a special person she is.”
After talking to Kathryn, Swinney then went over to the team and gave them their pep talk and said a prayer. Afterward, the players came over and talked with Kathryn, signed a poster she designed and took pictures.
“These group of guys were gentlemen and so respectful — even after they had just practiced and were all hot and tired, they still took time to come over and talk to Kathryn,” Karen said. “I have always been a Tiger fan, but now I’m an even a bigger fan. This day that they provided for Kathryn meant so much and touched her heart in a way that they will never know.”
The Hicks family would like to say a huge thank you to Swinney and all the players for the kindness that they’ve shown Kathryn and her sisters, Felicia and Kaylin.
“That was a day that we will all remember for the rest of our lives,” Karen said. “Dabo and these guys are Kathryn’s forever friends. We won’t get to go to the Orange Bowl, but you can bet we will be right by the TV cheering on our Tigers.”
Police identify suspect in theft caught on video
PICKENS — After the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office received numerous tips from the public, an arrest warrant was issued last week for a man suspected of stealing a package from the porch of a home in Easley on Dec. 15.
According to a news release from sheriff’s office chief deputy Creed Hashe, a magistrate issued a warrant Dec. 22 for Anthony Ray Tuggle, 39, of 220 Groce Road in Greenville, on an enhanced charge of simple larceny. The enhanced charge came as a result of prior convictions for theft-related incidents.
Tuggle, who had not been arrested as of press time Tuesday, is currently out on bond following an arrest earlier this year on a second-degree burglary charge, Hashe said.
The sheriff’s office had issued a news release the day before the warrant was issued asking for the public’s help identifying a man caught on camera stealing a package.
A home security system captured video of a man in a white van parking at a home on Edgewood Road on the afternoon of Dec. 15, and taking a package that had been delivered to the front porch of the home by the U.S. Postal Service earlier that day.
“The quick response from members of our community in coming forward with helpful information speaks to the positive changes that are occurring daily in our neighborhoods in Pickens County,” sheriff Rick Clark said. “Residents have pulled together to work with law enforcement to rid our county of those that refuse to respect others and continue to steal from the hardworking person that is trying to provide for his or her own family.
“We cannot thank the public enough for their support and their continued trust to work with us in our goal to not allow Pickens County to become as crime-ridden as other areas within our state.”
Sheriff’s office plans checkpoints
The Pickens County Sherriff’s Office has planned a series of sobriety checkpoints around the county on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day later this week.
COUNTY — With the new year dawning this week, the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office has announced locations for sobriety checkpoints planned for Thursday and Friday.
According to a news release issued Monday by the sheriff’s office, sheriff Rick Clark has directed his community action team to focus primarily on the detection of impaired drivers during the holiday weekend.
Launched in 2014, the community action team consists of six deputies who focus on community disorders, ranging from minor traffic complaints to street-level drug sales.
“Routine and random” sobriety checkpoints manned by uniformed deputies in marked sheriff’s office vehicles are planned on Thursday and Friday at the following intersections:
• Walhalla Highway at Terrapin Crossing Road in Pickens
• South Norris Drive at Cook Road in Norris
• Saluda Dam Road at North Fishtrap Road in Easley
• Old Easley Highway at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in Easley
• Farrs Bridge Road at Clear Dawn Drive in Easley
• Moorefield Memorial Highway at Odell Road in Liberty
In addition to normal holiday celebrations, many local residents will gather earlier in the day on Thursday as No. 1 Clemson takes on No. 4 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl with a trip to the National Championship game on the line.
“A lot of our citizens will be attending holiday parties and bowl game gatherings,” Clark said. “We encourage everyone that chooses to consume any alcoholic beverage to have a designated driver and drink responsibly.
“Pickens County has been blessed to not have the history associated with high volumes of accidents and fatalities linked to alcohol as some of our neighboring counties, but to lose one person is just senseless. If the sheriff’s office is able to prevent a single accident or injury during this holiday period, then that is one person that will be given the opportunity to perhaps live another day rather than being a victim in an alcohol-related death.”
Officials ask anyone who sees a vehicle being operation by what appears to be an impaired driver in Pickens County to dial 911 and report the location, description of vehicle and direction of travel so that a unit can be dispatched to investigate.
2015 year in review
COUNTY — It was a year of changes, accomplishments and tragedy in Pickens County. The Courier is looking back over the top stories of 2015 as we head into 2016 this week.
This week’s year-in-review story covers the first six months of the year.[cointent_lockedcontent]
January
The year started with exciting news for a long-awaited project that would retrace the path of the old Pickens Doodle train that formerly ran between Easley and Pickens with a multi-purpose recreational trail.
