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Monthly Archives: July 2016

Courier Notice to Creditors 7-20-16

The publisher shall only be liable for an amount less than or equal to the charge for the space of the item in error in the case of errors in or omissions from any advertisement, and only for the first incorrect insertion.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF ESTATES

All persons having claims against the following estates MUST file their claims on Form #371ES with the Probate Court of PICKENS COUNTY, the address of which is 222 MCDANIEL AVE., B-16 PICKENS, SC 29671, within eight (8) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors or within one (1) year from date of death, whichever is earlier (SCPC 62-3-801, et seq.), or such persons shall be forever barred as to their claims. All claims are required to be presented in written statements on the prescribed form (FORM #371ES) indicating the name and address of the claimant, the basis of the claim, the amount claimed, the date when the claim will become due, the nature of any uncertainty as to the claim, and a description of any security as to the claim.

Courier Trespass Notice 7-20-16

In the state of South Carolina, trespass after notice is a misdemeanor criminal offense prohibited by section 16-11-620 for the South Carolina Code. Those who enter upon the lands of others without the permission of the owner or manager shall be deemed guilty of misdemeanor trespassing. All persons are hereby notified and warned not to hunt, fish, cut timber or trespass in any manner whatsoever upon the lands of the undersigned:

Courier Classifieds 7-20-16

Read classifieds from The Pickens County Courier FREE! Click below to browse our ads AT NO COST! To place a Classified ad, come by our office at 109 Garvin Street in Pickens or give us a call at 864-878-6391. Rates to place an ad are $8.95 for 20 words and only 15¢ per additional word.

YARD SALE

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! Come out between 8 and Noon, Saturday, July 23rd for a massive yard sale at 903 Crestview Road, Easley! EVERYTHING MUST GO!

Officers seeking escaped inmate

SIX MILE — Authorities are asking for the public’s help finding a local inmate who walked off a job site just two weeks before his scheduled release on Monday.

Casey William Gillespie was cutting grass at a recycling center on Love and Care Road in Six Mile when he was last seen, according to a news release from county officials. His supervisor was on the premises and noticed Gillespie was gone, officials said.

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Serving a 90-day sentence on DUI, drug paraphernalia and driving under suspension charges, he was scheduled to be released on July 26.

Gillespie has been entered into the National Crime Information Center database as a wanted person, officials said.

Gillespie is around 6 feet tall and around 150 pounds, according to Pickens County Sheriff’s Office records.

Gillespie pleaded guilty to strong-armed robbery charges in 2014, 13th Circuit court records show.

Those with information on Gillespie’s whereabouts are asked to contact the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office at (864) 898-5500 immediately.

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Arrest made after woman stabbed

PICKENS — A 53-year-old man has been charged with attempted murder in connection with a domestic dispute under investigation by the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office.

Chief deputy Creed Hashe said Johnny Lee Ware is being held at the Pickens County Detention Center. In addition to the attempted murder charge, Ware also faces a charge of possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

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Hashe said the female victim, who was stabbed multiple times in the upper chest area, was transported from the scene to a local hospital and treated. The victim was able to tell deputies that she was stabbed by Ware, who was still at the home upon the first deputy’s arrival.

The chief deputy said Ware was arrested at the scene without incident.

Hashe said the sheriff’s office received a 911 call at approximately 7:15 p.m. Friday reporting that a woman had been stabbed on Secona Road in Pickens. Deputies responded to the scene approximately four minutes later and found a 56-year-old woman with what appeared to be stab wounds to the chest.

Preliminary investigations indicated the altercation stemmed from a previous verbal dispute, according to Hashe, who added that no one else was at the home at the time of the incident.

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NFL players return to Central for Daniel alumni football camp

Rex Brown/Courtesy The Journal
First-year Daniel coach Jeff Fruster, center, poses with, from left, former Lions and current NFL players DeAndre Hopkins, Jarvis Jenkins, DeShawn Williams and Shaq Lawson during the second annual Daniel High Alumni Football Camp at Singleton Field on Friday.

By Eric Sprott
Courtesy The Journal

esprott@upstatetoday.com

CENTRAL — As his star continues to rise, DeAndre Hopkins finds himself in increasingly high demand going into his fourth season with the Houston Texans.

