Hit And Run Crash Cuts Power

February 8, 2011

The Florida Highway Patrol is investigating a hit and run crash in Century Tuesday morning that left an unknown number of Gulf Power customers in the dark.

Witnesses told authorities that a full size maroon pickup truck with tinted windows hit a power pole on North Century Boulevard  near the Food Giant about 11:40 a..m. Witnesses said the truck with a Texas tag then fled the scene, headed south on North Century Boulevard.

The accident is under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol.

Century Seeks To Expand Code Enforcement Agreement

February 8, 2011

The Town of Century is looking to expand the agreement that allows county code enforcement to operate in the town.

Two weeks ago, the council instructed Mayor Freddie McCall to contact Escambia County’s Code Enforcement and seek a cease and desist order against George William Philyaw and the alleged “business” he operates from his home at 120 Front Street.

But Sandra Slay, director of Escambia County Code Enforcement, said the current inter-local agreement between Century and Escambia County does not allow for the enforcement of issues like zoning, solid waste violations and stormwater.

The council voted Monday night to have attorneys for Century and Escambia County draft an amendment to their agreement to allow the county to pursue zoning violations.

At issue with 120 Front Street, according to the town, is whether or not Philyaw is operating a business on property that is zoned residential.

In July 2009, the council voted to deny Philyaw’s request to rezone his property from residential to commercial so he could operate what the town’s consultant, Debbie Nickles, called a “junkyard”. During his rezoning hearing, Philyaw told the town council that he simply collects metal for recycling until he has a “load” and then it is sold.

Pictured top:  The property at 120 Front Street in Century. Pictured inset:  Escambia County Code Enforcement Director Sandra Slay addresses the Century Town Council Monday night. Also pictured: Mayor Freddie McCall. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Three Charged With Dumping Half Ton Of Trash Along Perdido River

February 8, 2011

Three people are facing charges for dumping a half ton of garbage along the Perdido River in North Escambia.

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Lt. Dan Hahr located a large amount of household garbage that was dumped along the road to The Pipes in Perdido River Wildlife Management Area. After going through the pile, he identified the residence in Pensacola that the garbage came from by old mail that was in the pile.  Upon further investigation, Lieutenant Hahr determined the tenants of the house had moved and the owner had paid someone to haul off the garbage and leftover belongings.

Melih Saklivan, a  49-year old legal alien from Turkey,  25-year old Kimberly Margaret Hudgins, of Pensacola; and Patrick Stephen Murphy, 26, of Lillan, Ala;, are all facing felony charges of commercial littering — a third degree felony.

The owner of the home where the trash originated told FWC officers that he had found a man named “Patrick” on Craigslist and hired him to haul off the trash and personal belongings left by tenants  in his rental house. The homeowner produced receipts where he paid Hudgins $100 to clean the house and $65 to “I Stand Alone Hauling” for the trash removal.

Hudgins told the FWC officer that they transported the first load of trash back to her trailer park where they filled a dumpster with a mattress and other items. The second load was taken to the Pipes landing area along the Perdido River, near Jacks Branch Road in Cantonment.

When the FWC and Baldwin County (Ala.) Sheriff’s deputies located Murphy at his home in Lillian, Ala., he admitted that he was hired off Craigslist to remove the trash for $65, and that it was his idea to dump it in the area of The Pipes.

Sakilvan told the FWC officer that he was “held hostage” by Murphy and had no other option but to go along with the plan. He expressed concern that charges would cost him the chance to obtain U.S. citizenship, and he volunteered to clean up the trash “to ease his conscience”. Officers verified that Sakilvan had indeed removed the rubbish and paid to dump 1,060 pounds at the Perdido landfill.

Sakivan and Hudgins were released from the Escambia County Jail on $2,000 bond each. Murphy was arrested in Baldwin County on an outstanding parole violation warrant. Murphy remains in the Baldwin County Corrections Center without bond.

Florida Schools To Take $3 Billion Hit Under Scott Budget

February 8, 2011

Florida’s public schools and universities will take a more than $3 billion hit under the budget proposed Monday by Gov. Rick Scott, with public elementary through high school spending dropping by nearly $300 per student.

Scott said, essentially, that’s not really his fault. He isn’t cutting state money to public schools, he simply is choosing not to replace federal stimulus money that is no longer available.

Former Gov. Charlie Crist and lawmakers used stimulus dollars to prop up the state’s budgets the past two years, and now that money is gone. Trying to find a new one-time source of cash to replace it doesn’t make sense, the governor said, likening that to a Lottery winner spending all his winnings on the assumption that he’d win again next year.

“We’re not going to take federal money and believe it’s going to be there forever,” Scott said.

Budget officials in the governor’s office said the loss of federal stimulus money accounted for some of the cuts to education, but didn’t provide details on how the governor planned to achieve all of them.