In January, the city of Easley passed ordinances that would secure funding for the trail. The move by Easley City Council set in motions the vision of the trail becoming a reality before year’s end.
The next step was for the city of Pickens to approve its half of the funding for the project to move forward.
By the end of January, after years of planning and debate, Pickens and Easley officially broke ground on the Doodle Trail in Pickens at the Pickens Rail Yard at 409 E. Cedar Rock Street.
Pickens County also welcomed its first baby of the year, as Abigail Swanger was born at 2:07 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 1, at Baptist Easley. Swanger weighed in at an even 9 pounds and was welcomed by mom Kelly Swanger and two big sisters, ages 9 and 12.
That same week, Dacusville named its 2014 citizen and business of the year. Tom Turner was named citizen of the year. He served the Dacusville Fire Department as a volunteer fireman and was recently elected chairman of the board for the Dacusville Fire Department. The Clock Restaurant of Dacusville was named business of the year.
In other news, despite some problems with Pickens County Council’s decision not to re-establish contracts with local municipal fire departments the Pickens Fire Department continued to answer calls in rural fire districts.
“For no money, free of charge, we will continue to run all the calls for the month of January,” Pickens fire chief Chris Elrod said. “The next (contract) starts Feb. 2 to take that two-mile global around our department and respond to all the activities within that, but I don’t think that one’s going to work either. I‘ve got no indication that (county officials are) interested in that.”
“We put those contracts together just so we would have something in writing. It does not look like the county is interested.”
In other areas of the county, the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office and Town of Six Mile officials held a community watch meeting. The meeting, which was open to all residents of the Six Mile area, featured tips and presentations from sheriff’s office officials, as well as handouts provided by law enforcement.
The Pickens County legislative delegation held its annual meeting with the public in early January at the Carr Center of West End Hall in Easley.
The delegation — consisting of state senators Larry Martin of Pickens and Thomas Alexander and state representatives Gary Clary, Davey Hiott, Neal Collins and Joshua Putnam — heard from a number of residents about their concerns heading into the 2015 session of the South Carolina General Assembly.
Late in the month, hundreds attended a celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Easley Union Missionary Baptist Church pastor the Rev. Artis J. Bufford addressed the public during the celebration in Pickens and challenged his audience to remain active in pursuing King’s dream.
The program was held in front of the Pickens County Courthouse and featured words from Bufford, Pickens County sheriff Rick Clark, Pickens City Councilman Fletcher Perry and Pickens Presbyterian Church pastor Rev. Nath Briley.
Rev. C.L. Cruell provided a rousing recitation of King’s famous “I Have A Dream” speech. A community choir performed “Amazing Grace” and “We Shall Overcome.”
Also later in the month, S.C. House Rep. Davey Hiott, a Pickens native, was named chairman of the Agriculture, Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs Committee of the South Carolina House of Representatives.
Easley city administrator Fox Simons also announced his resignation from the position would come the next month.
Simons, who had worked for the city for the last eight years, stepped down Feb. 13 to accept an assistant city administrator position in Myrtle Beach.
Pickens High School also got a new head football coach in former Blue Flame John Boggs. Like many others his age who grew up in Pickens in the 1970s and 1980s, Boggs remembered attending games at Bruce Field as a boy, watching legendary coach Bill Isaacs lead the Blue Flame through one of the greatest stretches in program history. Boggs got his own chance to lead the next generation of Blue Flame to glory.
February
As 2015 made it into February, officials from Pickens and Easley met at the Pickens Rail Yard to officially break ground on the long-awaited Doodle Trail.
Easley mayor Larry Bagwell recognized the work that Easley city administrator Fox Simons and former Pickens city administrator Katherine Hendricks had put into planning the trail, which was expected to be completed in the spring.
That same week, Pickens County Meals on Wheels broke ground on a new facility in Liberty. Many gathered at the former site of the lunchroom of Liberty Middle School to break ground for Pickens County Meals on Wheels’ new McKissick Center for Senior Wellness.
The facility was donated to Meals on Wheels by Pickens County after the county purchased the entire facility from the School District of Pickens County for various uses.
That same week, Liberty Post Office carrier Lynn Palmer retired. After serving as a city carrier for the past 16 years, Palmer decided to retire and spend her time remodeling houses.
Also in February, local attorney Perry H. Gravely was elected as judge for the 13th Judicial Circuit.
Gravely, who was elected in a joint session of the South Carolina House of Representatives and Senate on Feb. 4, succeeded the Honorable G. Edward Welmaker, who retired after a 10-year tenure on the bench.
The city of Easley passed an agreement to clear up a tax-increment financing dispute with the School District of Pickens County.
