Glenn Austin Becomes 7th Candidate For District 5 Commission Seat

February 2, 2012

Candidate number seven has pre-filed for the Escambia County Commission District 5 seat.

Glenn Austin of Cantonment prefiled Monday as a Republican for the seat currently held by Republican Kevin White of Molino.

“The rule for effective governance is simple. When there is a problem, you fix it,” Austin said in announcing his candidacy. “Escambia County does not have a solid plan to bring a sustainable industry into this county that will create jobs. I fully realize the problem and am focused on becoming part of the solution.”

Austin, a political newcomer, now owns a small business in Escambia County. He formerly worked for WKRG TV 5 and was spokesperson for the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office under Sheriff Ron McNesby.

In addition to Austin and White, Republicans Denanne Burkett, Sam Archer and Jim Taylor have pre-filed for the seat. Packy Mitchell and Dennis Wiggins have also announced, running with no party affiliation.

‘Shorty’ Charged With Cantonment Grand Theft Auto, Hit And Run

February 2, 2012

A Cantonment woman known as “Shorty” was charged with grand theft auto for stealing a pickup truck and crashing into a fence.

Latasha Thompson was arrested after being identified by multiple witnesses as the person who took a green Ford Ranger from Quarters Road in Cantonment.

An Escambia County deputy responding to the stolen vehicle call found the Ranger crashed into a fence on nearby Booker Street during the early morning hours of January 21. A resident at that address identified the driver of the truck as “Shorty”, a short, white female that frequents the neighborhood, according to a Sheriff’s Office arrest report. She had fled the scene prior to the arrival of the deputy.

The victim also told deputies that “Shorty” had taken his truck, and he knew “Shorty” because she “had been staying with him for a short time”.  The victim identified “Shorty” as Thompson. A warrant was issued for her arrest. Thompson was arrested on the warrant late Tuesday night and booked into the Escambia County Jail. She was also charged with hit and run by the Florida Highway Patrol in connection with hitting the fence.

Career Night Is Tonight At Ernest Ward Middle School

February 2, 2012

Ernest Ward Middle School will host a Career Night this evening from 6-7:30 in the school gym for parents, students and community members.

Representatives from many career fields will be present, along with school representatives from  who will speak individually to those who would like information concerning career academies, middle and high school academic programs and extracurricular activities.

Refreshments will be served and adults may register for door prizes. Adults are also welcomed to bring copies of their resumes to leave with potential employers.

Participants include:

  • Tate High School
  • Northview High School
  • West Florida High School
  • Ernest Ward Middle School
  • EWMS Electrical Academy
  • EWMS Culinary Academy
  • EWMS Graphic Arts Academy
  • George Stone Vocational School
  • Pensacola State College
  • Escambia River Electric Coop
  • Gulf Power
  • Alabama Power

Career fields expected to represented include:

  • professional baseball player
  • minister
  • barber
  • nurse
  • social worker
  • counselor
  • fireman
  • EMT
  • interior designer
  • speech therapist
  • banker
  • home inspector
  • accountant
  • deputy
  • taxidermist
  • attorney
  • lineman
  • electrical engineer
  • veterinarian
  • physician
  • forensic scientist
  • seamstress
  • florist
  • welder
  • correctional officer
  • optometrist

More Rain In Forecast

February 2, 2012

Here is your official North Escambia are forecast:

  • Tonight: A 50 percent chance of showers. Areas of dense fog. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 57. East wind between 5 and 10 mph.
  • Friday: Showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 69. East wind around 10 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
  • Friday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 54. East wind around 10 mph.
  • Saturday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 74. South wind between 5 and 10 mph.
  • Saturday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57. South wind around 5 mph.
  • Sunday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming north.
  • Sunday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 51. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Monday: A 40 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66. North wind between 5 and 10 mph.
  • Monday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 67.
  • Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 41.
  • Wednesday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66.
  • Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46.
  • Thursday: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 65.

Santa Rosa Man Sentenced To Life For Killing His Mother

February 2, 2012

A Milton man will spend the rest of his life in prison for a 2011 murder.

