Santa Claus Visits Century Library (With Photo Gallery)

December 16, 2015

Santa Claus paid a special visit to the Century Branch Library Tuesday afternoon taking those last minute Christmas wishes.

Requests included hoverboards, dolls, computers, a hamster, an ATV, a diary and many requests for Playstations.

One girl asked for a hamster, and Santa was quick to check to make sure she would be willing to  clean the cage. For the young man that’s hoping for a new computer under the tree, there was a request from Santa that he use it to research and learn about science and history in addition to just fun and games.

For a photo gallery, click here.

Pictured top: One of Santa’s young visitors Tuesday a the Century Branch Library. Pictured inset: Santa sizes up a young man Tuesday at the Century Branch Library  to see if he is big enough for his requested ATV. Pictured below: Despite much encouragement, this young lady was just not in the mood for Santa. Pictured bottom: Trying to decide what to ask Santa to bring.  NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Appeals Court Once Again Upholds ‘Docs Vs. Glocks’ Law

December 16, 2015

Rejecting constitutional arguments, a federal appeals court again upheld a controversial Florida law that restricts doctors from asking questions and recording information about patients’ gun ownership.

The 82-page ruling by a panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was the third time the court has upheld what became known as the “docs vs. glocks” law. After a July ruling by a three-judge panel, opponents of the 2011 law asked for the full appeals court to take up the issue. Instead, the same three-judge panel issued a revised ruling  that unanimously backed the law.

“The act seeks to protect patient privacy by restricting irrelevant inquiry and record-keeping by physicians on the sensitive issue of firearm ownership and by prohibiting harassment and discrimination on the basis of firearm ownership,” said the ruling, written by Judge Gerald Tjoflat and joined by judges L. Scott Coogler and Charles Wilson. “The act does not prevent physicians from speaking with patients about firearms generally. Nor does it prohibit specific inquiry or record-keeping about a patient’s firearm-ownership status when the physician determines in good faith, based on the circumstances of that patient’s case, that such information is relevant to the patient’s medical care or safety, or the safety of others.”

Wilson wrote a dissent in July that said the law violates the First Amendment rights of physicians.

The ruling left open the possibility of First Amendment challenges that deal with how the law is applied to specific physicians.

“Though the act applies in only a small number of circumstances, when it does apply it plays an extremely important role in protecting patients,” the ruling said. “The act is not a legislative revolution, but it does not need to be. It narrowly protects patients in a focused manner in order to advance the state’s compelling interest in protecting the Second Amendment’s guarantee to keep and bear arms and patients’ privacy rights in their medical records, exactly the sort of tailoring strict scrutiny requires. Those are rights that must always be protected in ways big and small.”

The law, which drew heavy opposition from physicians before passing, includes a series of restrictions on doctors and other health providers. As an example, it seeks to prevent physicians from entering information about gun ownership into medical records if the physicians know the information is not “relevant” to patients’ medical care or safety or to the safety of other people.’

by The News Service of Florida

Byrneville Elementary Present Sounds Of Christmas Joy (With Photo Gallery, Video)

December 16, 2015

Byrneville Elementary School’s third, fourth and fifth grade students presented their annual Christmas Program Tuesday night at Northview High School.

For a photo gallery, click here.

For a bonus Facebook highlight video, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Rudolph’s Day Off: Santa Arrives At Area School In Helicopter

December 16, 2015

The reindeer got the day off Tuesday as Santa Claus arrived at Flomaton Elementary School in a LifeFlight helicopter. Santa visited with the boys and girls, hearing Christmas wishes. Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Florida’s Presidential Primary Ballots Set

December 16, 2015

Florida Republicans will be able to select from 13 candidates in the March 15 presidential preference primary. Democrats will have three candidates — Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — on the ballot, according a list released Tuesday by Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner. The Republicans on the ballot are former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, physician Ben Carson, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, businesswoman Carly Fiorina, former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and businessman Donald Trump. Voters must be registered by Feb. 16 with one of the parties to participate in the primary.

by The News Service of Florida

Fire Destroys Beulah Bar

December 15, 2015

A fire that destroyed a bar in Beulah early this morning is under investigation by the Florida State Fire Marshal’s Office.

The Tavern in the 8600 block of Beulah Road had closed about 2 a.m., and by about 3:30 a.m. was fully involved in fire. The building was a complete loss.

There were no injuries reported. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

For more photos, click here.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.



Man Charged With Video Voyeurism For Recording Female In Bathroom

December 15, 2015

An Atmore man has been charged with a sex offense after allegedly video recording a female in a bathroom in Escambia County, FL.