The county mourned the loss of Earl Gilstrap Jr. Gilstrap, who served as principal at schools such as Easley Junior High and Daniel High and who once served as an assistant coach at Easley, passed away at age 66 after a battle with brain cancer.
He graduated from Easley High School in 1967. Gilstrap moved on to play for Clemson University and legendary coach Frank Howard. He played there from 1968-1971, as a kicking-team specialist, center and defensive back.
In other Easley-area news in February, after a little more than two months without a head football coach, Easley High School found its man.
The school announced that former Furman University defensive coordinator John Windham would take over the reins for the Green Wave.
Windham, who served as defensive coordinator for the Paladins for the last four seasons, replaced Grayson Howell, who had a 9-14 record in two seasons at Easley before being relieved of coaching duties in November.
By late February, winter was in full force as the county was blanketed in a huge ice storm. The first major winter storm of 2015 dropped a layer of ice over the Southeast on Feb. 16, closing schools and government offices and leaving thousands without power in the Upstate. As of the middle of the day Feb. 17, more than 3,600 Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative customers and more than 5,300 Duke Energy customers in Pickens County were still without power.
It was also announced Easley mayor Larry Bagwell would be inducted into the South Carolina Athletic Administrators Association Hall of Fame. Bagwell and six other honorees were inducted in a ceremony March 15 at the Charleston Marriott.
February ended with the unexpected news that after a little less than six months on the job, Pickens County administrator Matthew Delk announced his resignation.
No reason was given for Delk’s abrupt resignation, and county officials said they could not comment on personnel matters.
Pickens County Council members voted unanimously at a planning retreat to name finance director Ralph Guarino as the interim replacement for Delk as a search was carried out to find a permanent administrator.
Senior Citizens of Pickens received a $115,000 grant from Lt. Governor Henry McMaster for the completion of renovations at the Hagood Community Center.
The center, located at 129 Schoolhouse St. in Pickens, is home to the Pickens Senior Center.
The money, earned thanks to the efforts of a pair of local legislators, Sen. Larry Martin and Rep. Davey Hiott, as well as the director of the Lt. Governor’s Office on Aging, Yancey McGill, was awarded on Feb. 18 in Columbia. Senior Citizens of Pickens treasurer John Howard traveled to Columbia to accept the award from McMaster.
The project included the renovation of the auditorium of the 1929 building.
Winter just kept hammering Pickens County and the Southeast. After the remnants of the last ice storm finally melted away, Pickens County residents woke up to a blanket of snow days later, and much more of the white stuff was forecast to be on the way.
Schools in the county were closed after the first of two winter storm systems expected to hit the region dropped more than an inch of snow in much of the county overnight. According to forecasts, some parts of the Upstate, including most of Pickens County, could see accumulation of up to 8 inches.
March
As March rolled in, the first-ever Gathering on Appalachian Life was held at multiple sites around Pickens. The event drew large crowds to learn about Appalachian customs and traditions of days gone by at sites ranging from the community center to the Hagood Mill, Pickens County Museum and Hagood-Mauldin House.
Pickens County was chosen to receive $44,766 in federal funds to supplement emergency food and shelter programs in the county.
The selection was made by a National Board that is chaired by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Pickens County has distributed emergency food and shelter funds previously with Salvation Army, Clemson Community Care, United Christian Ministries, Golden Harvest Food Bank and SHARE.
Also in March, Pickens County Sheriff Rick Clark announced he had fired a deputy who used a Taser on a man in a wheelchair.
Clark said he terminated Deputy Steven A. Ticknor after determining the second of two Tasers used in an incident in February month should not have been used.
The Greater Pickens Chamber of Commerce held its annual banquet, and Betty McDaniel of Preserving Our Southern Appalachian Music was honored with the Pickens Revitalization Association’s Community Volunteer of the Year Award.
The Pickens County School Board of Trustees turned away a proposed ordinance that would lead to board meetings including public prayers by local members of the ministry.
The policy failed with a 3-3 vote, with board members Judy Edwards, Dr. Brian Swords and Dr. Herbert Cooper voting against it. Alex Saitta, Phillip Bowers and Dr. Henry Wilson voted for the policy.
In other news, a surgical team from Baptist Easley Hospital joined the annual mission trip to the Clinica Christiana in San Juan de la Maguana in the Dominican Republic, sponsored by the First Presbyterian Church of Spartanburg through Solid Rock International last month.
Pickens Elementary School students raised money to give to the Pickens County Humane Society. Humane society director Samantha Gamble visited the school and brought a 4-month-old puppy named Molly to play with the children as thanks. Gamble talked to the Pickens Elementary Cabin Character students about the services the humane society provides for animals and how the humane society finds the animals permanent homes.