State Attorney William “Bill” Eddins said David J. Lewis of Milton was sentenced by Judge David Rimmer to life in prison without possibility of parole for the September 30, 2008, murder of his 86-year old mother, Bonnie Lewis.

The 56-year old Lewis pleaded no contest to second degree murder with a weapon on July 18, 2011, as well as to the fleeing and resisting arrest charges. He received concurrent 15 and 5 year prison sentences for the fleeing and resisting charges respectively.

Family members found Bonnie Lewis slumped in a living room chair in her home at 3290 Lewis Road in Milton on September 30, 2008. Mrs. Lewis’s throat had been slashed at her front door and evidence at the scene showed she had managed to make her way to the living room chair before succumbing to her injury. David Lewis was arrested on October 1, 2008, for an outstanding arrest warrant for resisting arrest with violence and fleeing and attempt to elude arising from an unrelated high speed chase on September 10, 2008, which ended with Lewis being tased into submission as he resisted arrest by Santa Rosa County deputies. On October 2 ,2008, Lewis confessed to Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s detectives that he had murdered his mother with a knife when he “snapped” because she “treated me like a twelve year old”.

Sims, Nero, Craft Ink On National Signing Day

February 2, 2012

Three North Escambia area players inked letters of intent Wednesday on National Signing Day.

Dak Sims, McDavid

Dak Sims of McDavid was among three Pensacola High School players to sign with NAIA Cumberland University of Tennessee. Sims at center, linebacker Brian Rudolph and defensive end Kendrell Jenkins will head to Lebanon, Tenn., about 30 miles east of Nashville, in the fall. The Cumberland Bulldogs were ranked as high as 14th in the NAIA Top 25 last season. With a 7-3 season, the Bulldogs ended at No. 25.

Tyler Nero, Atmore

Tyler Nero of Escambia County High School in Atmore signed with the Auburn Tigers. The defensive tackle had fielded offers from several SEC schools before settling on AU.

Dalvin Craft, Atmore

The Escambia County High School Blue Devil’s Dalvin Craft signed his letter of intent to play for Southern Miss.

Pictured top: Tyler Nero reacts after signing his letter of intent to play at Auburn. Pictured below: Dalvin Craft of Atmore signs with Sothern Miss. Photos courtesy WEAR 3 for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

House Plans 8 Percent Tuition Hike, Senate Likely To Follow

February 2, 2012

Pitting the chamber against the wishes of Gov. Rick Scott, the House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday approved a spending plan that calls for an 8 percent tuition increase, continuing an effort to shift more of the cost in higher education to students instead of taxpayers.

A day after Scott said he wanted lawmakers to hold the line on tuition, the panel approved a budget that relies on an 8 percent base increase for university students to balance the higher education budget, which already will see cuts as lawmakers try to fill a budget gap shortfall of deeper than $1.5 billion.

The state’s 11 public universities would be allowed to raise tuition by an additional 7 percent on top of that base increase, a system known as differential tuition, under the proposal. Last year, universities raised tuition 8 percent at the direction of the Legislature, and the schools tacked on the full 7 percent differential hike for a 15 percent increase. Tuition has gone up every year for the past six years in Florida.

For universities, the proposed tuition increase would amount to $54 million in new incoming money; state college students would pay additional $73 million under the 8 percent tuition hike.

On Tuesday, Gov. Rick Scott said he opposes any increase in student tuition.

Rep. Denise Grimsley, R-Sebring, and chairwoman of the House’s budget committee, said the governor may have to acquiesce on the tuition issue. The proposed increase will likely be nestled into budget’s proviso language, which the courts have largely determined are off limits to the governor’s line item veto power.

The Senate is not expected to release its spending plan for at least a few weeks. Allocations for the Senate budget – how much of the money will go to which parts of the spending pie – have yet to be distributed to budget chairmen, but may be made public later this week.