Jeffrey William Murph, 34, allegedly hid an iPod inside a shaving bag inside a bathroom to record a female as a she used the shower and toilet. The recordings were then transferred to a thumb drive for storage, according to an arrest report.

Murph was charged with video voyeurism, a second degree felony offense.  He provided an address on Howard Page Lane in Atmore when booked into the Escambia County Jail.  He was released on a $20,000 bond.

Authorities did not released the age of the victim.

Challenges Pile Up Over Pot Licenses

December 15, 2015

Nurseries have filed more than a dozen challenges to the medical-marijuana licenses granted by Florida health officials, with some asking that the licensing process be put on hold until their petitions are heard in court.

As of Monday’s 5 p.m. deadline to challenge the licenses, the Department of Health had received 13 petitions, according to agency spokeswoman Mara Gambineri.

Loop’s Nursery, Plants of Ruskin, Tornello Landscape, Redlands Nursery, Alpha Foliage, Dewar’s, and McCrory’s Sunny Hill Nursery on Monday joined three other nurseries that filed petitions late last week challenging the award of the five licenses. Some of the nurseries filed multiple challenges.

A three-member panel — comprised of the health department’s Office of Compassionate Use Executive Director Christian Bax; his predecessor, Patricia Nelson; and agency accountant Ellyn Hutson — late last month named the winners of the licenses, one in each of five regions of the state. The winners were chosen from more than two dozen applications.

But the challenges question the panel’s scoring and also accuse the department of failing to give due process by not allowing the competitors to defend their presentations before the licenses were awarded.

The challenges are likely to inject yet another delay into the drawn-out attempt to get non-euphoric marijuana products, authorized by lawmakers last year, to families of children with rare forms of epilepsy. Under the law, pushed by those families, doctors can order the treatment for individuals with severe muscle spasms or cancer.

Gambineri said the department “will review each challenge and determine the best path forward to get this product to children with intractable epilepsy and people with advanced cancer. We remain focused on moving forward.”

The law authorized five dispensing organizations to grow, process and distribute marijuana that is low in euphoria-inducing tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, and high in cannabadiol, or CBD. Nurseries that have been in business for at least 30 continuous years in Florida and grow a minimum of 400,000 plants were eligible to apply for one of the five coveted licenses.

The medical marijuana applications were developed by a rare “negotiated rulemaking” committee, selected by Nelson, in February after health officials’ first stab at a rule last year was tossed by Administrative Law Judge W. David Watkins.

Four of the five applicants chosen to receive a “dispensing organization” license were represented on the committee, several of the challenges point out.

“It appears that the entities that were chosen to serve on the committee were disproportionately scored higher than other applicants based on non-objective, undisclosed and unsupported factors,” lawyers for Tornello, also known as Tornello/3 Boys Farm, argued.

Tornello is one of four growers — Perkins, Tropiflora and Plants of Ruskin — challenging Alpha Foliage’s license in the Southwest region of the state. Loop’s Nursery and San Felasco are challenging the selection of winner Chestnut Hill Tree Farm in the Northeast region.

Alpha Foliage, which also applied in the Northwest region, received a “significantly lower score” on that application than its winning application in the Southwest, noted lawyers for Tornello/3Boys Farm, which came in second.

The nursery also questioned changed scores on Alpha’s and Tornello’s applications.

“There is no indication on the score cards as to the reason why the scores were changed or whether the scores were changed prior to or after the time the score cards were combined for totaling,” lawyer J. Stephen Menton wrote.

Alpha and Redlands Nursery, owned by John and Carolyn DeMott, both applied in two separate regions. Alpha filed a challenge in the Northwest region, and Redlands filed challenges in the Central and Southeast regions on Monday.

Jacksonville-based Loop’s Nursery, affiliated with the Stanley family whose “Charlotte’s Web” cannabis has become synonymous with low-THC marijuana, accused the selection panel of failing to choose the best applicant for the job.

Loop’s was “the only applications in the Northeast region that satisfies all mandatory statutory and regulatory criteria for approval,” the nursery’s lawyer Jon Moyle argued.

“Loop’s is the most dependable and most qualified applicant, and is the only applicant with the current operational infrastructure to rapidly and consistently produce high quality low-THC derivative products and to make such products widely available and accessible to qualified patients within the Northeast region,” Moyle wrote.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Blue Bell Ice Cream Returns After Recall

December 15, 2015

Blue Bell Ice Cream returned to store freezers Monday in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties in Florida and across south and central Alabama.

