Travis Smith Named Florida Peanut Producers Young Peanut Farmer Of The Year

March 30, 2015

Travis Smith from Jay has been named the 2015 Florida Peanut Producers Young Peanut Farmer of the Year.

A fifth generation farmer, he started his farming career as a youngster when he could barely see over the steering wheel of his father’s tractor. Several years ago he was a recipient of a scholarship from the Peanut Producers Association.  Today, he still assists his father while farming over 200 acres of his own and managing a small herd of cattle.

Travis is married to Brittany Smith and they have three children: Leah, Lexie, and Tate.   Travis is a member of the Florida Peanut Producers Association and is active in the Young Farmers and Ranchers program.  Travis and his family are members of the Century Church of Christ.

Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Pedestrian Struck, Killed By Train In Cottage Hill

March 30, 2015

A pedestrian was struck and killed by a train Sunday afternoon in the Cottage Hill community.

The victim, reportedly a male, was pronounced deceased on the scene of the crash  just south of the McKenzie Road crossing at Highway 95. The victim was struck by a southbound train.

A spokesperson for the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office said the incident may have been intentional, rather than accidental.  The incident remains under investigation. Further details have not yet been released.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Century Residents Can Apply For Windstorm Upgrades To Their Homes

March 30, 2015

The Town of Century will assist local residents strengthen their homes against hurricanes and other windstorms.

The program will provide funding for the installation of hurricane resistant windows and doors, roof upgrades, installation of hurricane straps or clips, anchor walls or columns to the foundation and other upgrades.

Applicants must meet HUD low and moderate income limits, based on family size and reside within the Century town limits.

To apply, call the Century Town Hall at (850) 256-3208 during the application period which ends at 3 p.m. on Friday, April 10. Funding will be provided by the Florida Division of Emergency Management.

Northview Grad Serving With Navy Strike Fighter Squadron

March 29, 2015

A 2014 Northview High School graduate is currently serving with the U.S. Navy’s Strike Fighter Squadron 122, also known as the “Flying Eagles”, stationed at Naval Air Station Lemoore.

Airman Willie Owens is an aviation ordnanceman with the squadron, which the Navy designates as VFA-122, and works with the Navy’s most lethal and versatile strike fighter aircraft, the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet.

“I am responsible for handling and maintaining the F/A-18 Super Hornet weapons systems,” said Owens.

The Super Hornet takes off from and lands on Navy aircraft carriers and is capable of conducting air-to-air combat as well as air-to-surface combat. It is approximately 61 feet long, has a loaded weight of 51,000 lbs., and a max speed of 1,190 miles per hour.

Operating from the sea aboard aircraft carriers, the Super Hornet gives the Navy the power to protect America’s interests anywhere, at any time. The versatile jet has the ability to destroy targets located hundreds of miles inland, without the need to get another country’s permission to operate within its borders.

“I enjoy the people and learning experiences the most,” said Owens.

Owens said he is proud of the work he is doing as part of the squadron’s 1140-member team, helping to protect America on the world’s oceans.

“My job trains the pilots to fly with and operate the weapons systems on the Super Hornet,” said Owens.

Sailors’ jobs are highly varied in VFA-122. Approximately 220 officers, 660 enlisted and 260 civilian men and women make up and keep all parts of the squadron running smoothly — this includes everything from maintaining aircraft airframes and engines, to processing paperwork, handling weaponry, and flying the aircraft.

“The Sailors here are the epitome of a team,” said Cmdr. Ernie Spence, VFA-122’s commanding officer. “Everyone here is professional, skilled in their job, and they are great team players which enables us to accomplish our mission.”

The Flying Eagles are the Navy’s West Coast Fleet Replacement Squadron for the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet. They train aircrew and maintainers to prepare them to go to the fleet and join the squadrons that fly the Super Hornet. VFA-122 trained aircrews have flown combat missions in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom, and Operation Inherent Resolve.

“I’m proud to be in the Navy and I’m glad I’m serving my country,” said Owens.

Submitted article and photo by Navy Office of Community Outreach Public Affairs for NorthEscambia.com.