April
As April began, after months of discussion, the Pickens County School Board of Trustees gave final approval to a $4.65 million capital needs plan for the 2015-16 academic year.
School district spokesman John Eby said $3.25 million of funding for the plan was generated by refinancing the district’s bonds for the 2006 building program at a lower interest rate.
The Bargain Exchange flea market hosted a car and bike show to raise money for MARYS House, a local shelter for abused women and children.
A Pickens woman credited her four-legged friend with saving her life. Marlene Aiken’s dog Smidget warned that she had fallen into a diabetic coma and got her help. The little dog, which was suffering from a terminal illness, later died, breaking Aiken’s heart from losing her “hometown hero.”
As April progressed, Pickens County sheriff Rick Clark asked the S.C. Law Enforcement Division to conduct an investigation into a Pickens County councilman’s allegation that a former county administrator illegally used county resources.
After less than six months on the job, former administrator Matthew Delk and the county parted ways in February. No reason was given for Delk’s abrupt resignation, and county officials said at the time they could not comment on personnel matters.
But according to documents in Delk’s human resources file obtained by The Courier, the administrator and council members had butted heads as far back as December, when he was issued a written warning that his performance was “deficient” as compared to the standards outlined by the county employee handbook and/or his contract.
In other news, former Daniel High School and Clemson University football player and current NFL wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins gave back to the community by giving out gear to Central Recreation players during a visit back home.
Cannon Memorial Hospital received a new ISO 9001:2008 recertification after successfully passing an audit of its quality management system by DNV Healthcare Inc.
In 2012, Cannon was the first and only hospital system in South Carolina to receive the certification. The ISO certification is good for three years. Currently, only six other hospital systems in South Carolina are DNV accredited.
The Doodle Trail continued to be a focus of news, as Easley City Councilman Chris Mann reported that his committee had been hard at work on routes for the proposed Doodle Trail to enter city limits. While the city’s immediate focus was on two routes, two other routes through downtown were being considered. Mann said he hopes to eventually have all four routes active.
The 31st annual Pickens Azalea Festival kicked off with free family fun, starting with live WSPA broadcasts from Pickens’ Main Street on Your Carolina, Studio 62 and Scene on Seven.
The opening ceremonies began a full day of events, including more than 300 arts and crafts, nonprofit and food and drink vendors, free entertainment on both the amphitheatre and main stages, amusement rides and demonstrations.
The Central Railroad Festival pulled into historic downtown Central on April 25, with music, great food and festivities for all ages.
The Railroad Festival celebrates the rich heritage of Central, so named because the town is situated at the “central” point of the railroad line between Atlanta and Charlotte.
The third week in April saw problems among the members of the Pickens County Republican Party when the South Carolina Republican Party considered a request to nullify the Pickens County GOP Convention after political infighting marred the event, leaving dozens of potential delegates disenfranchised, according to local lawmakers.
In a formal protest letter addressed to the state party’s executive committee and chairman Matt Moore, Sen. Larry Martin, Rep. Neal Collins, Rep. Gary Clary and Rep. Davey Hiott alleged the convention, held at Liberty High School, was marked by “misapplications of state party rules and gross errors of judgment.”
In other rumblings, Pickens County Council considered taking legal action against a local reporter and newspaper chain as a result of a series of articles concerning the departure of former county administrator Matthew Delk.
Sparks were also flaring at Pickens City Council as it was reported that Pickens County’s fee for use of cells in the law enforcement center had increased from $24 a night to $65 a night.
“I’m not real happy about it,” Pickens City Police Chief Rodney Gregory said. “The only police departments it affects are Liberty and ourselves.”
Prayer at Pickens County School Board meetings continued to be a hot-button topic. During the public input session of the board’s last meeting in April, several local residents brought up the issue of prayer before meetings, which had been addressed at the last school board meeting.
A board vote in March on a revised prayer policy ended in a 3-3 tie, meaning the issue failed.
The Rev. Tony Qualkinbush, a former school board candidate, used his time during public session to pray.
Pickens mourned the loss of longtime community leader and former local newspaper owner David Hiott, who died April 27 at age 89.
A 1942 graduate of Pickens High School, Hiott served in the U.S. Navy before going to printing school in Nashville, Tenn., where he took a linotype course.
He later returned to Pickens to work at the Pickens Sentinel, which his father, Gary, had purchased in 1927.
May
An estimated 5,000 people turned out for Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative’s annual meeting of members in May, hosted at the utility’s Pickens equipment facility.
