Local High School Bands Shine At Marching Performance Assessments

October 12, 2015

District 1 High School Marching MPA performances were held Saturday at Tate High School.

Several bands, including the Royal Pride Band from Jay High and the Showband of the South from Tate, earned straight superiors.

For more photos of the Tate, Northview and Jay bands, click here.

Results are below (G=Good, E=Excellent, S=Superior):

Pictured top: The Tate High School Showband of the South earned straight superiors Saturday. Pictured below: The Jay High band also earned straight superiors. Pictured bottom: The Northview Tribal Beat Band performs. Photos by Gary Amerson and Michele Gibbs for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Applications Being Accepted For Free Professional Firefighter Training Program

October 12, 2015

CareerSource Escarosa has partnered with the City of Pensacola, Escambia County Fire-Rescue and Midway Fire Academy to provide training opportunities to individuals interested in training for a new career as a professional firefighter.

Eligible candidates may qualify for no-cost training through CareerSource Escarosa’s Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Program. Eligibility is determined by household income and dislocation status.

Minimum Requirements:

  • Must be at least 18 years of age
  • High school diploma or equivalent
  • Valid State of Florida Driver’s License (Class E)
  • Must be free from use of all tobacco products for one year prior to application
  • Applicants must be willing to attend six month training program at the Midway Fire Academy (located in Gulf Breeze) to receive State of Florida Firefighter Certification.
  • Candidates must be willing to submit to a background check and drug test, fingerprinting, medical exam and physical ability test.

For complete position details and eligibility requirements, visit employflorida.com and search job order # 10075446, or call (850) 607-8721 to speak with a WIOA Career Advisor.

Learn more about CareerSource Escarosa’s WIOA Program including; eligibility requirements, list of approved programs and providers, orientation dates and application procedures online at careersourceescarosa.com/programs/firefighters

Camp Fire Kids Hold Trike-A-Thon For Children’s Hospital

October 12, 2015

The children at Camp Fire USA Century Youth Learning Center recently held their seventh annual Trike-A-Thon in support of St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital last week. The children not only raised money for St. Jude; they also learned about trike safety and the importance of helping others.

Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

No Injuries When Driver Overturns Near Bridge

October 11, 2015

There were no serious injuries when a driver lost control and overturned his pickup truck in the Bay Springs community Saturday afternoon.

The driver apparently lost control of his Chevrolet Z71 on Highway 97A, about a mile west of South Highway 99, at the Boggy Creek Bridge. His vehicle left the roadway, crossed back over both travel lanes and overturned.

The accident remains under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol. Further details have not been released.  The Walnut Hill Station of Escambia Fire Rescue and Atmore Ambulance also responded to the accident.

NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Cantonment Comes Home For Homecoming Fall Festival

October 11, 2015

Cantonment residents took part in a Homecoming Fall Festival Saturday at Carver Park.  The event brought families together with food, family fun, kid’s games and entertainment, plus information tables from community partners. The event was organized by the Cantonment Improvement Committee.

For more photos, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Local Fire Stations Participate In Fire Safety Outreach Events

October 11, 2015

Two North Escambia fire stations took part in Fire Safety Week events Saturday morning.

The Cantonment Station of Escambia Fire Rescue took part in a Fire Safety Awareness Day Saturday the Cantonment Waterfront Rescue Mission Bargain Center (pictured left and below).

And members of the Molino Station of Escambia Fire Rescue took part in a fire safety display at the Molino Community Center (pictured top).

Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Pumpkins Arrive At Popular Church Pumpkin Patch

October 11, 2015

Hundreds of pumpkins arrived Saturday afternoon and were unloaded by volunteers ata St. Luke United Methodist Church on Nine Mile Road. The church’s annual pumpkin patch, at 1394 East Nine Mile Road, will be open Monday-Saturday from 1-7 p.m. and from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sundays.  Pictured top: St. Luke’s first pumpkin patch customer Saturday afternoon. Pictured below: Hundreds of pumpkins arrived Saturday afternoon. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

JV Volleyball Results: Northview, Tate, Escambia, Washington

October 11, 2015

Results from JV tournament volleyball Saturday at Tate High School:

Washington def. Northview 25-13, 25-10.

Tate def. Northview 25-8, 25-12.

Escambia def. Northview 25-21, 25-21.

For more photos, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Gary Amerson, click to enlarge.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Firearms, Religious Freedom And The Rebel Flag

October 11, 2015

A ruling from Leon County Circuit Judge Terry Lewis late Friday quickly overshadowed a week dominated by guns, religious liberty and the Confederate flag.