Vietnam Veterans Get Emotional ‘Welcome Home’ (With Photo Gallery)

March 29, 2015

It was a tearful welcome home Saturday for a small group of Vietnam veterans….a welcome home decades overdue.

National Vietnam Veterans Welcome Home Day is observed on March 29, the 42nd anniversary of the last U.S. troops leaving Vietnam — except for the prisoners of war. Saturday, a few dozen people gathered for a ceremony sponsored by the Atmore Memorial Ladies Auxiliary to VFW Post 7016.

For a long time, Vietnam veteran Mike Hanks, one of Saturday’s guest speakers, said he did not talk about the Vietnam War. “I didn’t figure anybody wanted to hear about it.”

He related the story of his “Freedom Flight” home following his tour, and of the business woman sitting next to him on that plane. Her reaction to being seated next to a returning solider from Vietnam and what she said to the stewardess still resonates deeply with Hanks, an Ernest Ward High School graduate.

“I want a different seat; I don’t want to sit by a baby killer,” she said loudly.

“That hurt me more than anything, because she couldn’t understand how much I love kids. and it hurt,” an emotional Hanks said, as other veterans in the audience  were visible moved. One veteran grabbed his walking cane and made his way a short distance away.

“It hurts. I just can’t stand it, still. It’s been a long time. Oh man, why did he say ‘baby killer’? We were all called that, and it still hurts so much,” the veteran said, standing under the American flagpole. Tears streamed down his face. “Oh it still hurts so much. We were just doing what we were told for our country.”

“Words cannot describe how much it helps the healing process for you to have something like this for our veterans,” Hanks concluded as he thanked the organizers of the welcome home ceremony. “I’ve got news for you. I am a Vietnam veteran of the U.S. Army. Any I am proud of it, and I’m proud to be an American.”

For a photo gallery, click here.

Yellow ribbons were tied to trees around Atmore’s Heritage Park for the event which included the patriotic music, food and fanfare of a welcome home ceremony most of the Vietnam veterans in attendance had never received.

The ceremony concluded with VFW Ladies Auxiliary members giving each Vietnam Veteran a gift, a handmade card from Bratt Elementary School students and a hug — and sometimes a quick kiss on the cheek — to thank them for their service. It was a scene reminiscent of a welcome home ceremony that has played itself out over and over for other American wars.

And tears that were decades overdue fell from the eyes of several veterans as they were finally welcomed home.

Organizers are already planned a ceremony for the last Saturday in March 2016.

For a photo gallery, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Senate Takes Pot Regulation Into Its Own Hands

March 29, 2015

Facing another legal challenge to the state’s attempt to craft a framework for a medical-marijuana industry, a Senate committee moved forward last week with a measure that would jump-start the process after hearing from dozens of speakers who objected that the proposal does not go far enough.

Senate Regulated Industries Chairman Rob Bradley, who was instrumental in passing a law last year that legalized non-euphoric cannabis for patients with cancer or chronic muscle spasms, is pushing a new plan that would expand the types of patients who would be eligible for the treatment. The plan also includes specifics about how the Florida Department of Health would choose nurseries that can grow, process and distribute the substance.

Under the current law, health officials were supposed to begin selecting by Jan. 1 five nurseries to operate as vertically-integrated “dispensing organizations.” Those nurseries would have to meet qualifications, such as being in business for at least 30 years and processing a minimum of 400,000 plants. But a judge tossed the department’s first attempt at regulations last year, siding with a handful of nurseries and other businesses that objected, among other things, to the use of a lottery to select the licensees because a lottery wasn’t included in the law.

Health officials earlier this month took a second stab at the regulations after a rare and exhaustive “negotiated rule-making” workshop. But a lawyer representing a 4-year-old girl with inoperable brain cancer filed a legal challenge to the revised proposal two weeks ago, creating more delays in getting the law implemented. A judge has set an April 14 hearing in the case.

Last year’s law was “a promise to families across Florida that had children suffering from as many as 100 seizures a week that we would give them the relief they were asking for,” Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said. “A year has passed and unfortunately we have yet to be able to fulfill this promise that we made to those families, even though we wrote a law that said a system would be in place to deliver the substance by Jan. 1. The purpose of this bill is simple. To deliver on the promise we made last year.”