Speaking to reporters later Wednesday, Senate President Mike Haridopolos, R-Merritt Island, said the chamber would likely follow the House and include tuition hikes as part of its proposed budget.

“We have the fifth lowest tuition in the country, sometimes people lose sight of that,” said Haridopolos, who teaches classes at the University of Florida. “The vast majority of students in my class are on Bright Futures so it’s still a great deal for Florida students. … I would not be surprised if it’s roughly the number the House is talking about.”

The legislative decisions put the chambers on a collision course with Scott, who told reporters Tuesday that he does not want lawmakers to raise rates again.

“We have to tighten our belts and save money, Scott said. “What we have to focus on is how do we reduce our costs rather than how do we raise the tuition.”

Scott said he doesn’t agree that tuition hikes are acceptable because Florida students already pay some of the lowest tuition in the country.

“Why wouldn’t you want that,” Scott said of low tuition. “I want the cost of living to be lower in this state than other states, not higher.”

By The News Service of Florida

Escambia County Man Gets 20 Years In Meth Case

February 2, 2012

An Escambia County man was sentenced to 20 years on multiple drug charges Wednesday.

Daniel Ducharme was convicted by an Escambia County Jury of trafficking in methamphetamine (200g or more), possession of a firearm with altered serial number, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Following the trial, Judge Jan Shackelford sentenced Ducharme to 20 years state prison with a 15 year minimum mandatory.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office served a search warrant on Ducharme’s residence and found an active meth lab in the bathroom of the apartment. Ducharme was found immediately outside of the bathroom with a co-defendant. A handgun with a sanded off serial number was located in the kitchen, while multiple pieces of drug paraphernalia were found throughout the entire apartment and outside trash. Ducharme admitted to making the meth in the apartment as well as the possession of the firearm, according to State Attorney Bill Eddins.

Ducharme has additional charges pending for sale of methamphetamine and possession of listed chemical.

School Prayer Bill Passes Senate, Heads To House

February 2, 2012

The Senate on Wednesday passed a measure that will allow school districts to let students offer inspirational messages, including prayer, at school events as long as adults stay out of the way.

Passage of the bill (SB 98) on a 31-8 vote sends it to the House, where it is thought to be likely to pass. The bill was sponsored by a Democrat, Sen. Gary Siplin of Orlando, though all those who opposed the bill were Democrats.

Its approval came over the objections of senators who said the measure will lead to prayers at school events that students can’t get out of, including possibly in classes, and that some young students will have to listen to prayers or risk being ostracized because they come from a different religious tradition than most of their classmates.

“I implore you to protect minority students … and not promote alienation,” said Sen. Eleanor Sobel, D-Hollywood. “We want our public school students to get along.”

But backers of the bill said the measure is needed to protect the religious freedom of students, some of whom now feel they aren’t allowed to offer prayers that the student body, or a large part of it can listen to – that they’re only allowed to pray to themselves or in small groups.

In that way the bill is about freedom of expression – the right of students to be heard when they’re expressing a religious message, said Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart.

“This is about protecting the rights of students to talk,” he said, saying that he rejected the notion that “religious expression should somehow be eliminated from the public square.”

Negron said efforts to remove religion from public discourse have resulted in discrimination against the religious – preventing them from expressing their beliefs in public while at school events.

“I don’t park my religious beliefs, my political beliefs, my economic beliefs, my sports beliefs – you don’t park your rights at the school door,” Negron said. “The reasons Sen. Siplin has to do this bill is these rights are being trampled.”

Many of those who spoke against the bill on the Senate floor were Jewish, including Sobel and Sen. Nan Rich, D-Weston, who said she remembered that in the Miami Beach of her childhood there were establishments with signs that said “no dogs, no Jews, no blacks.”

“The same feelings of exclusion come welling up” with the bill the Senate debated and passed on Wednesday, she said. “Anyone who doesn’t go along with it is considered the other. This is especially true with children. Anything that makes you different can subject you to ridicule and abuse.”

Rich and several other opponents noted that the constitution protects the rights of children to pray now.

