Wahoos Beat Birmingham In Series Finale
May 12, 2018
It looked like a long night was in store for Wyatt Strahan (W, 4-2) after the Barons scored four runs in the first two innings of the game. Instead, Strahan turned in one of his best starts of the year as the Wahoos came from behind to win Friday’s finale 6-4 at Regions Field.
The Barons’ start to the game was a microcosm of the entire series between these two teams. In the first inning, the Barons jumped ahead on a two-run home run from Zack Collins, and immediately doubled their lead in the second when Keon Barnum launched a two-run shot of his own. That marked Birmingham’s 21st home run against the Wahoos throughout the 10 games, which is exactly half of the total home runs allowed by Blue Wahoos pitching this season (42.)
But after those two innings, Strahan slammed the door shut on the hosts for the rest of his outing. The USC graduate retired 17 of the final 18 Barons before he was lifted, having completed seven strong innings for his longest outing of the season. He also did not walk a batter for the first time this season and struck out four.
After Taylor Sparks chipped in a solo home run in the second inning to put the Pensacola on the board, the Wahoos scored three runs in the fifth inning to tie the game at 4-4.
After an error and a walk, Shed Long laced a two-run triple off Barons starter Ian Clarkin (L, 3-4), and then scored on Luis Gonzalez’s RBI groundout. In the following inning, Gavin LaValley walked and then scored after Aristides Aquino crushed his third home run of the season to give the Wahoos a 6-4 lead. Pensacola tacked on a precious insurance run in the ninth inning after C.J. McElroy singled, stole a base, advanced on a passed ball, and scored on Gonzalez’s infield single to short.
The bullpen had to withstand some late-inning pressure from the Barons but held on to close out the win for the visitors. Carlos Navas hurled a scoreless eighth inning, which extended his team-best scoreless-inning streak to 9.2 innings. Alex Powers then entered the game in the ninth but was chased from the game after loading the bases and allowing a two-out single to Ryan Brett, which cut the Wahoos lead down to 7-6. Jody Davis then brought in Rafael De Paula (S, 2) to secure the final out, and after De Paula walked Collins to load the bases, he got Chicago White Sox top prospect, Eloy Jimenez to ground into a fielder’s choice to end the game.
Pensacola will continue their road trip with a five-game series against the first-place Biloxi Shuckers. Last season the Wahoos won 11 of their 20 matchups against the Milwaukee Brewers Double-A affiliate; however, the Shuckers will enter play 11 games above .500. Daniel Wright (2-1, 6.42) will take the hill for the Blue Wahoos in search of his first win since April 16th. He will be opposed by Thomas Jankins (5-1, 3.63), who suffered his first loss of the year in his last outing.
Small Aircraft Crashes In Escambia, AL; Pilot Seriously Injured
May 11, 2018
A pilot was seriously injured in an ultralight crash in Escambia County, AL, on Friday.
The pilot was identified as Matthew Scott Newton of Pensacola. He was transported by LifeFlight to Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola where he was listed in stable condition with a badly injured leg.
The plane crashed on Darryl Dawe Lane about a mile from the Robinsonville Baptist Church, and about 4.5 miles from the Alabama/Florida state line. The plane lost power, clipped a tree and power line before crashing into a yard.
The crash is under investigation by the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board.
The aircraft is listed as experimental by the FAA.
NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Two Nine Mile Road Starbucks Stores Burglarized
May 11, 2018
The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office is looking for a man that burglarized two Starbucks on Nine Mile Road early Friday morning.
Investigators said the white male “disabled the front door locks” to enter the businesses at 1701 East Nine Mile Road and 2200 West Nine Mile Road. He is described as about six feet tall and was wearing blue jeans,a green jacket, black shoes and a scarf covering his face.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office at (850) 436-9620 or Crime Stoppers (850) 433-STOP.
Images courtesy Escambia County Sheriff’s Office for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
ECSO: Couple Charged After Child Found Living In Deplorable Conditions
May 11, 2018
A family was discovered living in a deplorable conditions after an Escambia County deputy responded to a report of two people passed out at a gas station.
Keith Daniels, 37, and Lindsay Ann Mason, 35, were both charged with child neglect after failing to provide a child “with the appropriate care of supervision to maintain his physical health,” according to an arrest report.
