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Monthly Archives: May 2016

Blue/White game rescheduled for Monday

PICKENS — Pickens High School football will make its return to historic Bruce Field as the Blue Flame’s annual Blue/White game is scheduled for Monday May 23, at 6 p.m.

Germany company to build North American headquarters in Pickens County

By Jason Evans

Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

PICKENS COUNTY – A new neighbor is moving into the “world-class neighborhood” that is the Pickens County Commerce Park.

era-contact GmbH, a world market leader in electrical railway couplings, will be locating its North American manufacturing headquarters in Pickens County.

GermanyThe $3.4 million investment is expected to create 45 new jobs in Pickens County, era-contact USA Managing Director Jochen Kurz said Wednesday morning.

Company officials toured the Pickens County Commerce Park earlier this year, he said.

“We saw the neighbors, we saw the construction going on here and we were absolutely impressed,” Kurz said. “It was love at first sight.”

That visit led to a handshake agreement between Alliance Pickens Director Ray Farley and company founder Erich Aichele.

“That is not normal in our business,” Kurz said.

Farley agreed. He said after company officials’ “really, really good two-day visit” to the area, including meetings with county officials and officials with the Pickens County Career and Technology Center, Aichele told him he was ready to sign contracts then and there.

Farley said he had to tell Aichele that there were hoops to go through first, including three readings of ordinances regarding incentives. But the two men did shake hands, agreeing to go back to their bosses – Pickens County Council and Frau Aichele, respectively.

“All of this from a handshake,” Farley said. “Once we did the handshake, the real work started.”

“Now we are back here in Pickens County to sign the contracts,” Kurz said. The Pickens County facility is expected to be operational in 2017.

Kurz gave a brief overview of era-contact and its parent, the Aichele Group.

The company currently employs 720 employees at 8 locations on 4 continents. Locations include Germany, China, Turkey and Tunisia. The company has a small sales facility in Hauppage, New York, but all North American operations will be located in Pickens County.

“The business is growing and growing,” Kurz said. Locating in Upstate South Carolina will allow the company to better serve its customers, which include BMW and Siemmens.

“We are customer-oriented,” Kurz said.

The Pickens County Career and Technology Center’s work goes hand-in-hand with the company’s philosophies, combining theory with hands-on best practices.

“It’s something we were very impressed with,” Kurz said. “It’s our intention to bring young people into our facility to educate them on best practices, practical issues and the theoretical things that have at the Technology Center. That’s the next step. That’s very important for us.”

Farley said the company will join the Commerce Park’s neighborhood of leaders in their field – including Adidas, Taylormade, Reliable Automatic Sprinkler Co. and more.

Before the announcement, Pickens County Council held a special called meeting where they passed some incentives for the company, including a fee in lieu of tax agreement.

“Now for the fun part,” County Council Chairwoman Jennifer Willis said as she adjourned the meeting. With that, the veil was lifted on the economic development previously known only as “Project: Big Apple.”

“The most successful businesses are those who adapt and innovate and add value to their customers,” Willis said. “era-contact GmbH is an international, state-of-the art manufacturing company.”

era-contact is headquartered in Bretton, Germany. The company manufactures products for transmitting signals, data and power in small spaces. These applications are used in subways, rail and automotive industries.

“era-contact GmbH is a world leader in an electrical railway and subway couplings, ” Willis said. “They earned this market position with laser-like focus on their product, their customers and their goals. This world leader could have gone anywhere, and yet they chose Pickens County. Why? Because Pickens County Council understands business.”

Farley agreed. “County Council worked very doggedly to expedite getting us to where we are today,” he said.

When businesses succeed and grow, “every one of our citizens benefit directly and indirectly,” Willis said.

The initial structure will be a 38,000 sq/ft facility, with room to grow up to 90,000 sq/ft. Job application information will become available as construction of the manufacturing facility nears completion.

Company founder Erich Aichele thanked everyone for their support and said he hoped they could have an opening ceremony sometime next year.

After the announcement, attendees enjoyed cake in honor of Frau Aichele’s recent birthday.

 

Easley shooting raises questions

By Greg Oliver
Courtesy The Journal

goliver@upstatetoday.com

EASLEY — The Pickens County Sheriff’s Office is continuing its investigation into the shooting of an Easley woman last Wednesday that ultimately led to the shooter taking his own life.

Chief deputy Creed Hashe said Thursday the sheriff’s office is still seeking answers into the unexplained shooting of a 45-year-old female resident on Robert P. Jeanes Road. The shooting occurred at approximately 11:57 a.m. as the victim was struck by shotgun pellets fired at her while standing on her front porch.