Siplin reminded colleagues that the bill is permissive – school boards don’t have to allow anything, if they don’t want. And the measure doesn’t represent government dictating any type of religious message, because it specifically says that teachers and other school personnel are prohibited from having anything to do with the message. The choice to offer an inspirational message at a school event would have to be up to the student, and no adults would be able to censor what it is the student wants to say.

One supporter of the proposal, Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, while speaking in favor of the bill, warned his colleagues that in order to support the measure they had to accept the notion that those messages may not always be a Christian prayer, or even a Jewish one. With adults not allowed to tell students what they can or can’t say – some messages could be unsettling.

“At a graduation ceremony a student might stand up and say I give my thanks to Allah, and let me explain why,” said Gaetz. “A student might stand up and say I’m a Wiccan and let me explain why. We have to be prepared for the full expression of religion and I am.”

All eight senators voting against the bill were Democrats: Sens. Audrey Gibson, Arthenia Joyner, Gwen Margolis, Nan Rich, Jeremy Ring, Maria Sachs, Chris Smith and Eleanor Sobel.

By The News Service of Florida

Romney Wins Florida Primary In Landslide

February 1, 2012

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney stormed to a convincing win in Florida’s Republican presidential primary Tuesday, bolstering the front-runner’s argument that he is the best candidate to compete with President Barack Obama in swing states in the general election.

With 98 percent of precincts reporting, Romney had 46 percent of the vote to former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s 32 percent. Former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum and Texas Congressman Ron Paul were running far behind, with 13 and 7 percent of the vote, respectively.

The win allowed Romney to show off his ability to win a state that will be the largest competitive prize in the November showdown with Obama.

Related Story: Escambia, Santa Rosa Go For Gingrich

Standing in the city where Republicans will gather in seven months to hold their convention, Romney gave a speech that at times sounded like he was accepting the GOP nomination.

“I stand ready to lead this party and to lead our nation,” Romney said. ” … My leadership will end the Obama era and begin a new era of American prosperity.”

Romney swept the major metropolitan areas of the state, though the results were very close in Duval County, where Romney won by fewer than 1,400 votes out of more than 86,000 cast.

Gingrich carried many of the largely rural counties in North Florida and the south-central part of the state.

The victory was almost certain to ratchet up pressure on Gingrich, who has vowed to fight on, to drop his upstart bid. Gingrich came into Florida will a full head of steam after his South Carolina victory Jan. 21, but the momentum fizzled after two lackluster debate performances and an avalanche of negative ads from Romney’s campaign and “super PAC.”

Florida House Speaker-designate Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, said Romney’s win in Florida had “defined” the race.

“I think that Mitt Romney has shown that he’s the candidate that is going to win the nomination,” Weatherford said. “The other candidates have to decide how long they want to stay in.”

Gingrich, for his part, showed no interest in stepping aside following the defeat.

“It is now clear this will be a two person race between the conservative leader Newt Gingrich and the Massachusetts moderate,” the former speaker said in his post-election speech.

That prospect delighted Democrats, who watched the Florida primary devolve into a bitter and personal feud between Gingrich and Romney. Florida Democratic Party Chairman Rod Smith said Romney’s bombardment of Gingrich had tarnished his future prospects in the state.

“He may have won this contest, but he lost the opportunity to win the hearts and minds of the people of Florida,” Smith said.

Romney and party leaders were quick to say that the intraparty battle would soon enough give way to a party united in an effort to defeat Obama.

“A competitive primary does not divide us, it prepares us, and we will win,” Romney told hundreds of cheering supporters who waved American flags and “Florida Believes” signs.

Republican Party of Florida Chairman Lenny Curry, who joined the Romney party but officially remains neutral, suggested that the back-and-forth amounted to a vetting of the candidates and could inoculate the party’s nominee against attacks from Obama in the fall.

“We have a winner here now,” Curry said. “I think the negative advertising is old news.”

By The News Service of Florida

Pictured: Rep. Mitt Romney campaigns Saturday at The Fish House in Pensacola. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

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