The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office responded to a gas station in the area of Guidy Lane and Ten Mile Road for a report of a man and woman who were passed out in their vehicle with a small child inside. The caller said couple then left the gas station and were swerving into oncoming traffic before pulling into a trailer park on Grace Drive.
Daniels opened the door when the deputy knocked at the trailer, and he appeared to be under the influence of an unknown substance, the report states. The deputy said he smelled marijuana coming from the interior.
In his report, the responding deputy wrote, “While inside the trailer I observed trash in the living room, marijuana roaches in the. trashcan, marijuana shake on the kitchen table, moldy dirty dishes filling the sink, cockroaches in the kitchen, the covering for the air conditioning unit to be missing with rusty metal accessible to the child, a homemade pipe which appeared to be used for ingesting narcotics in the bedroom on the dresser which was accessible to the child and the floor vent cover to be missing from the vent in the living room which left a large opening in the center of the floor. I observed in what appeared to be (the victim’s) toys and clothes strewn about the floor which made it impossible to walk in the bedroom due to the items being piled so high. I also observed in a mattress which was laying up on its side and it did not appear as though there was a place for the child to sleep. I observed the bathroom to be messy with urine still in the toilet. The temperature in the trailer was extremely hot due to the air conditioning being inoperable.”
The cabinets and refrigerator contained a few breakfast items and a small number of canned goods, the deputy wrote. The trailer had no working air conditioner.
Daniels told the deputy that he had worked numerous hours in the past 30 days and was unable to clean and the trailer. Mason said she had not been home for two days and unable clean the trailer as she normally does on daily basis. The deputy wrote that it would have taken more than two days for the trailer to end up in the poor state he observed.
The Department of Children and Family Services was called. Mason agreed to allow the child to stay with her mother.
Mason was released from the Escambia County Jail on a $5,000 bond; Daniels was released on a $2,500 bond.
New Traffic Signal Equipment Installed At 16 Escambia County Intersectons
May 11, 2018
Escambia County recently implemented Advanced Traffic Management System signalization equipment at 16 signalized intersections, adding capabilities to help improve signal and timing and traffic flow.
Those intersections are:
- North Palafox Street and Kingsfield Road
- North Palafox Street and Ten Mile Road
- North Palafox Street and Hood Drive
- North Palafox Street and Ensley Road
- North Palafox Street and Detroit Boulevard/Johnson Avenue
- North Palafox Street and Olive Road
- North Palafox Street and Burgess Road
- North Palafox Street and Hancock Lane
- W Street and Marcus Pointe Boulevard
- W Street and Airport Boulevard
- W Street and Massachusetts Avenue
- W Street and Scott Street
- W Street and Avery Street
- W Street and Jackson Street
- Olive Road and Cody Lane
- Olive Road and Whitmire Dive
The ATMS capabilities, funded by Local Option Sales Tax, include real-time interface with the intersections (ability to remotely manipulate the signal timings), immediate data collection for developing timing plans to improve traffic flow, and intersection health reporting.
In addition to the 16 new intersections, the county has 35 additional intersections with ATMS capabilities. The county plans to expand ATMS capabilities to all signalized intersections within the county as resources permit.
Cox Recognizes Student Heroes In Escambia County
May 11, 2018
Over 450 people laughed, cried and were inspired at Cox Communications’ annual Inspirational Student Hero Awards. Cox recognized 51 students from Escambia County who have overcome extreme challenges in life to serve as an inspiration to their teachers, administrators and fellow students.
The students were chosen by a committee of leaders at their school. During the event, Cox presented the students with an engraved medal and certificates of honor from Cox, Congressman Matt Gaetz and State Senator Doug Broxson.