The nearly 3,000 members who registered for the event each received a cast-iron skillet embossed with the cooperative’s 75th anniversary logo. The event was followed that weekend by The 18th annual Blue Ridge Fest at Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative’s headquarters in Pickens. The festival boasted the largest classic car cruise-in event in the Upstate, along with a Beach Night show and dance.
Easley city council members met in the first meeting in May and decided to hire Stephen Steese as city administrator, according to Mayor Larry Bagwell. Steese was selected from 47 applicants to replace departing administrator Fox Simons.
Perry Gravely of Pickens was sworn in as the newest 13th Circuit judge during a special investiture ceremony at the Pickens County Courthouse. The honorable judge Victor Pyle administered the oath of office, while Gravely’s wife, Kathryn, held the Bible as he recited the oath.
Southern Wesleyan University’s School of Education recently received accreditation for seven years — until 2021 — under the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) standards.
The long-awaited grand opening ceremony for the Doodle Trail was also held in May. The celebration, held at 514 Fleetwood Drive in Easley, included words from both Pickens mayor David Owens and Easley mayor Larry Bagwell, as well as the unveiling of the logo for the trail, a ribbon cutting and giveaways.
Friends and family waited in hushed silence in the small cemetery at Mountain Grove Baptist Church in Pickens as Kenneth Nabors, president of the Pickens Historical Society, dressed as a soldier in the Upcountry Militia, gently lifted the black cloth covering the tombstone of revolutionary war patriot Benjamin Barton.
More than 1,000 Pickens County students received their diplomas in graduation ceremonies. Each of the four county high schools hosted its own ceremony in its football stadium.
The Daniel High School community also remembered Matthew Robinson as an excellent student who loved being a part of the school’s marching band. Robinson, 16, of Central, was killed in a single-car collision on Brookbend Road at Maw Bridge Road near Central on May 19, Pickens County coroner Kandy Kelley said. His sister, who was the only passenger, was injured but survived.
Organizers gathered in May at the Hagood Community Center to dedicate the remodeled building to community service. The center also received a $2,500 donation from Leadership Pickens County as a 2015 class project.
The site, originally known as Ben Hagood Elementary School, and before that Pickens Mill Elementary School, was leased to the city of Pickens in 1990. The site was operated by Seniors Unlimited until that organization ran into financial difficulties in 2011.
June
June started with a huge announcement by a Pickens County native, as U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham returned to his hometown of Central, telling a throng of supporters gathered on Main Street he was running for U.S. president.
In Easley, mayor Larry Bagwell announced that Maj. Tim Tollison would be the new chief of the Easley Police Department. Bagwell said Tollison was selected over quality candidates such as Maj. Richard Zapel from Savannah, Ga., and Salem police chief David Poulson.
At least two Pickens County School Board trustees were confident in June that the board could address continued concerns from AdvancED in a manner that will be satisfactory to the accreditation agency.
The findings cited by the agency led to fears by district officials and supporters that the school district could lose its accreditation. But Phillip Bowers — one of the board’s newest members after being elected in November along with Henry Wilson — said he felt there were positives from the report that should be emphasized.
A bill establishing a seventh member on the Pickens County School Board proposed by State Reps Gary Clary of Clemson and Neal Collins of Easley passed third reading in the House and was sent to the Senate in early June. The bill was proposed in reaction to increased concerns a recent AdvancED report stated the school district’s failure to take corrective action on several issues could lead to the loss of accreditation.
On the anniversary of D-Day, Pickens County paid tribute to its four Medal of Honor recipients and honored their families. County officials designated June 6 as Congressional Medal of Honor Dedication Day, and a handful of celebrations marked the occasion.
The day began with a ceremony at the newly renovated Liberty Civic Auditorium, where retired U.S. Marine Corp Maj. Gen. James Livingston, a Medal of Honor recipient, spoke and a biographical video about Pickens County’s four recipients was shown.
After nearly 18 years on the force, Pickens police chief Rodney Gregory announced in June that he would be stepping down from his position the following month. Gregory, who said he began his law enforcement career at the Pickens Police Department in July 1997 under chief Wendell Jenkins, worked his way through the ranks, from road patrol officer to chief.
The Jocassee Gorges field office in northern Pickens County was dedicated as the Sam W. Stokes Work Center in honor of retired wildlife biologist Sam W. Stokes Sr.
“Sam Stokes is truly a living legend among wildlife biologists in the Palmetto State and also among everyone in the South Carolina conservation community,” S.C. Department of Natural Resources director Alvin Taylor said.