Fresh off his first Pro Bowl selection and becoming the first receiver in NFL history to record 100-yard receiving games with four different quarterbacks in one season, the former Daniel High School and Clemson University standout is steadily becoming one of the league’s elite talents.

But despite the time constraints that come with his soaring fame — in addition to preparing for training camp later this month — Hopkins was happy to make time Friday to join up with some of his closest friends, who also happened to come through Daniel and Clemson before making the leap to the NFL.

Along with New York Jets defensive end Jarvis Jenkins, Buffalo Bills defensive end Shaq Lawson and Cincinnati Bengals defensive tackle DeShawn Williams, Hopkins helped host the second annual Daniel High Alumni Football Camp at Singleton Field — a free four-hour camp that saw hundreds of kids from around the area come out to learn from their hometown heroes, who all graduated from Daniel between 2007 and 2011.

“It means everything,” Hopkins said. “This is where my roots are, and these are the first people who saw me develop and grow as a player, so it means a lot to give back. I’ve got a hectic schedule in the offseason, especially right now, so just being back for a little amount of time, I’m pretty sure it means a lot to these kids.”

In addition to the four headliners, former Clemson quarterback Tajh Boyd was also on hand for the event, as were former Seneca and Clemson standout Joe Don Reames, former Clemson tight end Brandon Ford, the Daniel coaching staff and a herd of current and former Lions as well.

Jenkins, whose J3 Foundation sponsors the camp, began the event last year with Hopkins and said it means a lot to him to not only make an impact with the campers, but to do it at no cost to them as well.

“You shouldn’t charge kids who want to get better,” said Jenkins, who registered a career-high four sacks last season with the Chicago Bears before inking a two-year deal with the Jets. “If they want to come out here on a 100-degree summer day, that tells me they want to learn, and that says a lot.”

Williams took part in the camp last season, though he wasn’t necessarily one of the star attractions after going undrafted following a solid Clemson career. Despite his unheralded status, he narrowly missed out on clinching a roster spot outright before accepting a spot on the Bengals’ practice squad for the duration of the season. He was later promoted to the 53-man roster for the squad’s wild-card playoff loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Jan. 9.

Coincidentally, Williams took the spot of former Clemson defensive tackle Brandon Thompson, who had been placed on injured reserve with a knee injury.

“Last year, Jarvis and DeAndre did it, and they wanted me to tag along, and just to see the kids coming and looking at them as heroes was special,” he said. “They came through the small town of Central with one stoplight, and now to have two more guys come and build on top of this is great. A lot of people might say you can’t make it out of a small town, but we’re living proof that you can make it anywhere.

“It’s just a wonderful thing for this community to see four guys doing something for Central, Seneca, Six Mile, Clemson and all over the area.”

Lawson, meanwhile, is getting ready for his first training camp with the Bills after being taken in the first round of this year’s draft. In May, he had to undergo shoulder surgery and has since been ruled out for four to six months, but that hardly held him back from taking part in the camp.

“It’s always a pleasure to give back to the kids, especially in the community you grew up in,” he said. “The kids look up to you, and they try to follow in your footsteps to become an elite athlete. They can take a lot from this — things like the hard work and dedication it took to get here.”

Though he’s going into his first year as the Lions’ head coach, Jeff Fruster is tightly connected to the four pros. He joined former coach Randy Robinson’s staff in 2006 — Jenkins’ senior year — and was a defensive assistant and later coordinator, as he directly coached all four, including Hopkins, who starred as a defensive back and receiver at Daniel before making the full-time move to receiver in college.

“When you start thinking about the possibilities of the future, this just speaks mounds,” he said. “For a kid to be able to see others like him that went through the same struggle of football and made it to the highest level, it really can’t get any better.”

In addition to donating his time Friday, Hopkins held his third annual back-to-school book bag and school supplies giveaway in partnership with S.M.O.O.T.H Inc. on Saturday for students in kindergarten through age 12 at the Central-Clemson Recreation Center.

And just as he feels about Jenkins, Lawson and Williams, Hopkins still cherishes the community he grew up in.

“We’re real close, and we’re almost like brothers,” he said. “We don’t talk every day, but we still have that respect for each other. It’s a tight bond, because when you come from here, everybody is basically family no matter how old you are or what family you’re in.”

 

Big League World Series almost here

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

Easley also hosting Southeast regional tourney this weekend

EASLEY — Easley is gearing up to host the Big League Baseball World Series later this month.