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This year’s award recipients were:
A.K. Suter Elementary – Aiden Medley
Bellview Elementary – Dominic Gill
Bellview Middle – Tran Nguyen
Beulah Elementary – Cameron Cross
Blue Angels Elementary – Camron Weatherford
Bratt Elementary – Landon Hawthorne
Brentwood Elementary – Colby Beasley
Brown Barge Middle – Isabella McMurray
Byrneville Elementary – Zachary Herndon
Cordova Park Elementary – Srinidhi Rao
Ensley Elementary – Alexis Walker
Ernest Ward Middle – Dajanique Williams
Escambia High – Austan Sexson
Ferry Pass Elementary – Ruby Risenhoover
Ferry Pass Middle – Kaleb Harp
Global Learning Academy – Mariyah Rich
Hellen Caro Elementary – Izzy Pilong
Holm Elementary – Logan Beasley
Jim Allen Elementary – Austin Wise
Jim Bailey Middle – Jasmine Allison
Lincoln Park Primary – Amare Legrant
Lipscomb Elementary – Jeffery Carnley
Longleaf Elementary – Christian Dawson
McArthur Elementary – Tristan Johnson
Molino Park Elementary – Olivia Franks
Montclair Elementary – Nevaeh Jenkins
Myrtle Grove Elementary – Elba Bautista
N.B. Cook Elementary – Kishora Goldsmith
Navy Point Elementary – Frieda Turbeville
Northview High – Sarah Perritt
O.J. Semms Elementary – Caulee White-Wiggins
Oakcrest Elementary – Tristan Raines
PACE Center for Girls – Yana Jenkins
Pensacola Beach Elementary – Jason Cerone
Pensacola High – LiAna Patterson
Pine Forest High – Brittany Williams
Pine Meadow Elementary – O’Rion Evans
Pleasant Grove Elementary – Kayla Gross
Ransom Middle – Da’vina Bettis
Scenic Heights Elementary – Michael Griffin
Day Support at Lakeview – Jessica Jones
Sherwood Elementary – Zacharias Thomas
Tate High – Nina Ventura
Warrington Elementary – Caleb Stanfield
Warrington Middle – Kiana Burgos
Washington High – Taylor Delorme
Weis Elementary – Noah Williams
West Florida High – Joshua Bazinet
West Pensacola Elementary – Moinee Rochelle
Woodham Middle – Dwayne Janigen
Workman Middle – Sol Tripp IV
Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Key Law Makers Says No Plans To Fill Florida Prison Budget
May 11, 2018
Despite warnings that cuts to substance-abuse programs and transition services could result in more prisoners behind bars, the Senate appropriations chairman said Thursday lawmakers aren’t planning to plug a $28 million budget gap at the Florida Department of Corrections until next year.
But budget chief Rob Bradley indicated corrections health-care problems may spur lawmakers to consider criminal-justice reforms that have failed to gain traction in previous years.
Corrections Secretary Julie Jones announced last week she is slashing contracts with nearly three dozen substance-abuse and re-entry providers — programs considered integral to reducing recidivism and helping inmates transition back into society — by at least 40 percent because the money is needed to cover the cost of a contract for prison health services.
Lawmakers will begin working after the November elections to prepare for the 2019 legislative session.
“What I would encourage our partners who are facing these cuts to do is to double-down on their efforts to find efficiencies and understand that, when we return in November, this is going to be something that many of us are eager to address,” Bradley, R-Fleming Island, told The News Service of Florida on Thursday.
Jones said the cuts, which are already being implemented in time for the July 1 start of the new fiscal year, were necessary because lawmakers did not fully fund the corrections agency, which is running about $80 million in the red.
The reductions were announced as Jones finalizes negotiations on a renewed contract with prison health-care company Centurion, hired by the secretary in 2016 in an emergency, no-bid agreement after one private vendor quit years before its contract was up and before she fired another vendor.
Contractors that provide substance-abuse and re-entry services to the prison system had hoped the Joint Legislative Budget Commission, a panel of House and Senate members with the power to make funding decisions when the Legislature is not in session, would steer additional funds to the Department of Corrections to avoid the program cuts.
“We’re looking at all that stuff right now,” House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’ Lakes, told reporters Wednesday when asked about the cuts.
Corcoran blamed the Senate for the corrections agency’s financial woes, saying the House had proposed higher funding but agreed to the Senate position as part of budget negotiations. It’s not unusual for the two chambers’ early budget proposals to differ, and both the House and Senate eventually signed off on the final budget.
“It’s got to be fixed and it will be fixed,” Corcoran said of the Department of Corrections funding problems.
But contradicting Corcoran, Bradley said the corrections department — and the affected contractors — will have to live within the $2.4 billion budget lawmakers approved for the agency in March during the regular legislative session.