“The victim advised deputies that she was shot by a neighbor that lived across the street for unknown reasons,” Hashe said in a prepared statement. “There were no previous interactions or communications between the two that have been discovered by sheriff’s detectives at this stage into the investigation.”

Calvin Joseph Benton Jr., 59, who was found dead by authorities, was positively identified by the victim at the hospital by means of a photo lineup. A judge had issued an arrest warrant for Benton on the charge of attempted murder.

The victim was treated and released from Greenville Memorial Hospital.

A preliminary investigation regarding a timeline of events was also provided by Hashe, stating that the victim was shot while standing on the front porch of her residence with her dog. But the chief deputy said the victim was able to walk back out on the porch to retrieve her cellphone, which had been dropped as she was shot the first time.

Hashe said the victim was shot a second time but able to see the shooter standing in his yard across the street. She recognized him as the neighbor as he yelled at her, stating, “If you want, I’ll shoot you again,” but did not know the shooter’s name.

Deputies were dispatched to the scene shortly before noon, with the first deputy quickly interviewing the victim. Additional deputies arrived to assist and approach the residence where the shooter was believed to be inside.

Around noon, deputies spotted the male subject standing in the doorway of a residence on Robert P. Jeanes Road. While attempting to engage the subject in conversation, deputies reported he appeared “agitated and confrontational.” Deputies stated the subject refused to exit the residence and made statements indicating he was armed.

After the subject slammed and locked the door, the sheriff’s office deployed its Special Weapons and Tactics team, which secured nearby streets.

At 12:45 p.m., Hashe said the sheriff’s office crisis negotiation team proceeded to attempt making contact with the subject in residence, with numerous phone calls, but no contact. Additional attempts to contact the subject via a public address system and bullhorn also proved unsuccessful.

During that time, sheriff’s detectives presented information to the Pickens County magistrate who, in turn, issued a search warrant for the residence under the premise of locating the assailant and or evidence from the shooting.

At 2:32 p.m., the shooter was positively identified and a judge issued an arrest warrant for Benton. At 3:10 p.m., the tactical team inserted less-lethal chemical munitions into the residence in an effort to persuade the subject to surrender.

Hashe said officers forced entry into the residence at 3:36 p.m. following failed attempts to persuade the subject to communicate or surrender. The house was found to be barricaded with plywood in multiple locations.

Two minutes later, officers gained entry and found Benton deceased, face down in the front room of the residence with no one else inside. At 4 p.m., Hashe said the scene was processed by the forensics team and four weapons located and seized from the residence — including two 12-gauge shotguns, two semi-automatic handguns. Both pistols and one shotgun were found loaded and within arm’s reach of the suspect. One of the pistols was discovered inside the pants pocket of the subject.

Hashe said there were no visible signs of trauma found on Benton.

 

Liberty wreck kills 3-year-old

LIBERTY — A 3-year-old girl was killed in a car accident Sunday.

Pickens County coroner Kandy Kelley identified the victim as Lillian Valerie Griffin, 3, of Seth Court in Liberty.

The two-car fatal collision occurred on Five Forks Road in Liberty at around 11:20 a.m. Sunday, according to Lance Cpl. Tony Keller of the South Carolina Highway Patrol.

The collision occurred as a 2004 Chevrolet pickup driven by a 36-year-old Liberty woman collided with a 2006 Jeep SUV driven by a 23-year-old Liberty man. The two drivers were injured and transported to Greenville Memorial Hospital.

Kelley said Lillian was restrained in a car seat in the back seat of the SUV. She died of blunt-force trauma at the scene of the accident.

The South Carolina Highway Patrol’s MAIT team is still investigating the accident. The Highway Patrol did not give any additional details about the collision.

 

Feed a Hungry Child Sunday planned for this weekend

Donations will help local group feed students in need

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

PICKENS COUNTY — For many students, weekends mean staying up later, going out with friends and having fun.

For some, weekends mean going hungry.

For some students, lunch at school on Friday afternoon may be the last time they eat until they return to school on Monday morning.

For the last six years, a small group of dedicated local volunteers have been fighting this problem.

This Sunday, Feed a Hungry Child Pickens County will ask area church congregations to take up a second collection to help them continue to feed hungry students on the weekends.

Just before she retired as principal of A.R. Lewis Elementary School, Kathy Brazinski and her staff began looking at students coming into the health room week after week to see when they were coming in and why they were coming in.