The tournament will be held July 26-Aug. 2 at the J.B. “Red” Owens Recreation Complex.

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Tournament director Jon Humphrey spoke about the series during Easley City Council’s July meeting Monday night.

“The championship game Aug. 2 will be televised once again on ESPN,” Humphrey said. “So the whole world will be watching us.”

Eleven teams will be coming in from around the world to play ball, he said.

blws logo“(There will be) five international teams and six U.S. teams,” Humphrey said. “We already know that Puerto Rico will be coming. We do know that Curaçao won the Latin America tournament. That’s their first time coming here. That’s an exciting thing for us, to have a newcomer coming here.”

He said Chinese-Taipei just won the Asia Pacific tournament.

“So Chinese-Taipei will be coming back,” Humphrey said. “We also know that we have our local team, South Carolina District 1, skippered by Gregg Powell. He’s got a good team.”

But you don’t have to wait until the end of the month to see tournament action.

Easley is stepping up to the plate to offer Little League International some assistance — by hosting the Southeast regional tournament this weekend.

The tournament had to be moved from Florida, and its original site in Tennessee fell through, city administrator Stephen Steese said. Little League International officials then contacted the city to see if Easley could host the regional.

“I think it’s going to work out just fine. We’ll have teams from six states, including South Carolina, coming in to play,” Steese said. “The winner of that will be the Southeast representative in the Big League World Series.”

“I know that Little League appreciates that the city of Easley stepped up to host that tournament,” Humphrey said.

Games begin in the regional tournament Friday morning at the Alice Mills park.

Humphrey thanked city officials and employees for their support of the tournament over the past 10 years.

“We can’t run this tournament without your support,” he said. “I just wanted to say thank you to all of you.”

Mayor Larry Bagwell asked Humphrey if hosting the regional tournament would take some of the luster off the BLWS.

Humphrey said the extra event will tax some of the volunteer base.

“It does a take a little out of that,” he said. “But we have a very giving community.”

The tournament is a success every year thanks to the efforts of “hundreds of volunteers,” Humphrey said.

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Special Liberty council election planned

By Jason Evans

Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

LIBERTY — A special election will be held in Liberty later this month to fill a vacancy on city council.

According to the county elections office, polls will be open from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. on July 26.

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The election is to fill the Ward 2 seat formerly held by Lisa Hunter.

Candidate filing closed on May 31.

Misty Medlin was the only person to file for the office. Voters will also have the ability to type in a write-in candidate.

The election will be citywide and open to all registered voters of the city regardless of which ward they live in.

Every person offering to vote in the election must be registered on the county books of registration as an elector and resident of the city of Liberty 30 days prior to the election. The last day to register to vote for the special election was June 25.

The following precincts and polling places will be open on the date of the election:

Rices Creek, located at Liberty First Baptist Church, 403 Edgemont Ave.

West Liberty, located at Calumet Baptist Church, 400 S. Peachtree St.

East Liberty, located at Eastside Baptist Church, 920 Anderson Drive.

North Liberty, located at Liberty United Methodist Church, 310 Mae St.

Absentee voting for the election is now underway. In-person absentee voting is available at the Pickens County Office of Registrations and Elections, located at 222 McDaniel Ave. in Pickens, during normal business hours, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The in-person absentee voting will close at 5 p.m. on July 25.

Absentee voting is also available by mail. Learn more at pickenselections.org or by calling (864) 898-5948. The last day an absentee ballot can be mailed is July 22.

A runoff election, if needed, will be held Aug. 9.

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Voters get final say on Easley Sunday alcohol

By Jason Evans

Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

EASLEY — When they go to the polls in November, Easley voters will decide whether to allow businesses and nonprofits to sell alcohol on Sunday.

Easley City Council members voted 5-1 on second reading Monday to allow the issue to go to a referendum in November.

Councilman Terry Moore cast the dissenting vote, as he did on first reading. Councilman Chris Mann was on vacation.

Councilman Jim Robinson said, in addition to other letters, the city had heard from a national grocery store chain that had a location in Easley. The letter was in support of the referendum,

“In that letter, the manager of the store said that Sunday is the second busiest shopping day of the week,” Robinson said. “Based on this request from Easley businesses, I believe that the matter should be decided by the voters in a referendum.”