An appropriation of $437 million was about $55 million short of what corrections officials estimated they will need for inmate health care, which includes pharmaceuticals, according to documents distributed by the agency last week.
“I think the budget that passed off the floor and was signed by the governor in March is the budget that’s going to hold through the next fiscal year,” Bradley said.
After the session ended, Jones and Centurion negotiated a 12-month agreement “that resulted in the DOC having to spend an extra $28 million on health care,” he said.
Jones is trying to finalize a deal with Centurion, the only company that responded to an invitation to negotiate with the state for inmate health services. Former prison health-care vendors — such as Corizon Health, which in late 2015 notified the state that it was walking away three years early from a five-year, $1.2 billion deal — have complained that they lost money on the contracts.
After ordering the cuts to the substance-abuse and reentry programs, Jones is shifting funds within the agency, something she is authorized to do when the Legislature is not in session.
That will ensure that the agency has the money for a new contract with Centurion, department spokeswoman Michelle Glady told the News Service.
Because Jones intends to award the health-services contract later this month, “we need to continue moving forward with our plan to move the funding from the contracted-services category to the health-services category,” Glady said.
“We need to show that funding is there before we award a contract,” she said.
Bradley, a lawyer who formerly chaired the Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Subcommittee, defended Jones’s decision to cut the services, saying she runs the risk of federal intervention if the agency fails to fulfill its “constitutional duty to provide health care services” to inmates.
“That is an unacceptable outcome. The secretary is doing what she believes is necessary to comply with this constitutional mandate,” he said.
Regarding next year’s budget, Bradley said he is “confident that that we will be able to not only meet all of our health care needs but also be aggressive in our funding of substance abuse and reentry programs in the Department of Corrections.”
But Florida Alcohol and Drug Abuse Association Executive Director Mark Fontaine said workers whose jobs are on the line — and affected clients — can’t wait that long.
By Fontaine’s estimate, about 600 people will lose their jobs due to the program cuts, and providers whose contracts aren’t eliminated will lose up to 45 percent of their capacity.
“So at that point, each provider will have to make a decision about what they can do to continue to provide these services,” said Fontaine, whose association represents providers.
The 43 percent reduction in community substance-abuse beds means that drug courts will have restricted access to diversion programs considered good alternatives to prison, according to Fontaine.
Some of those courts “certainly will send those offenders to prison, and that will increase the population,” he predicted.
Jones is also slashing treatment to inmates inside prison by up to 48 percent, “which means that more people will be getting out without the substance-abuse treatment that they need,” Fontaine said.
Other inmates getting released from prison won’t have access to therapeutic programs designed to aid their transition to the community. Advocates maintain the programs have been shown to reduce recidivism.
The annual savings from the reduction or elimination of the 33 affected contracts range from as little as $38,000 to more than $3 million, according to documents provided by the Department of Corrections, and total $28 million.
“The contracted substance-abuse funding is only 1.5 percent of the department’s $2.4 billion budget. Hard to believe there aren’t other options available,” Fontaine said.
The dust-up over the health-care budget may spur lawmakers to reconsider hard-line positions on issues such as criminal sentencing. Florida has one of the largest prison systems in the nation but has been slow to adopt some cost-saving criminal justice changes enacted by other states such as Texas and Georgia.
Advocates for reform have pushed the state to reduce mandatory-minimum sentence requirements for non-violent offenses, such as those involving drugs, and to do away with a requirement that all prisoners serve 85 percent of their sentences before being considered for early release.
According to Bradley, Florida’s corrections system is designed to serve between 80,000 and 85,000 inmates but is home to about 97,000 prisoners.
“That is not a sustainable system,” he said. “If we were to cut 10,000-15,000 inmates from the system, I think we would be right-sized. To me, that’s the reality and has been the reality for a long time and is something that many of us have been preaching for a long time.”
Bradley said he intends to lead the crusade to do away with mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes.
“It’s insane that judges’ hands are tied when they are confronted with an individual who is an obvious addict, who is not a drug kingpin and the judge is required to sentence that individual to three, 10 or 15 years, when that individual has the ability, if they receive proper treatment, to be a member of society. That is insane,” said Bradley, a former prosecutor. “It doesn’t work and it’s contributed to the fact that we have too many people incarcerated in the state of Florida.”
by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida
Saturday Is ‘Stamp Out Hunger’ Food Drive
May 11, 2018
Escambia and Santa Rosa Letter Carriers will join forces Saturday to help Stamp Out Hunger in our community. The nnual food drive is the largest national single-day effort that benefits millions of Americans who struggle to put food on the table.