“There were more kids coming to the health room on Monday mornings, and they were hungry,” Brazinski said. “It was mostly Monday mornings. They would say they didn’t have any food.”

Unloading at schoolBrazinski received a small grant that enabled her school to provide meals for the 15 children in need.

“That last semester, we were able to feed those kids on the weekends,” she said.

Courtesy Photo
Feed a Hungry Child Pickens County volunteers unload food for area students. The food goes home with the students on Fridays.

Milledge Cassell heard about the need at A.R. Lewis and also about a program in the Rock Hill school district that fed students district-wide.

“Milledge Cassell has been the key driver in all of this. He’s been phenomenal,” Brazinski said. “He said to me, ‘Do you think we can get some people together and do this all over Pickens County?’ I said, ‘Well, we can sure try.’”

With that, Feed a Hungry Child Pickens County was born. McKissick Elementary was the first school it served, helping 100 students that first year.

“It has grown,” Brazinski said.

The program, now in its sixth year, currently serves 634 students.

“We have just about increased our numbers by a hundred students a year,” she said.

The program started out with elementary schools. It now serves 15 of the 16 elementary schools in the county.

“Dacusville (Elementary) has chosen to serve their own students,” Brazinski said. “They have a very strong PTA and a church that is funding them.”

In addition to its elementary schools, Feed a Hungry Child Pickens County also serves Pickens Middle School, R.C. Edwards Middle School, Daniel High School and Liberty High School.

“Why we’re not serving everybody is because of the cost,” Brazinski said. “It costs us about $130,000 a year to feed these children.”

Most of the children served are in the poverty range, she said.

The program buys food in bulk from Golden Harvest Food Bank. Volunteers purchase additional food to give to the middle and high school students.

“What they provide is not ample for a middle or high school student,” Brazinski said.

Two volunteers drive to Golden Harvest’s facility in Piedmont to get the food. Thanks to the generosity of Doris Dalton, who donated one of her mini-warehouses, the group has a place to store the food safely and securely.

“We have drivers, our volunteers, who come and pick up the food and also deliver it to the schools,” Brazinski said.

The group works with school guidance counselors and social workers to identify the students in need.

“It’s very discreet,” Brazinski said.

The food, enough to see them through the weekend, is given to the students on Fridays. It costs a little more than $6 to feed each student per weekend, Brazinski said.

The economy’s slow growth means the need is still there.

“We really felt like, with the economy, thinking the economy was getting better, that we would not have so many kids in need, but it has just continuously increased,” Brazinski said.

The reasons students are in need of food are many.

“There were a lot of reasons they weren’t eating,” Brazinski said. “You couldn’t pinpoint just one.”

In some cases, unemployed parents take their children off the program when one parent finds a job, only to return to the program a few weeks later.

“They tell us, ‘We can’t make it on one salary,’” Brazinski said. “It’s not always because the parents are negligent, it’s because the economy is so bad.”

The program has helped attendance increase at county schools.

“One of the issues with students who are at risk, they are often out of school on Fridays,” Brazinski said. “Since Fridays are the day they get their food, attendance has increased.”

This Sunday, May 22, has been designated as Feed a Hungry Child Sunday, Brazinski said.

“We try to reach as many churches as we can to ask them if they would take up a second collection for Feed a Hungry Child,” she said. “Anybody who wants to make a donation can make it to Feed a Hungry Child Pickens County, P.O. Box 1573, Pickens, SC, 29671.”

Donors will receive a receipt for their donation.

“We are a 501(c)3,” Brazinski said. “90 percent of what we take in goes directly to the kids.”

The program receives no district, state or federal funding, Brazinski said, but rather relies strictly on grants and donations.

She said the group hopes to raise $15,000-$20,000 from this year’s Feed a Hungry Child Sunday.

The program has received grants from Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative, Dabo Swinney’s All-In Foundation, The Reserve at Lake Keowee, Wal-Mart, the Pickens Women’s Association and the Southeast Grocer’s Association.

Since its inception, the program has been run by a nine-member board and several volunteers.

Recently, the group hired Diane Rowe part-time to be a point of contact with the schools, Golden Harvest and the volunteers.

“It’s just been a small group of us, all going in different directions,” Brazinski said. “We just wanted to get the kids fed — that was our goal. Having somebody to help out will be great. We can reach a little wider.”

Volunteers themselves get no reimbursement, Brazinski said.

“They’ve donated their time, talent and treasure,” she said.