The Department of Health “was given an impossible task,” Bradley said he concluded.

Bradley’s new proposal, approved by the Regulated Industries Committee in an 11-1 vote, would expand the number of licensees to 20 nurseries and broaden the types of eligible patients to include those with multiple sclerosis, Crohn’s disease, HIV and AIDS and a handful of other ailments.

His plan (SB 7066) would also lower a bond required for the applicants from the current $5 million to $1 million, set the initial application fee at $50,000 and the biennial licensure fee at $125,000.

But to the consternation of a standing-room only crowd who nearly all complained that Bradley’s proposal won’t help them or their children, his current plan does not increase the levels of euphoria-inducing tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, now limited to .08 percent, or change the amount of cannabadiol, or CBD, now required to make up at least 10 percent of the product.

Moriah Barnhart, whose lawyer filed the challenge to the low-THC pot rule on behalf of her 4-year-old daughter Dahlia, pleaded with the committee to consider expanding the THC levels to benefit children like her daughter, who suffers from inoperable brain cancer and uses a high-THC treatment.

Barnhart said she filed the challenge to speed up the process of implementing the law and does not oppose Bradley’s measure but wants more.

“We are desperate. We are desperate to get their medicine here in this state and not have to fear being arrested for saving their lives,” Barnhart said.

Former medical-marijuana user Dani Hall told the committee she had been addicted to opiates for years after repeated back surgeries until she began to the pot treatment.

“Medical marijuana saved my life. Literally,” Hall said.

But the current law won’t do anything for her son, who was diagnosed with autism, Hall said.

“This bill … is simply not good enough. It’s not going to help my child,” she said.

Others complained that expanding the patient base without expanding the THC levels would do nothing to help patients because the benefits of the low-THC treatment are likely restricted to patients who suffer from seizures.

Bradley has refused to hear in his committee a measure that would legalize full-fledged medical marijuana and has consistently said he wants last year’s bill to be implemented before expanding THC levels.

But, at the end of  testimony on the bill, the chairman left the door open for that possibility after being questioned by Sen. Miguel Diaz de la Portilla, a Miami Republican.

“I’m not one for ultimatums, and I’m certainly not going to start on this one,” Bradley said.

Bradley’s measure would also create more specific guidelines for the University of Florida to conduct research on the efficacy of the low-THC treatment, something in last year’s law. Research is sparse because, under state law, marijuana is classified along with other dangerous drugs like heroin, he said.

“There is not enough research in this area. There just isn’t … because this is a Schedule 1 substance in state law, and frankly it shouldn’t be,” Bradley, a former prosecutor, said. “We should acknowledge that. That has kept the research from happening.”

by The News Service of Florida


Roof Fire Damages Century Auto Parts

March 29, 2015

Fire damaged the roof of Century Auto Parts Saturday.

The fire was reported about 11:30 a.m. and was contained to a roofing membrane over the rear auto repair shop area of the building on North Century Boulevard. Firefighters believe a smoldering fire was sparked in the roofing material from a heater pipe that exiting the side of the building and extended slightly above the roof. The heater was last used on Friday.

There were no injuries reported, and the business remained opened.

The Century, McDavid, Walnut Hill and Molino stations of Escambia Fire Rescue, the Jay Volunteer Fire Department, the Flomaton Fire Department, Escambia County EMS and the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office responded to the blaze.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Florida Department Of Health Reminds Residents To Test For Radon

March 29, 2015

The Florida Department of Health is reminding Floridians about the importance of identifying and addressing elevated indoor radon levels in homes and buildings statewide.

Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that you cannot see, smell or touch and is found in most soils and earthen construction materials. It is formed by the natural radioactive decay of uranium in rock, soil and water. While outdoor levels produce little risk, higher concentrations found indoors present potential health hazards. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), radon in indoor air is estimated to cause about 21,000 lung cancer deaths each year in the United States. Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the U.S. after smoking and the leading cause of lung cancer among non-smokers.

“Exposure to elevated indoor radon levels is dangerous to a person’s health, so it is important to know how to protect yourself from this health hazard,” says Dr. Anna Likos, director, Division of Disease Control and Health Protection. “One in five Florida homes tested for radon has elevated levels, so we encourage you to test for radon and to take corrective actions if needed to keep your family safe and healthy.”