Moore said he’s heard from numerous people in the city who oppose Sunday alcohol sales.

“I just don’t feel like it’s right for the city of Easley,” he said.

He scoffed at the economic claims.

“I keep hearing tax dollars, tax dollars, income,” Moore said. “I’m hearing greed, not need.”

“If you want to use alcohol, fine. You’ve got six days to go buy alcohol,” he continued. “Why make it Sunday? Why go in a restaurant when you’ve just left church and watch someone funnel alcohol? Can’t Christians not have one day?”

Mayor Larry Bagwell urged voters to vote their conscience.

“We all realize this is going to be a controversial issue, no doubt about it,” Bagwell said. “Nobody’s trying to twist your arm. All we’re going to do is put it on the ballot. This is an opportunity for you to express yourself in November.”

Surrounding cities of similar size to Easley have all approved Sunday alcohol sales. Bagwell said he worries that the city will lose business, which in turn, would put pressure on council to raise taxes to make up for lost revenue.

“We can’t sit still,” he said. “If we sit still, we’re going to be dying.”

Councilman Kent Dykes said this was a “pivotal time in the city of Easley.”

“We want a lot of input, and it’s there,” he said. “What we’re doing is we’re allowing this to get on the ballot so the citizens of Easley can express their position and vote on this. That’s where it’s going to happen in November. That’s where we all ought to be out campaigning, for or against this.

“I don’t have — we don’t have — the authority to say we’re going to have Sunday liquor sales,” Dykes said. “And we don’t want that authority. It should come from the citizens.”

Before the vote, council heard from those on both sides of the issue.

Cindy Hopkins, executive director of the Greater Easley Chamber of Commerce, said the chamber supported both allowing the voters to decide and the Sunday alcohol sales issue.

“From an economic growth perspective, our organization represents restaurants and retailers who would economically benefit from Sunday alcohol sales,” Hopkins said. “We just really feel like it would be a positive economic impact for the city of Easley as a whole, for a number of factors, that would have a positive effect on our economy here. Therefore, based on that rationale, our chamber does support allowing our citizens to vote in November to determine if we are to support Sunday alcohol sales.”

Council also heard from John DeWorken, representing the South Carolina Retail Association. He said that organization also supports taking the issue to the voters.

“Just want to encourage the council to give voters the opportunity to choose what they want to do in this community,” DeWorken said.

Resident Jeff Cook told council he was “vehemently opposed” to allowing alcohol sales on Sundays.

“There are six other days during the week when a person can consume alcohol,” Cook said. “I remember that it says in the Bible to remember the Sabbath day, keep it holy. I’m asking you to do that.”

Cook said he wanted to publicly thank Moore for his “strong stance” on the issue.

“If you’ve never experienced what alcohol can do, it’s devastating,” Cook said. “It’s the devil in a bottle. The alcoholic started with that first drink, and the recovering alcoholic is one drink away from falling back.”

He asked council to reconsider the vote they were going to take on the ballot issue.

“I hope we can settle this before it ever comes to a referendum,” Cook said.

 

Principal celebrates successes at LHS

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter

jevans@thepccourier.com

LIBERTY — “We have a wonderful high school,” Liberty High School Principal Josh Oxendine said. “We have 700 young people who are doing what they’re supposed to on a day-in and day-out basis.

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“For me, it’s an easy job,” he continued. “I show up and I smile. They go about their day and do what they’re supposed to do.”

Oxendine was one of the speakers at the recent State of Liberty event, sponsored by the new Liberty Area Chamber of Commerce.

Negative news often makes the headlines in today’s world, and Liberty High School has been portrayed negatively in the past, he said.

“If you want to know about Liberty High School, if you want to know the truth, pick up the phone and call me,” Oxendine said. “A lot of times I get a phone call about a situation, and it’s really no situation, it’s just misinformation.”

“Sometimes, there’s a misconception, that budget-wise, we’re in bad shape,” Oxendine said. “Liberty High School is in the black. We have a budget moving forward with the school district that’s one of the best budgets in the district. We finished up in the black finishing up the year and we don’t see that changing.”

The school has the normally high school issues, he said. Like most schools, LHS’ athletics run at a deficit.

“So if you want to support the school, buy a ticket on Friday night,” Oxendine said. “That’s an easy way that you can help.”

There’s much to celebrate about the school, with more successes to come.