Lewis’s choice of a congressional map supported by voting-rights groups struck a blow to House and Senate leaders, who argued that maps drawn by lawmakers and aides would better comply with Florida’s anti-gerrymandering “Fair Districts” standards.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgThe case will ultimately be decided by the Florida Supreme Court, which ruled in July that some congressional districts crafted by the Legislature in 2012 unconstitutionally favored Republicans.

Friday’s ruling came at the end of the Legislature’s second pre-session committee week, filled with discussions about allowing Floridians to openly display their handguns, letting pastors say no to gay weddings, stripping the Confederate battle flag from the Senate’s official seal, and the state’s beleaguered unemployment benefits website.

LETTING IT ALL HANG OUT

A measure that would let individuals with conceal-carry permits walk around with their guns exposed made it through its first House hearing on Tuesday.

But, in a state where pro-firearms measures have advanced at a record clip over the past four years, concerns were quickly raised about how allowing individuals to openly display their handguns may conflict with private property rights.

The House Criminal Justice Subcommittee voted 8-4 Tuesday to support the proposal (HB 163), filed by Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach. The bill would allow people with concealed-weapons licenses to openly carry firearms, something the state has banned since the law authorizing the licenses went into effect in 1987.

Gaetz described his proposal, one of a number of gun-related bills up for consideration this legislative session, as allowing citizens to be “armed with their own liberty.”

But a sign that the measure may have a tougher journey through the more moderate Senate, where Gaetz’s father, Sen. Don Gaetz, has sponsored an identical measure, the Florida Chamber of Commerce wants more clarity about private property rights.

“That’s an important issue to many businesses who feel like that’s something that could be of concern to them,” Gary Hunter, a lobbyist representing the Chamber, said.

Others argued that the proposal needs to better define the manner in which people can publicly display handguns.

“What we’re talking about is allowing people to walk down a street with a firearm in their hand — pointed down, not pointed at anyone but pointed down — they can lawfully walk past a bank, past a bar, past a school, not encased in a holster,” said Rep. Dave Kerner, a Lake Worth Democrat who voted against the measure. “The right to carry a weapon irresponsibly is not a constitutionally protected right, and that is what this bill will do.”

Shawn Bartelt, an Orlando mother of two, told the committee that, while crime is down, allowing people to walk around with exposed firearms creates a “less civilized” society.

“I do not want to walk around Lake Davis, when I walk my dogs, and know somebody is carrying an open gun there,” Bartelt said. “There is a reason Dwayne Johnson, the Rock, doesn’t walk around with his shirt off all the time, because it’s intimidating. It’s scary.”

GIVING PASTORS A PASS

A measure that would allow pastors and others to refuse to perform marriage services that violate their theological beliefs cleared its first House vote on Wednesday.

In a party-line vote, the House Civil Justice Subcommittee advanced the emotionally charged proposal (HB 43) that supporters say is needed to reinforce First Amendment guarantees of religious freedom in the aftermath of this summer’s U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down state-approved bans on same-sex marriages.

“The court has redefined marriage as we see it today,” said Rep. Charlie Stone, R-Ocala. “So what’s to say the court won’t redefine what a (member of the) clergy can do next week, next month, next year?”

But opponents of the proposal questioned where such an exemption might lead.

LGBT supporters at the meeting didn’t dispute that church officials should be free to choose whom they marry. Carlos Guillermo Smith of Equality Florida, one the state’s most prominent gay-rights organizations, said his group would be willing to defend any church that refused to marry a gay couple and would even contribute to the congregation’s defense fund.

But Guillermo Smith also said he was concerned about the precedent the legislation might set.

“At best, it’s an insulting proposal that is pretty much a simple disapproval of same-sex relationships by a secular government,” he said. “But what’s worse, and what our top concern is, is that this bill is a Trojan horse which can be a vehicle that will bring even more anti-LGBT legislation to our state.”

Democratic Reps. Kionne McGhee and Cynthia Stafford, who are both black, said they were worried that the bill would open the door for discrimination by white supremacists, who could use religious grounds to defend their racist views.

“As it currently states today in the language that we have before us, we have a dangerous, dangerous bill that can explode at any moment and rewrite our history books and return us to the days of Jim Crow,” McGhee, a Miami lawyer, said.

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Scott Plakon, R-Longwood, dismissed the concerns.