School District of Pickens County teachers got an overdue pay increase at no extra cost to county taxpayers under the district’s 2015-16 budget, which passed its final reading in June. The school board gave the budget its final OK by a 5-1 vote at its regular June meeting, with board member Alex Saitta casting the lone dissenting vote.
As the world mourned for the nine victims in the wake of the June 17 shooting at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, Southern Wesleyan University mourned the loss of an employee and alumna. DePayne Doctor, admissions coordinator at Southern Wesleyan’s Charleston learning center, was in historic Emanuel AME Church and was among the shooting victims.
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SDPC seeking input on calendar options
By Greg Oliver
Courtesy The Journal
goliver@upstatetoday.com
EASLEY — Two versions of the School District of Pickens County calendar for the 2016-17 academic year are currently under consideration by the district. However, officials are also seeking public input before a final decision is made.
The Normal Start Calendar, based on current South Carolina law, requires school begin no earlier than the third Monday in August. The Early Start Calendar has been prepared in the event the state legislature approves a change in South Carolina law that would allow school to begin a week earlier.
School district officials say they support such a change in order to have as many school days as possible before Christmas holiday break and before standardized tests are administered in the spring.
Included in the Normal Start Calendar are Aug. 10-12 as Professional Learning Days for teachers and Aug. 15 as the first day of school for students. The Thanksgiving holiday would be observed Nov. 23-25, while Christmas break would take place from Dec. 19-30.
Spring break would be observed from April 10-14, and inclement weather days would consist of March 7, April 7 and June 5, in that order.
Educators say exams under the Normal Start Calendar would be Dec. 3-6, while second-semester exams would take place May 30-June 2. Graduation ceremonies would be scheduled for May 27. Holidays for Labor Day and Election Day, the latter set for Nov. 8, as well as students being off for teacher in-service, are also included in the calendar.
Under the Early Start Calendar, teachers would attend Professional Learning Day activities from Aug. 1-5, with Aug. 8 the first day for students. Thanksgiving, Christmas holiday and spring break would remain the same as the Normal Start Calendar, while graduation would take place May 20 — a week earlier than the other calendar — and inclement weather days are March 24, April 7 and April 17, in that order.
Holidays for Labor Day and Election Day, as well as in-service days that are off days for students, are also included.
“We appreciate feedback on all aspects of the calendar, including starting and end dates, length of holiday breaks and placement of professional learning days,” district spokesman John Eby said, adding that the school board typically makes a final decision around the end of January.
To provide feedback, contact Eby at johneby@pickens.k12.sc.us.
Rec dept. set to start volleyball, soccer signups in January
PICKENS — The Pickens Recreation Department will take registrations for the spring volleyball and soccer seasons during the month of January.
Signups for both sports will begin Jan. 4 at the Pickens Recreation Center on Sangamo Road in Pickens and run through Jan. 29.[cointent_lockedcontent]
For volleyball, the following age divisions are offered: 7-9, 10-12, 13-14 and 15-17.
For soccer, coed age divisions offered will include 5-6, 7-8, 9-10 and 11-12. Depending on the size of leagues, the top two division may be combined.
Birthdate cutoff for both sports is Sept. 1, 2015.
Following registration, a skills/evaluation day will be held for each age division in each sport. The registration fee provides a jersey to be kept, and the fee is $45 for in-city residents and $55 for out-of-city residents. Birth certificates are required at registration.
If you are interested in coaching or need more information, contact the recreation department at (864) 878-2296.
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Martin among MADD’s Legislators of the Year
By Greg Oliver
Courtesy The Journal
goliver@upstatetoday.com
PICKENS — State Sen. Larry Martin of Pickens is among 70 lawmakers across the country who have been recognized by Mothers Against Drunk Driving for their efforts in authoring legislation designed to crack down on drunk driving.
Martin was recognized for authoring three separate Senate bills related to alcohol server training, improving field sobriety test requirements and improving the interlock law.
Fellow South Carolina state senators Joel Lourie and Brad Hutto, as well as state representatives Rick Quinn, Ralph Norman and Anne Thayer, were also recognized by MADD.
“You need a strong advocacy group like that, and they’ve filled a need,” Martin said. “I think our alcohol-related driving statistics still reflect a strong concern, but we’re working on that. We’re not turning away from that.
“It affects every one of us driving down the road — you never know when you’re going to encounter one of those drivers.”
Martin said one of his bills allow for a convicted drunk driver to have an interlock device on their vehicle that prevents them from driving while drunk.
“It enables those folks to continue to work, but restricts their ability to have any alcohol at all,” he said. “This does not analyze blood alcohol levels, but detects any alcohol (which prevents the driver from using the vehicle).”