Residents are encouraged to leave a sturdy bag of non-perishable foods, such as canned soup, canned vegetables, pasta, rice or cereal next to their mailbox prior regular mail delivery on Saturday, May 12.
Top High School Athletes Recognized At Senior Scholar Banquet
May 11, 2018
The top senior student-athletes in each sport from Escambia and Santa Rosa County schools were honored at Pensacola Sport’s 2018 Annual Senior Scholar Athlete Banquet.
Stanley Dorion, Pensacola High School and Ellen Floyd from Catholic, won the overall male and female scholarships, respectively. The Pensacola Sports Foundation awarded each of them a $4,000 scholarship. Other awardees were Luke Racine from Tate High School (University of West Florida Scholarship), Jordan Mann from Milton High School (Gary McAdams Memorial Scholarship), Heidi Vega from Pensacola High School and Matthew Blalock from Tate High School (Whataburger Books Scholarship), Mary Middleton from Pensacola Catholic (Dr. Alec Kessler Memorial Scholarship) and Jacob Adler from Pensacola High ( Papa Jay Memorial Scholarship).
Additionally, Pensacola State College awarded 24 individual sport winners with a scholarship:
- Baseball — Bennett Shell – Pace
- Girls Basketball — Sadie Nix – Gulf Breeze
- Boys Basketball — Luke Stringfellow – Catholic
- Cheerleading — Jescie Roberts – Jay
- Boys Cross Country — Ryan Von Brock – Gulf Breeze
- Girls Cross Country — Ana Rodriguez – Gulf Breeze.
- Football — Darrell Hixon – Navarre
- Girls Golf — Frances McKernan – Catholic
- Boys Golf — Ty Aulger – West Florida High
- Boys Lacrosse — Jake Molina – Gulf Breeze
- Girls Lacrosse — Sara White – Pensacola High
- Boys Soccer — Justin Schubeck – West Florida High
- Girls Soccer — Carleigh Baerresen – Milton
- Softball — Megan Robertson – Milton.
- Boys Swimming — Coulson Barfield – Booker T. Washington
- Girls Swimming — Meghan Doyle – Booker T. Washington
- Boys Tennis — Michael Ennis – Pace
- Girls Tennis — Elizabeth Nowak – Catholic
- Boys Track — Keyshawn Helton – West Florida High
- Girls Track — Gabrielle Fountain – Pine Forest
- Volleyball — Dina Razek – Pensacola High
- Boys Weightlifting — Patrick Richardson – Catholic
- Girls Weightlifting — Haylee Watson – Jay
- Wrestling — Mathew Blalock – Tate
Schools in both Escambia and Santa Rosa nominate their senior athletes for each sport and submit the paperwork to Pensacola Sports. A selection committee made of educators, community leaders, and Pensacola Sports board members reviews the anonymous applications and select the best person’s credentials for each sport. Those are the individual sport winners. Then they select the overall male and female winners from the individual sport winners.
Rotary Academic All-Stars Named (With Gallery)
May 11, 2018
The Atmore Rotary Club recognized 138 area high school students as Academic All-Stars Thursday night.
The Academic All-Star program is open to students who attend Northview High School, Atmore Christian School, Escambia County High School or Escambia Academy. To be named an Academic All-Star, a student must have maintained at least a B average in every subject for each grading period of the school year, with at least one A for each grading period.
Those who have maintained this status from the 9th through the 12th grades, were honored as Four-Year Academic All-Stars (pictured top) and received a scholarship.
The Randolph B. Luttrell, Sr.Scholarship, valued at $2,000, was presented to Billie Jean McKinley. The Mary Joyner Grissett Memorial Scholarship, also for $2,000, was presented to Kristin Gore. An Anna Ruth Vickery Scholarship worth $2,000 was presented to ShaDiamond Harris.
For a photo gallery, click here.