Scott said repeatedly on the campaign trail that he wanted Florida students to receive a “first class education,” advocating for the state to better invest in its education system, provide school choice and create a merit pay system for teachers. Lawmakers are already working on a merit pay system, but have been slower to take up a voucher expansion.

Under Scott’s proposed spending plan, per pupil spending in K-12 would drop by $298 to $6,600 per student.

The House Prek-12 budget subcommittee chair, Rep. Marti Coley, R-Marianna, has said she hopes to protect the per pupil spending level at the current year amount.

Scott’s overall budget – just shy of $66 billion – gained kudos from business groups around the state, who praised him for a budget that didn’t raise taxes and focused on job creation.

“Cuts to education and health care will inevitably raise concerns among some, but in the midst of a recession, government must cut expenses because raising taxes is a death knell for job creation,” said Associated Industries of Florida President Barney Bishop.

Getting school spending to the $6,600 per student level would still rely in part on Washington, having local school boards reserve dollars from a federal education jobs fund from this year.

Education advocates argued that a $300 per student cut still will result in layoffs and make things worse for the public school system, not better.

FundEducationNow.org, an Orlando grassroots education advocacy organization that says it was created by parents of public school children, called the proposed cuts “catastrophic.”

“Florida’s children are the key to our long term economic stability. High-quality public education is a job creator not a funding burden,” said group co-founder Linda Kobert. “Gov. Scott must embrace his paramount duty to invest in the real future of this state – the students.”

The governor’s office released details of the budget on a Website that got so many hits Monday afternoon that it crashed. That made it hard for some advocates to evaluate the proposal. Officials at the Board of Governors said they couldn’t comment on proposed cuts to higher education, because they hadn’t been able to read the budget recommendation.

The Board of Governors could face a substantial reduction if stimulus dollars from last year are not replaced. Twenty out of 53 positions were paid for by stimulus money.

Century’s Budget Looking Good

February 8, 2011

A little good news for the town of Century — the budget for the first quarter of the year is in good shape.

Robert Hudson, the town’s accountant, told the Century Town Council that they ended the quarter and calendar year with revenue just over budget and expenditures under budget.

“So we are on the plus side…we are doing real well,” Hudson said. “We took a very conservative approach.”

Pictured above: Robert Hudson, the accountant for the Town of Century, discusses Century’s budget  Monday night. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Tate Aggies Softball Regular Season Begins

February 8, 2011

The Tate Aggies will begin their regular softball season today. Here is the complete schedule for both the varsity and junior varsity programs:

Scott Unveils Big Budget Cuts — $4.6 Billion And 8,681 Jobs

February 8, 2011

Gov. Rick Scott unveiled his first budget Monday as Florida’s chief executive – a $65.9 billion blueprint that cuts $4.6 billion in state spending, trims 8,681 jobs across state agencies, and sets the state on course for even more reductions next year. The budget includes the closure of two unnamed prisons and big cuts in the Department of Corrections.

Scott went to the Lake County city of Eustis to tout the proposal at a rally with 1,000 Tea Party activists who steadily cheered his belt-tightening message, and appeared ready to be marshaled as a grassroots army to help the governor get his plan through a so-far lukewarm Legislature.

Scott said his proposal also leaves room for $2 billion in tax cuts – part of his central campaign theme. The new governor – who ran and won last November on an outsider’s theme – departed with tradition both by laying out his budget 200 miles from the state Capitol, but also by outlining a two-year spending plan.

His budget proposal for 2012-13 shrinks state spending even more – to $63.3 billion. Spread throughout the proposal are performance goals with outcomes expected to be achieved by specific line-item spending.

“Let’s start with the obvious,” Scott said to cheers from Tea Party leaders gathered at the First Baptist Church in Eustis. “We can’t spend more than we take in.”

With the state facing a budget shortfall of at least $3.6 billion, Scott is proposing deep reductions in many agencies, with some of the heaviest scalpeling used on those whose workers and allies formed a political base for gubernatorial rival Alex Sink.

The Corrections Department would absorb an $82.4 million cut and lose 1,690 jobs – or more than 5 percent of its workforce. The Police Benevolent Association union which represents most correctional officers, campaigned heavily against Scott last fall, warning he would cut so many prison jobs it would put people in danger.

The state’s Education Department budget is reduced $3.3 billion, the largest single reduction in Scott’s proposal. While education also is the largest item of state spending overall, the Florida Education Association, the state’s largest teachers’ union, also was a vocal opponent of Scott, campaigning for the Democratic nominee.

Returning to the Capitol following the Tea Party event, Scott said he wasn’t proposing to cut state financing to public schools, that the budget merely reflected the loss of federal dollars.

While per student spending is slated to be $6,600, a $298 reduction from this year’s level after retirement savings are factored in, Scott attributed that drop to the loss of $872 million in federal stimulus money that went to K-12 education, money Scott said the state shouldn’t have relied on in the first place.