For more information or to donate online, visit pickenschildren.com.

 

Administrator: No state plan for Zika

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

PICKENS COUNTY — The state of South Carolina doesn’t seem to be taking the Zika virus very seriously — and that’s worrisome to some county officials.

Interim county administrator Tom Hendricks addressed the issue during his report to county council members at their May 2 meeting.

The virus can cause Zika virus disease, also known as Zika.

The virus is spread primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito, according to the Centers for Disease Control. The most common symptoms of Zika are fever, rash, joint pain and conjunctivitis (red eyes).

Illness associated with Zika is usually mild, with symptoms lasting for several days to a week.

According to the CDC, people suffering from Zika rarely get sick enough to go to the hospital. Zika is rarely fatal.

Due to the mildness of the illness, many people do not realize they have been infected.

The CDC says that Zika virus infection can be very serious during pregnancy. Zika virus infection during pregnancy can cause a serious birth defect called microcephaly, as well as other severe fetal brain defects.

He said the county sent some representatives to a briefing on the virus in Columbia.

Hendricks said the state does not have a program or a plan regarding the Zika virus.

“Their first announcement was that they have no money,” Hendricks said.

He said county staff have taken information about mosquitos, West Nile virus and the Zika virus and created a pamphlet.

“We’re going to give these out to nursing homes, to the school bus drivers and the day care agencies,” Hendricks said. “Basically, it’s some commonsense stuff on how to keep yourself as safe as possible.”

The pamphlet advises readers to avoid mosquito bites by wearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants and stay in places with air conditioning and window and door screens to keep mosquitoes outside.

It also urges local residents to control mosquitoes in their homes and yards by emptying any containers of standing water. Mosquitos lay eggs near standing water.

County councilman Neil Smith asked Hendricks if the county had the ability to spray for mosquitos “if we need to, if the federal government finally decides this is more of a danger to us.”

Smith said he’s been to Florida several times recently and heard about a lot of spraying and “a lot of movement” by state government regarding the Zika virus there.

Two cities in Pickens County spray for mosquitos on alternate weeks, Hendricks said.

“Back many years ago, we had a countywide spray system with the county,” he said. “If it came to it, yes sir, if it became necessary for us to have a countywide spray program, we could do it. What I’ve found out from my last 60-something days, we can pretty much do anything if we put our nose to it.”

Hendricks said “there’s a lot of uncomfortable feelings” about the way the Zika virus is being explained by the federal government and the Center for Disease Control.

“I don’t know if that’s the normal stuff or if we do have a problem where they’re not explaining everything they need to explain to us,” Hendricks said.

For other Zika prevention tips, visit http://www.cdc.gov/zika/prevention/index.html.

 

2 charged with neglect after child’s drug test

By Greg Oliver
Courtesy The Journal

goliver@upstatetoday.com

CENTRAL — A Central couple were arrested and charged recently after Pickens County deputies executing an eviction order at an Easley home discovered a small quantity of marijuana in the presence of a small child under the age of 5.

Creed Hashe, chief deputy of the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office, said Thursday that Melissa Renee Brooks, 20, and Jerry Daniel Hopkins, 19, both of Creekside Drive, were charged with unlawful neglect of a child. Both were released from jail on $10,000 personal recognizance bonds.

Hashe said a joint investigation into the incident with the Department of Social Services resulted in the charges after the child tested positive for traces of cocaine and marijuana. The eviction order that led to the discovery took place on Walnut Hill Drive in Easley.

Arrest warrants state that on March 30, the couple used illegal drugs in the presence of the child. Warrants further state the test revealed the presence of benzoylecgonine, cocaine and marijuana and that the defendant and co-defendant were primary caregivers of the child.

Hashe said Brooks and Hopkins are no longer caregivers for the child, who has since been placed into alternative care.

 

Barton, King earn state track crowns

Courtesy Photos
(LEFT) Daniel High School senior Laurie Barton broke the Class AAA girls’ state record in the 800-meter run on the way to her third consecutive state championship in the event. (RIGHT) Liberty High School sophomore Keyshawn King won his first Class AA state championship in the triple jump over the weekend at the South Carolina State Track Meet at Spring Valley High School.

COLUMBIA — A pair of record-breaking local athletes wrapped up the 2016 high school track and field season with individual state championships over the weekend at Spring Valley High School.