Those honored as Atmore Rotary Club Academic All Stars were:
(Four-Year Academic All-Stars are denoted with asterisks)
ATMORE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
9th Grade
Micah Mast
Emma Overstreet
Lily Richardson
10th Grade
Lylia Albritton
Jace Weber
11th Grade
Luke Chambless
Charley Clemmons
Kyle Hostetler
12th Grade
Gabrielle Henderson
Kamryn Mothershed
Jasmina Stahly ****
Melissa Wilson
ESCAMBIA ACADEMY
9th Grade
Jeb Black
Jackson Dortch
Avery Mims
Rubye Nix
Disha Patel
10th Grade
Anna Ruth Smith
Gaines Tanner
11th Grade
Bailey Hayles
Lexie Hollinger
Mary Thompson Lancaster
Sara Rolin
Emma Caroline Sasser
12th Grade
Jackson Breckenridge ****
Melanie Fournier
Andrew Howell
Anna Kathryn Rolin
Austin Williams****
ESCAMBIA COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
9th Grade
Keyonna Atkins
Destiny Brown
Nadija Graves
Jakiyah Hixon
Janiyah Lambert
Breanna McGowan
Madison Simmons
Mia Simmons
10th Grade
Kayley Johnson
Divyaben Patel
Joshua Richardson
Nakieyah Robinson
Ladarious Wilson
11th Grade
Cortez Finklea
Darrica James
Christiara Jones
Anaya Montgomery
Johnika Roberts
Olivia Simmons
Adonis Williams
Luerensley Williams
12th Grade
Lazarrian Boykin ****
Destiny Freemon
ShaDiamond Harris
Josaline Hollinger
Diamond Kidd
Nylah Knight
Rodney Lee
Curteia McCants
Billie Jean McKinley
Terriana McNeil ****
Dekaveon Reynolds
Zaria Smith
Keyaira Wilson ****
NORTHVIEW HIGH SCHOOL
9th Grade
Maggie Lauren Amerson
Haillie Marie Anderson
Naudua Briana-Nicole Carach
Sophia Danielle Cotita
Savannah Corrinn Doremus
Amber Marie Gilman
Shelby Madlyn Godwin
Hailey Nicole Harigel
Hannah Elizabeth Hughes
Rylee Evan Huskey
Maille Viola Kilcrease
Heather Lashea Knowles
Bryce Garrett Korinchak
David Allen Lamb
Abigail Lynn Levins
Meredith McKinley McGhee
Mary Paige Nassar
Abigail Elise Nelson
Libby Shay Pugh
Emily Grace Stabler
Benjamin Tyler Ward
Summer Marie Waters
Autumn Hope Williams
William Lane Wilson
10th Grade
Addison Claire Albritton
William Milton Beach
Cassidy Jordyn Boutwell
Emily Grace Boutwell
Alexia Lee Broadhead
Keaton Adam Brown
Lacie Elizabeth Carter
Karlee’ Nicole Criswell
Jackson Thomas Edwards
Jason Nikijah Fayard
Ashlan Kaile Harigel
Anna Christine King
Ansleigh Marie Maholovich
Abigayil O Mascaro
Kayla Marie McKillon
Charleigh Elaine Parham
Kinzie Brooke Rackard
Savannah Nicole Roley
Marissa Denae Rothrock
Cloe Madison Smith
Savannah Grace Spence
Bailey Anna Van Pelt
Brianna Shay White
11th Grade
Austin Joshua Adams
Lexxi Olivia Baggett
Jacob Wolf Borelli
Marissa Skye Bullington
Logan Wade Chavers
Justin Alan Cruce
Rebecca Nicole Dunn
Dalton Dewayne Hamilton
Kherstin Sinone Johnson
Seth Hammac Killam
Gabrielle Faith Kline
Tanner Brett Levins
Aubree Grace Love
Lance Taylor McLaughlin
Sara Delaney Reynolds
Valen Taylor Shelley
Madison Alyssa Sherouse
Aaliyah Raquel Tucker
12th grade
Anna Belle Barberree ****
Dawson Christopher Brown
Jarrod Latrell Davison
Jason Riley Fischer
Austin Laine Ging
Bria Ashlynn Hardy
Fisher Logan Spence
Hunter Ashton Spence
Madison Skye White
Tara Faith Windham ****
NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.