Martin said the bill he introduced regarding road sobriety tests, which he hopes will be passed during the upcoming legislative session that begins in January, could circumvent “some very strange court rulings made in the past.”
“They seem to believe the statute requires the person to be visible in the video the entire time,” Martin said. “If they’re walking along the edge and stumble out of camera view, we’ve had some cases dismissed since the motion said the statute required a complete video.
“We’re trying to bring an element of common sense. If you have a BAC where the driver is obviously drunk, there should be no absolute requirement. If they’ve been caught on video for part of the time and given ample justification for the arrest through a field sobriety test, that should be sufficient.”
The issue of powdered alcohol was also addressed in legislation led by Martin that banned its sales in South Carolina. As a result, 25 other states have joined the Palmetto State in passing similar legislation.
“I think it is common sense,” Martin said. “Powdered alcohol has so much potential for use and misuse, especially for young people, and we don’t need another substance on the market that is going to create issues for our young people. There’s no shortage of alcohol for people to buy, and we don’t need it in another form.”
MADD was founded 36 years ago by a mother whose daughter was killed by a drunk driver. According to its website, the organization is the nation’s largest nonprofit working to protect families from drunk driving, drugged driving and underage drinking.
MADD also supports drunk and drugged victims and survivors at no charge through victim advocates with the organization and its 24-hour victim helpline at 1-877-MADD-HELP.
In spite of proactive measures taken by MADD to reduce DUI and the deaths that often result (cut in half since the organization was founded in 1980), statistics show there is still much work to be done.
Statistics provided by MADD include the following: each day, people drive drunk almost 300,000 times, but fewer than 4,000 are arrested; almost half of all drivers killed in crashes and tested positive for drugs had alcohol in their system; almost one-third of all drivers arrested or convicted of drunk driving are repeat offenders; and drunk driving costs the United States $199 billion a year.
MADD says the public can also take action to advance lifesaving legislation by going to www.madd.org/takeaction.
Norris nominated for national award
COLUMBIA — Toyota of Easley president Tommy Norris has been nominated for the 2016 TIME Dealer of the Year award.
[cointent_lockedcontent]Norris is one of a select group of 50 dealer nominees from across the country who will be honored at the 99th annual National Automobile Dealer Association Convention and Exposition in Las Vegas on April 1.
The announcement of this year’s nominees was made by TIME publisher Meredith Long and Ally Financial president of auto finance Tim Russi.
The TIME Dealer of the Year award is one of the most prestigious and highly coveted honors in the auto sales industry. Recipients are among the nation’s most successful auto dealers who also demonstrate a longstanding commitment to community service.
Norris, 68, was chosen to represent the South Carolina Automobile Dealers Association in the national competition — one of only 50 auto Dealers from 16,000 nationwide — nominated for the 47th annual award. The award is sponsored by TIME in association with Ally Financial, and in cooperation with NADA.
A panel of faculty members from the Tauber Institute for Global Operations at the University of Michigan will select one finalist from each of the four NADA regions and one national Dealer of the Year.
“The most rewarding aspect of my career has been mentoring people,” Norris said. “I have had no greater satisfaction in the automobile business than to watch people grow and become successful in this business.”
Norris graduated from Greer High School in 1965. A friend suggested that he apply for a sales position at Fairway Ford in Greenville in 1967, and he got the job. He worked as a general manager at Toyota of Greenville and back as sales manager for Fairway Ford before leaving to found Toyota of Easley in 1980.
“I can’t tell you how many people that I have seen start out in entry-level positions at Fairway Ford, Toyota of Greenville and Toyota of Easley and then watched them work their way up through the ranks,” Norris said. “Many still work with me, and some went on to hold high-ranking positions at other dealerships. Some even own their own stores now.”
Norris’ son, Ryan, is now a partner in running the dealership, which has won the Toyota President’s Award 26 times, according to Norris.
“It is the highest award that is given by Toyota to dealers that meet the strict criteria each year,” he said. “It speaks volumes about our wonderful associates and how they serve our customers in an exceptional way. This award is a true report card on how good of a job we are doing in taking care of our employees and our customers.”
The great success of Toyota of Easley has allowed Norris to support his community in many significant ways.
“Over the past 30 years, we have given more than $1 million to different charities in our local area,” he said. “I think it is very important to give back to the people that have made us successful and have supported us.”
He donates to Pickens County Meals on Wheels, Prevent Child Abuse Pickens County, MARYS House in Easley and the Dream Center of Pickens County, to name a few. Norris recently contributed $22,000 to the YMCA of Easley, Pickens and Powdersville following a dealership charity drive during which he donated $100 for each new and used car sold during the month of May each year.
“We don’t plan to stop giving any time soon,” Norris said.