Radon levels can be measured with a simple test and elevated levels can be lowered through well-established techniques. To prevent dangerous radon exposure, the department and EPA recommends the following:

  • All residents should test their homes. Schools, day cares and work places should be tested. Test kits are available at many hardware and home improvement stores as well as through online retailers. The department has certified radon measurement professionals who are available to provide radon testing for a fee.
  • Building owners should address elevated radon-related problems immediately—this can be done by a department-certified radon mitigation professional.
  • New buildings should include radon-resistant features, which can be easily and inexpensively installed during initial construction—these features are especially important in areas reporting elevated radon levels.

For more information about radon, its health effects and testing procedures, please visit the department’s Radon Program’s website at http://radon.floridahealth.gov or contact the Department’s Radon Hotline at 1-800-543-8279.

Lady Aggies Take Second In Kissimmee Klassic

March 29, 2015

The Tate High School Lady Aggies took second place in the Kissimmee Klassic Saturday after a 5-2 loss in the championship game against 8A Hagerty.

The Aggies’ Tori Perkins was named defensive player of the tournament.

The Lady Aggies moved into the championship game after an earlier victory Saturday 4-0 over St. Cloud.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Nearing The Halfway Mark

March 29, 2015

The House and Senate committees charged with crafting budget plans have finished their first drafts. Differences between the two chambers on some of the major policy issues are starting to emerge.

And Capitol insiders are beginning to speculate that a special session could be in the cards.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgIn others words, all the usual signs that the midpoint of the session is at hand are on display in Tallahassee. And as usual, there are almost as many questions as answers.

Will the budget include money to defray the medical costs of low-income Floridians, either through a form of Medicaid expansion or something else? Just how far will lawmakers really go in reining in the testing and accountability system that has been the hallmark of the state’s education reform efforts for 15 years? And is this the year that advocates of a gambling deal hit the jackpot, or will they once again go bust?

The past week helped set up some of the battles. The next month will be about resolving them. Unless, of course, the chattering classes finally have it right and lawmakers will need a few extra weeks to hammer out their differences.

WHAT’S A FEW BILLION AMONG FRIENDS?

There’s always a gap of some sort between the House and Senate budgets. Usually, one of the chambers floats the idea of removing a program from the state ledger, or adding something to the spending plan, or cutting this tax or that expense.

This year, though, the difference is a bit larger than usual. With the Senate Appropriations Committee passing an $80.4 billion for the budget year that begins July 1 and the House Appropriations Committee checking in with a $76.2 billion outline, the gap between the two is more than $4 billion.

That means legislative leaders will likely have to reach some sort of agreement before negotiations about the budget details can begin. And the biggest source of friction comes in health care.

The Senate would include $2.8 billion for a plan to use Medicaid expansion money from the federal Affordable Health Care Act, better known as Obamacare, to help lower-income Floridians purchase private insurance. The upper chamber also would use nearly $2.2 billion from a potential extension of the Low Income Pool, or LIP, program, which funnels additional money to hospitals and other health providers that serve large numbers of poor and uninsured patients.

That program is set to expire June 30 unless the state can reach an agreement with the federal government.

In the case of expanding health coverage with Medicaid money, the Senate has tried before to get the House to go along with a similar plan, only to get soundly rejected. And the House is also hesitant to put LIP money in the budget, given that the LIP program is scheduled to not exist when the budget takes effect. But something’s got to give, Senate leaders say.

“Whether or not the House wants to embrace either of those two proposals remains to be seen, but we’re going to have to have some solution,” said Senate Appropriations Chairman Tom Lee, R-Brandon.

As reluctant as they are to talk about Medicaid expansion and LIP funding, though, House leaders are eager to discuss taxes. The chamber rolled out a $690 million package of tax relief that slashes levies or offers holidays for a range of items, including cell phone bills, pay TV, gun-club memberships, college textbooks and book fair purchases.

“The average Floridian pays about $1,800 bucks a year in state taxes. That is the lowest in the country, but we can do even better and we will,” said House Finance & Tax Chairman Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach.