Scott did propose to earmark $8.6 billion for “The Education Choice Fund,” aimed at expanding charter school, virtual-school and other “choice” options for elementary and high school students.

Scott has included in his budget a plan to make the 655,000 public employees – mostly school board members – contribute 5 percent of their paychecks for remaining in the Florida Retirement System, the government pension plan. Scott has said those contributions will save taxpayers $2.8 billion over the next two years.

Some of Scott’s centerpiece campaign promises – cutting property-taxes and the state’s corporate-income tax levy – came up smaller than earlier billed.

Combined, the first-year reductions were just below $1 billion for these two tax cuts – about half of his campaign pledge.

Scott did, however, manage to actually exceed the $2 billion in promised tax reductions by adding $301.4 million in unemployment compensation tax cuts, $177.8 million in water management district property-tax reductions, achieved by 25 percent rollbacks the next two years, and a $235.7 million reduction in highway safety fees approved by lawmakers in 2009.

Scott’s budget proposal also includes other cost-cutting measures that, if history is a guide, are certain to prove controversial with state lawmakers. Among them:

  • Privatizing the state’s three mental health hospitals in Chattahoochee, Macclenny and Gainesville, savings also gained by eliminating the state workforce;
  • Closing two prisons – a move Scott said was made easier by the state having 8,000 excess prison beds in the system;
  • Saving close to $1 billion by limiting the state’s Medically Needy program to pregnant women and children, barring thousands of transplant patients and those with catastrophic illnesses from participating in the program;
  • Cutting $1 billion from the state’s Agency for Health Care Administration, by imposing 5 percent cuts in state payments to hospitals, nursing homes and other health-care facilities, and eliminating annual cost of health care increases;
  • Setting in motion plans to steer Florida’s more than 2.7 million Medicaid patients into managed care programs, setting the stage for $1.2 billion in savings in 2012-13;
    Revamping health insurance coverage for state workers, increasing payments for Florida’s select exempt employees such as legislative staff and lawmakers, and senior managers. Scott also would cap employee health coverage at $5,000 annually;
  • More than double the size of spending on Scott’s own office – bringing its budget to more than $638,000, as the governor takes on a greater role as a business recruiter for Florida. A newly created economic development agency would come under Scott’s control, while he also wants sole authority over tax- and financial incentives that currently must be approved by the Legislative Budget Commission.

Although Scott’s budget proposal sets the stage for flashpoints with lawmakers, for now, legislative leaders were spare in their praise. Indeed, reaction around the state was generally muted, in part, because Scott’s budget plan was largely available only on a website that was down most of the day, apparently because of overuse.

“The first and highest priorities of the Florida House are to cut government spending and not raise taxes,” said House Speaker Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park. “I am grateful that Gov. Scott shares these goals.”

Senate President Mike Haridopolos, R-Merritt Island, said, “The Senate is dedicated to working with the governor to provide a balanced budget with no new taxes. The best way to improve the business environment in Florida is to keep taxes low and live within our means. We will do that.”

Senate Democratic Leader Nan Rich of Weston, however, derided the tax-cuts and spending reductions coursing through Scott’s proposal. She said the Republican governor’s approach could threaten the state’s economic turnaround.

“The retreaded voodoo economics we heard today will not right this ship,” Rich said. “But it will drill more holes in our already badly damaged public education. It will further eliminate the life rafts hundreds of thousands of Floridians have had to turn to for basic survival.”

Pictured: Century Correctional Institution. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

By John Kennedy
The News Service Florida

Drug Awareness Program Scheduled For Cottage Hill

February 8, 2011

Residents of the Cottage Hill community will come together Friday night to learn about battling drugs and crime in their neighborhood.

The “Drug Awareness” program will be held at 6:30 Friday evening, February 18 at the Cottage Hill Baptist Church at 230 Williams Ditch Road.

Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Delarian Wiggins will present information on a community “Clean Sweep” that will be held on March 24, how to form a neighborhood watch and information on making the community safer while decreasing crime.

The public is invited to attend.

Diane Kyser Named Bratt Elementary Teacher Of The Year

February 8, 2011

Diane Kyser has been named the 2010-2011 Teacher of the Year at Bratt Elementary School. The kindergarten teacher will be honored along with Escambia County’s other Teachers of the Year during the Golden Apple Awards in Pensacola on February 24. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Escambia Deputies Seek Robbery Suspect (With Surveillance Photos)

February 7, 2011

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office is asking the public to help identify a robbery suspect.

The robbery happened January 30 at 12:39 a.m. at the Circle K at 1112 North Navy Boulevard. The suspect is describe as a white male in his 20’s, five-foot eleven-inches tall, 170 pounds wearing a black jacket and a white or tan beanie on his head. he was armed with knife.

If you have any information about the robbery or the man pictured, contact Gulf Coast Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP. Callers can remain anonymous and collect up to a $1,000 reward.

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