Norris was nominated for the TIME Dealer of the Year award by Sims Floyd, executive vice president of the South Carolina Automobile Dealers Association.
Norris and his wife, Vickie, have two children and six grandchildren.
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Potential coal ash dump poses threat to citizens
The last thing we need in Pickens County is a coal ash dump. But it seems we’re in danger of acquiring one. On the face of things, it appears that there’s been some subterfuge on the part of the company proposing the project, as there was nothing about disposing of coal ash in the initial proposal.
Coal ash contains substances that can contaminate ground water and subsequently constitute a public health hazard. To date, seepage from 300 coal ash dumps has contaminated drinking water.
Arsenic, mercury and lead are three of the substances in coal ash. All three cause major problems in both humans and wildlife.
No amount of lead consumption is acceptable. Certain levels of arsenic and mercury can cause cancer and heart, lung, nervous system and brain damage.
Unfortunately for us, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, “Under South Carolina regulations, fly ash, bottom ash, slag and flue gas emission control waste generated primarily from the combustion of coal or other fossil fuels are exempt from regulation as hazardous waste. Regulations authorizing reuse of coal combustion byproducts, (CCBs) were drafted in 1994 by the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) but have reportedly been abandoned. According to SCDHEC, it may proceed instead with reuse regulations for all industrial solid wastes, including CCBs.”
Anyone can go online and research the matter.
At this date, no public hearing has been held. It is my understanding that the permit issued the company to construct a waste disposal site near the county’s industrial park contained no language giving permission to accept coal ash. The initial permit was issued for construction waste.
I believe this is called bait and switch.
Around 70 percent of all coal ash dump sites are located in low-income communities. South Carolina already has more than her fair share.
So why compound the problem?
Experience shows us that no matter what a company claims, the risks to human life far outweigh the benefits.
On one hand, thousands of lives are put at risk. On the benefit side, a few shareholders rake in some profits. Which is more important?
A company can claim the risk is negligible. It can say if liners are properly installed, there is no seepage. But that’s a pretty big if.
Especially if the company serves as its own watchdog and there’s no real scientific oversight.
Nationwide, billions of dollars have been spent trying to make contaminated drinking water safe. Our county has already suffered countless misery from the PCB contamination of the Twelve Mile River.
It will take more than four centuries for the PCBs to break down and become harmless.
What can we do? Contact your state legislature and ask for state regulation for coal ash. If a public hearing is scheduled, make sure you know when and where and show up.
Talk to your county council representatives to find out what the county can legally do to oppose the coal ash dump.
Remember, it only takes a few minutes to make a phone call. We can’t sit back and expect other people to take care of the problem, because sometimes other people think the same thing.
I hope we can find a way to prevent this. Sometimes we can make good things happen.
Letters to the Editor 12-30-15
Inner Space
Dear Editor,
We know more about what’s out there in space than we do about what lies below our very feet.
For all we know, there may be giant cathedral-size caverns just below our dwelling places.
In Florida not long ago, I read where a man was asleep in bed and his entire bedroom fell into a sink hole some 100 feet across. He was never found.
It’s like we’re living on the front porch of a house and we’ve just looked into the windows and have only gone in that house as far as the living room.
There may be all kinds of beauty just below us we don’t know about — cascading waterfalls, rivers or stalactites and stalagmites hundreds of feet tall.
There could also be unknown civilizations living just below us. Civilizations of advanced beings. You never can tell.
At one time there was a belief that the Earth was hollow. Some thought if you went to the North Pole, you could go into the Earth and find a tropical paradise.
Admiral Byrd flew over the North Pole and proved that false.
Still, I believe we have an unknown world below.
Maybe not tropical, but a dark world devoid of light.
There are fish swimming in the rivers that are there. Trout have been found by cave explorers which are without eyes. The fish, not the explorers.
It would seem by living in a constant dark atmosphere, they adapted by being born with no eyes, just white spaces where eyes would have been. What other beings may live there?
What else is down there? Perhaps Bigfoot? We’re too busy as a race to think about that. We’re too worried about what’s out there beyond the solar system instead.
If you are a young person reading this, think about someday forming a movement to go below and explore. Make sure you know how to properly exsplore first. Don’t want you becoming lost, never to be seen again! There are many mysteries no doubt waiting on you to be solved truly. More than enough territory to explore as well. Enough for generations to come. The adventures of a lifetime await you — just go below. What stories you could tell to the world.
Will you be one of the first to go?
P.S. Let’s not forget the Oceans.
Two-thirds of the Earth is covered in water. What lies beneath there remains to be discovered!
Eddie Boggs
Westminster