“They seem to be talking about a bill other than this one,” he said. “So I think that this would be mainly for (same-sex marriage), but I don’t see any reason or I didn’t hear any reason today why you would simply say that.”

JACK LATVALA, DEFENDER OF THE UNION

Jesse Panuccio, Gov. Rick Scott’s jobs chief who still needs Senate confirmation to keep his job next year, found himself having to defend his comments to a union lobbyist before outraged Republican lawmakers during a Senate Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development Appropriations Committee meeting on Wednesday.

Panuccio already was facing heat from lawmakers, who told him that they continue to receive complaints from constituents having a hard time accessing the two-year-old, $77 million unemployment benefits website called Connect.

But committee Chairman Jack Latvala went further, accusing Panuccio of being arrogant and displaying a “sense of entitlement,” because of the way the agency head dismissed Florida AFL-CIO lobbyist Rich Templin’s assertion that Florida may be purposely last in the nation in paying unemployment claims.

Latvala, who has sparred with Panuccio on a number of issues during the past couple of years, didn’t defend Templin’s claims, but took issue with the manner in which a speaker before his subcommittee was addressed by another speaker.

“I frankly don’t like your attitude,” Latvala, R-Clearwater, told Panuccio. “I think that there is an arrogance in the way you present this that’s a sense of entitlement. And I just think it’s wrong.”

Panuccio said he didn’t intend to attack any individual and defended how his agency handles jobless claims.

Templin had pointed to a Sept. 22 report from the National Employment Law Project that found fewer than one in eight unemployed Floridians — 12 percent compared to 27 percent nationally — receive jobless aid.

“Our concern is that you have a state agency, and perhaps Connect and the system itself, going above and beyond what the Legislature intended and is making it really hard for workers to get benefits,” Templin said. “My personal concern is that is by design.”

Panuccio described Templin’s comments as “not valid” and the statistics by the National Employment Law Project as “specious.”

LOOK AWAY, LOOK AWAY, LOOK AWAY, SENATE SEAL

Senate President Andy Gardiner and a couple of staff members scoped out the size of the wall behind the rostrum in the Senate chamber on Wednesday. Noticing reporters in the press gallery looking down on the scene, the Orlando Republican waved before he and his aides returned to their offices.

Earlier in the day, the Senate Rules Committee took a step towards establishing a new seal that doesn’t include the Confederate battle flag.

The Senate’s seal should include the flags of “those sovereignties that were legitimate sovereignties of this state,” committee Chairman David Simmons, R-Altamonte Springs, said.

Under the proposal approved by the committee, the Senate’s official insignia would still include other non-American flags that flew over Florida, including the 1513 Spanish flag, the 1564 French flag and the 1763 flag of Great Britain. The U.S. flag and the Florida state flag would also appear on the marker.

The move is another step in a continuing backlash against symbols of Southern rebellion that started after a white supremacist massacred nine black churchgoers in South Carolina this summer.

The new Senate seal may not be the Legislature’s only attempt to further bury the 1860s conflict.

Legislation has been filed to replace a statue of Confederate Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith, whose likeness is one of two sculptures that represent Florida in the National Statuary Hall Collection at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center in Washington, D.C.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Leon County Circuit Judge Terry Lewis recommended Friday that the Florida Supreme Court adopt a set of congressional districts proposed by voting-rights organizations.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “Well, it is part of history, but the Nazi flag is part of history and shouldn’t be forgotten, but it also shouldn’t be lifted up.” — Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, on removing the Confederate battle flag from the Senate seal.

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

Cantonment Man Charged In Home Invasion, Carjacking

October 10, 2015

A Cantonment man has been charged with a home invasion, robbery and carjacking.

Ramoe Tyvon Smith, 30, is charged with home invasion robbery, aggravated assault with a firearm, grand theft, aggravated battery using a deadly weapon and carjacking. He remained in the Escambia County Jail Saturday with bond set at $220,000.

According to an arrest report, Smith entered a mobile home on West Hannah Street, pointed a handgun at the resident and demanded his wallet. Smith and a female accomplice then allegedly took a 5-gallon bucket from inside the home that contained copper scraps before fleeing.

Within hours, Escambia  County Sheriff’s Office investigators were able to determine that the copper was sold at a local recycling business by Smith and the female and warrants for their arrests were issued. The female has not yet been arrested.

In a previous incident, Smith is accused of carjacking a vehicle and beating the victim.

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