Blue Bell has been absent from stores since a voluntary recall April 20 due to a listeria outbreak that was linked to 10 illnesses in four states, including three deaths.

For now Blue Bell is producing five flavors of ice cream in the half gallon and pint sizes: Buttered Pecan, Cookies ’n Cream, Dutch Chocolate, Homemade Vanilla and The Great Divide. More flavors will be added in the future. 12-pak Homemade Vanilla Cups and 12-pak Homemade Vanilla and Dutch Chocolate Cups are also available in stores.

Pictured: Blue Bell Ice Cream was back in the freezer at the Piggly Wiggly in Davisville on Monday. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Gambling Deal Could Be End Of The Road For Dog, Horse Racing

December 15, 2015

Once posh destinations drawing A-list socialites, celebrities and gangsters, Florida’s dog and horse tracks are now at the center of a dispute over whether they should be allowed to do away with live racing altogether.

The issue, known as “decoupling,” is one of several key items lawmakers and industry leaders are trying to work out as they cobble together gambling legislation for the session that begins next month.

Eliminating dog and horse racing at the state’s pari-mutuels would be allowed in a $3 billion, seven-year agreement, called a “compact,” signed by Gov. Rick Scott and the Seminole Tribe of Florida last week.

But the Legislature needs to sign off on the deal, almost certain to be modified in order to get the votes required for passage in the House and the Senate.

Decoupling remains a thorny issue for lawmakers and the industry. Under current law, live races — or offering jai alai games — are required for tracks to have more lucrative operations like poker rooms or, in Broward and Miami-Dade counties, slot machines. The number of racing days varies widely.

Doing away with money-losing greyhound racing has drawn repeated legislative debates in recent years, as dog tracks are widely viewed as a dying industry, kept afloat by tax breaks and poker rooms — or slots — that put the facilities in the black.

But across-the-board decoupling of dogs and horses, as permitted under the compact, is more complicated, according to House Regulatory Affairs Chairman Jose Felix Diaz, the chamber’s chief negotiator on the gambling deal with the Seminoles and the lead on gambling legislation.

“There’s some (legislators) that would be OK with decoupling all horses. There’s some that would be OK with decoupling most horses but not thoroughbreds. It does get a little stickier when it comes to horses,” Diaz, R-Miami, said.

Only three tracks — Gulfstream Park, Calder Race Course and Tampa Bay Downs — now run thoroughbreds.

Last year, The Stronach Group, the company that runs Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, took over racing operations at Calder, owned by Churchill Downs, in nearby Miami Gardens. Calder leases its racetrack to The Stronach Group, which operates racing under Calder’s permits.

But now, Calder wants to get out of the horse-racing business altogether, while keeping its slot machines and hoping to re-establish its card room.

Calder would continue to steer money from its slot machine earnings toward purses for horse races, pursuant to its contracts with the horsemen and breeders, according to Calder lobbyist Wilbur Brewton.

Attendance for the horse races is down dramatically at the Miami Gardens track, Brewton said.

“It’s just wrong to continue to require racing at facilities so they can lose a substantial sum of money doing it. It’s like you have two franchises for McDonald’s and one is losing money and the other isn’t, but they say you have to keep both of them open,” he said.

But the horse industry is dead set against the idea of letting tracks drop the races.

“This is just a money grab by the casinos. That’s all it is,” said Joe Pennacchio, executive director and president of the Florida Standardbred Breeders and Owners Association. “Maybe if they traded horses for blackjack tables, they may make more money. But that’s not how they got their permit. They got their permit because they agreed to race horses. My point is if you don’t want to race horses, that’s fine. Just give the permit back.”

In Central Florida, the horse breeding and training industry provides thousands of jobs and injects billions of dollars into the state’s economy, Pennacchio said.

“There are some legislators who are emotionally invested in getting rid of the dog racing. I understand that. But to even think for a second that you would lump horses in with that is preposterous,” he said.

The economic and political heft of the horse industry is likely to doom across-the-board decoupling.

But Diaz said that any legislation would “take care” of Calder, if horse decoupling is not included in the bill.

“I look at it as a matter of equity. It’s difficult to decouple everybody except for one and not listen to the one that is being excluded. So if everybody gets decoupled except for thoroughbreds, then there needs to be some considerations for those tracks that are not being decoupled but would like to be,” he said. “I think it would be unjust to start picking winners and losers. So if that’s what ultimately happens because that’s where the votes are, then those losers would need to have something done that would alleviate some of their concerns if we want to pass an equitable deal.”

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

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