He said the chamber’s mission – economic growth – starts “on the front lines” at the high school.

“We led the district this year in WorkKeys scores,” Oxendine said.

Part of the district’s federal accountability now is a test to determine whether its students are “workforce ready,” he said.

“Our young people led the district, led Pickens County, with their certificates that they received for the WorkKeys test,” Oxendine said. “Ultimately, what that says in layman’s terms is we’re preparing our young people. When I was in high school, I was told the only way I could be successful is if I went to a four-year college or university and I think we all know that’s not true. I had a lot of people that I finished high school with, that grew up in Pickens County, that received a good education in Pickens County. They felt that they only way they could succeed was to go to a college or university. Ultimately they were not successful there.”

The school has some high-achieving students and “we’re providing opportunities for them, to make sure that they continue to achieve,” Oxendine said.

“They will go to our colleges and our universities,” he said. “But we can’t overlook our population that are really going to be the backbone of this community and neighboring communities, that are going into the workforce. Some of them may get a two year degree or a training certificate. But, ultimately, that WorkKeys tests, the results have told us, that our young people are being prepared for reality, for real life, for the workforce and colleges and careers as well.”

This year, Liberty High School hosted a Manufacturing Day.

“We had a lot of our businesses, a lot of our manufacturers, come speak to our young people,” Oxendine said. “We really just did it for our junior class this year, so they could make some decisions going into their senior year about what they wanted to do. We showed them, ‘Here’s what you get with a high school diploma and a WorkKeys certificate. Here’s what you get with a two-year degree or a trades certificate and with a four-year degree or higher, here are the opportunities with the manufacturing corporations here in our community.”

This year, the school targeted a group of its seniors before graduation, helping them with job prep and resume prep, Oxendine said.

“We brought in a lot of employers who knew that they would have vacancies,” he said. “For these young people who knew they were going right in to the workforce, we had a Career Fair just for these people at our school. Some of our seniors knew they were going into the workforce, so we put that employer with those students, and prepared them.”

Oxendine said the school will double the number of Advanced Placement courses it offers its students.

“We’re very excited,” Oxendine said. “When I came in this past year, I said ‘I think our students need more high-learning opportunities.’ We have 10 AP courses that we will be offering our students next year.

Liberty High School has partnered with Tri-County Technical College to offer dual-credit courses. The program is open to all Pickens County students but will be housed at Liberty High School, Oxendine said.

“We have two classrooms that will be full of professors, all day long,” Oxendine said. “A young person in Pickens County can take advantage of this, get high school credit and college credit at the same time. And when the bell rings, they can walk into our cafeteria to get something to eat and at the end, they can get on a bus and go home if they want to.”

“Previously, dual-enrollment courses were for a certain group of society,” Oxendine said. “If your parents had the money to pay for it, if your parents had the money to buy you a car, put gas in that car, and send you to Tri-County or wherever you may go. It was just for a certain section of our community. Now, you can catch a bus, we’ll feed you breakfast, we’ll feed you a hot lunch, you can walk down the hall, and if you qualify, you can take a college-level course and get college credit.

“For a lot of our young people, we have it set up, where in two years, they can get a high school diploma, a WorkKeys certificate and the first year of college taken care of, with very minimal cost,” he continued. “We’re excited about that program.”

He said the school is laying the groundwork for a program that will begin in the 2017-2018 school year,

“We’re partnering with the South Carolina Governor’s School and the Engineering Department at Clemson University,” Oxendine said. “We’ll have an engineering program for young people that qualify housed at Liberty High School moving forward. It’ll be a little different from traditional coursework that students take in high school. Higher-level math and science courses.

“With this opportunity, a young person can leave our high school with a high school diploma, a WorkKeys certificate and also their first year of engineering taken care of when they leave,” he continued. “That’s actually at no cost, for the young people who qualify for. It’s all about preparing our young people.”

Raising the school’s graduation rate is an important goal for Oxendine and his staff.

“Our graduation rate is the lowest in the district,” he said. “We’ve made strides this year in starting addressing some of that.”

Another goal is helping its young people become not just great students, but great citizens. Oxendine said character-building is important.

“I think sometimes we place too much emphasis on test scores and certain types of achievement,” he said. “At the end of the day, the lessons we teach the young people in our building will ultimately continue to make this community great in the future.”

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