Daniel High School senior Laurie Barton, a Virginia Tech signee, won her third consecutive Class AAA championship in the girls’ 800-meter run at the state meet, breaking the state record along the way with a time of 2:09.62. Barton also earned silver medals as part of a pair of relay teams for the Lady Lions.

Meanwhile, Liberty High School sophomore Keyshawn King, who already holds the school’s triple jump record after breaking the mark of 45 feet, 11 inches held by his father, Kevin King, earned his first statewide gold medal, winning the event in the AA meet with a distance of 47 feet, 8 inches, improving upon his school record. King, who finished fourth in the triple jump at the state meet a year ago and earned all-region honors with a first-place finish in the Skyline AA meet last month, is also a two-year starter for the Red Devils’ basketball team.

Barton led the way for a strong performance from the Daniel girls’ team, as the Lady Lions took second overall behind state champion Beaufort.

Seventh-grader Ally Wilson also had a strong day for Daniel, taking second behind Barton in the 800-meter run, third in the 1,600-meter run and helping the team’s 4×400-meter and 4×800-meter relay teams to second-place finishes as well. Lady Lions eighth-grader Mari Cagle Lockhart finished fourth in the 3,200-meter run, while senior Chyna Cannon also earned points for Daniel with a fourth-place finish in the discus throw and a fifth-place finish in the shot put.

On the boys’ side of the Class AAA meet, Daniel’s Dante Gilliard finished fourth in the discus throw, while Pickens’ Ridge Clark recorded an eighth-place finish.

Easley junior Voc Tabron took third place in the 110-meter hurdles as the only local athlete in the Class AAAA meet.

 

Clemson to mark the 300th birthday of Hanover House

By: Ken Scar

Special to The Courier

news@thepccourier.com

CLEMSON — Clemson University will mark the 300th birthday of its oldest structural resident, Hanover House, with a public symposium featuring guest speakers from architecture and academics this Saturday, May 21 at the Strom Thurmond Institute on campus.

Speakers will include Dean Norton, director of horticulture at Mount Vernon; Patrick McMillan, director of the South Carolina Botanical Garden at Clemson; and Sally Reeves, co-author of the award-winning New Orleans Architecture series.

Hanover

Ken Scar/Photo
Clemson University’s 300 year-old Hanover House sits on campus in the South Carolina Botanical Garden.

Hanover House, a white home built in the early 1700s in South Carolina’s Lowcountry, was saved from destruction and brought to the Clemson campus by faculty and students in 1941.

The preservation and refurbishment of Hanover House was a triumph for Clemson’s budding undergraduate research programs, said Will Hiott, Clemson’s director of historic properties.

“The historic preservation of Hanover House by architects and historians was in reality an early Creative Inquiry project involving students, faculty and staff to photograph, blueprint and document the structure on its original site in Berkeley County and to relocate and reconstruct Hanover on campus in 1941,” he said. “Much of the preservation and restoration work was overseen by faculty and staff.”

Hanover House was built in 1716 for French Huguenot Paul de St. Julien in what is now Berkeley County. It was planned as a three-story house made of bricks and cypress and was considered very luxurious at the time. The original design was simple, featured balanced symmetry, a gambrel roof, dormers, and French details. St. Julien honored his French heritage in the mortar of one chimney where he inscribed “Peu a Peu,” from the French proverb, “Little by little the bird builds its nest.”

The house remained in the St. Julien and Ravenel families for nearly 150 years. In the 1940s, progress threatened to destroy the home, as it was in the path of the man-made Lake Moultrie. The Historic American Buildings Survey of the Santee-Cooper basin noted that Hanover was of national significance. So, Hanover was moved 250 miles north to the campus of Clemson University, home to the state’s architecture school. It was relocated to the South Carolina Botanical Garden in 1994 and now overlooks an heirloom vegetable garden.

“We are excited to celebrate this milestone of three centuries of the colonial cottage. This year we observe not only the tricentennial of Hanover but also its 75th year as part of Clemson University,” Hiott said.

“Hanover is truly a gem of Colonial architecture, which was deemed nationally important,” he said. “As we reflect on the tricentennial of the Hanover, we reflect on American history and the Huguenots, like the St. Juliens and Ravenels, who came to the Colonies, fought in the American Revolution with Francis Marion and aided in founding South Carolina.”

To register for the daylong symposium, go to http://blogs.clemson.edu/hanover-300/2016/05/02/hanover-300th-registration-link/.

Congrats

grad

Congratulations Lashae Rutz. We are so proud of you for all your accomplishments. We love you very much.

Love, Mom, Dad,

Renae and Matthew