INSIDE: S.C. Attorney General rules coroners’ toxicology reports medical records A3 PANORAMA
Patriot Hall hosts expanded Comic Arts Symposium C1 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 2016
| Serving South Carolina since October 15, 1894
75 cents
SUPER TUESDAY
Clinton, Trump sweep South WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton swept through the South on Super Tuesday, with the front-runners claiming victory in their parties’ primaries in delegaterich Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia. Clinton also carried Texas, the night’s biggest prize. On the Republican side, Ted Cruz won his home state of Texas, as well as neighboring Oklahoma. Democrat Bernie Sanders picked up a home-state win as well, in Ver-
mont, and won in Oklahoma, too. Still, the night belonged to Trump and Clinton, who turned the busiest day of the 2016 primaries into a showcase of their strength with a wide swath of American voters. “What a Super Tuesday,” Clinton exclaimed during a victory rally. As Trump’s victories piled up, he fired off “thank you” Twitter notes to the states that landed in his win column. The billionaire businessman scheduled a nighttime news conference at his swanky Mar-a-La-
go resort in Florida, eschewing the traditional election night rally. Cruz desperately needed a win in Texas in order to stay in the race, and was likely to keep campaigning as the only Republican who has been able to defeat Trump in any primary contest. For Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the night was turning into a disappointment. While a flood of Republican officeholders have rallied
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gives a thumbs up at a rally in Spartanburg on Saturday. Trump came out on top in several primary contests on Super Tuesday, including the Georgia SEE TRUMP, PAGE A6 and Virginia Republican primaries.
Disc golf drama
Brown won’t seek re-election Longest-serving rep has been in office 40 years BY JIM HILLEY jim@theitem.com
KEITH GEDAMKE / THE SUMTER ITEM
“It has been the thrill of my life to represent this district for the past 32 years,” said Rep. Grady Brown, D-Bishopville, after announcing he will not run for reelection to the South Carolina House of Representatives in the upcoming election. “It’s something I have been discussing for six months,” Brown said Tuesday. Brown, a former barber, was first sworn into the S.C. House in 1985 and is the longest serving member of the House. The 71-year-old said the outpouring from friends and neighbors who have heard of his retirement has been amazing. “I am not willing to go BROWN through the mental, physical and psychological stress of campaigning the way I campaign in the type of district I am in,” he said. Rep. David Weeks, D-Sumter, said Brown will be missed by his colleagues. “It has been a pleasure and an honor to serve with Grady Brown,” Weeks said. “He has been a valuable member of the ‘Team Sumter’ legislative delegation and is highly renowned for his constituent service. “Whenever somebody has been here as long as he has, you make friends and become a part of the landscape and a very important part of it all,” Weeks said. Brown said he will not miss the pomp and circumstance of being in the General
Sara Young, a Sumter High School drama student, “putts” on the third hole during a disc golf tournament at Dillon Park on Saturday to benefit the school’s drama department and the course itself.
SEE BROWN, PAGE A6
City council approves moratorium for vacant property registry fines BY ADRIENNE SARVIS adrienne@theitem.com Sumter City Council approved a moratorium extending to Dec. 31 on fines associated with the city’s vacant property registry during its regular meeting on Tuesday. Sumter Attorney Eric Shytle said the $250 fine, that will be charged every month to any residential property owner who fails to register vacant property within the allotted 60day period, was intended to start at the end of this month. Owners of vacant residential
VISIT US ONLINE AT
the
.com
property are still required to register property on the city’s website, sumtersc.gov, on the planning department’s page. Shytle said the city will continue to keep the registry in place to see how it works, and officials will address issues as they arise. City council later approved a resolution authorizing a cost-plus contract between the city and Thompson Turner Construction, the contractor for the parking garage to be built at the corner of Sumter Street and Hampton Avenue. In March 2015, council
voted to exempt the contract for the parking garage from the city’s competitive bidding process to allow Thompson Turner Construction, also the contractor for the Hyatt Place hotel to be built on North Main Street, to take on both projects in order to reduce possible issues because both projects will take place at the same time. The city consulted with Nick Nicholson, managing director of Haynsworth Sinkler Boyd, P.A., for the contract. Nicholson told council that the cost-plus contract will re-
DEATHS, B6 Lilia G. Yates John Q. Ross IV Furman J. Ridgeway Willis A. Rosado Sr.
Helen W. Jackson Lou N. Hatfield James Ira Dalton Dewitt Walker Sr.
quire that the city pay a maximum guaranteed price for the project and a fee to the contractor, so the company can make a profit for the project. The city will not be charged if the contractor exceeds the maximum guaranteed price, he said. Nicholson said the price for the project has not yet been set because the designs for the garage are not complete. Also, council approved an amendment to the Community Block Development Grant Entitlement Budget for 2016-17. City Manager Deron McCormick said the budget needed to
be amended because the city is receiving less money than originally planned. He said the budgeting process requires the city to pass the budget before learning the true amount it will receive. The city asked to use figures from the previous year, he said. The original 2016-17 CDBG budget, approved on Jan. 5, was approximately $285,900 and the amended budget is $278,866. McCormick said the city made reductions to the administration and housing repair portions of the budget.
WEATHER, A8
INSIDE
COOLER, BUT STILL NICE
3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES VOL. 121, NO. 116
Mostly sunny today and cooler than yesterday; tonight, chilly and clear HIGH 61, LOW 35
Classifieds B7 Comics C6 Food C8
Opinion A7 Television C7