But Lee said tax-cut measures may not advance for a couple of weeks due to the talks with the federal government.

“And we’re not going to get into conference (negotiations with the House) unless we get some remedy, in all likelihood anyway, on the health-care funding problems that we have,” Lee said.

INHERITED VICE

The sins — or at least the sinful ideas — of past legislative sessions are coming back to pester lawmakers in 2015. One of the thorniest issues is gambling. On one hand, the House is vetting a soup-to-nuts gaming measure that might end up going nowhere fast; on the other, the Senate is pursuing negotiations with the Seminole Tribe of Florida focused on the state’s existing deal with the tribe.

House Regulatory Affairs Chairman Jose Felix Diaz’s comments at the introduction of a four-hour workshop Thursday on gambling might have foreshadowed the future of a sweeping proposal released by House Majority Leader Dana Young the day before the legislative session began earlier this month.

“Welcome to the most anticipated non-event of the year,” Diaz, R-Miami, quipped to a packed meeting room.

Young’s plan (HB 1233) would allow a maximum of two Las Vegas-style casinos to open in Miami-Dade or Broward counties and would effectively do away with a 20-year revenue-sharing agreement, called a compact, with the tribe. A portion of the deal with the Seminoles giving the tribe exclusive rights to operate banked card games such as blackjack is set to expire on July 31 unless the Legislature reauthorizes it or signs a new agreement.

Meanwhile, Senate Regulated Industries Rob Bradley told The News Service of Florida that his talks with the Seminoles have intensified over the past week.

“We are negotiating right now with the Seminole Tribe. Those are ongoing negotiations. Whether they will be fruitful or not remains to be seen,” Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said.

Under the current agreement, the Seminoles agreed to pay the state a minimum of $1 billion over five years in exchange for exclusive rights to banked card games at five of its seven facilities throughout the state. The tribe’s payments to the state have thus far exceeded the minimum and are expected to increase under a complicated revenue-sharing formula inked in 2010.

Meanwhile, Bradley’s committee has also tackled a state law that allows a limited form of medical marijuana. Facing another legal challenge to the state’s attempt to craft a framework for the pharmacological pot industry, the committee moved forward with a measure that would jump-start the process.

Bradley, who was instrumental in passing a law last year that legalized non-euphoric cannabis for patients with cancer or chronic muscle spasms, is pushing a new plan that would expand the types of patients who would be eligible for the treatment. The plan also includes specifics about how the Florida Department of Health would choose nurseries that can grow, process and distribute the substance.

The Department of Health has tried twice to craft rules for the industry. But a lawyer representing a 4-year-old girl with inoperable brain cancer filed a legal challenge to the revised proposal two weeks ago, creating more delays in getting the law implemented. A judge has set an April 14 hearing in the case. Also, two other challenges were filed this week.

Last year’s law was “a promise to families across Florida that had children suffering from as many as 100 seizures a week that we would give them the relief they were asking for,” Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said. “A year has passed and unfortunately we have yet to be able to fulfill this promise that we made to those families, even though we wrote a law that said a system would be in place to deliver the substance by Jan. 1. The purpose of this bill is simple. To deliver on the promise we made last year.”

TEST OF WILLS

Lawmakers are also considering, as usual, an array of measures dealing with education. Perhaps the highest-profile legislation related to schools is a plan to roll back the number of standardized tests that public-school students take each year, and the Senate Appropriations Committee took perhaps the biggest step in that direction yet.

Under the newest version of a Senate measure (SB 616), Florida third-graders would not have to pass the Florida Standards Assessment to be promoted to fourth grade this year until the tests for that grade and others are found to be valid by an independent examination.

In exchange, the proposal would require school districts to identify students who scored in the bottom 20 percent on the test and come up with strategies to help those students.

“You can promote them, if you want to promote them, but you need to demonstrate why you’re promoting them,” said Senate Education PreK-12 Committee Chairman John Legg, a Lutz Republican sponsoring the overall bill.

House Speaker Steve Crisafulli, R-Merritt Island, didn’t seem eager to join.

“Social promotions, to us in the House, are not something that we’re interested in,” he said.

The House, having already passed its version of the testing bill, moved on this week to other education measures. It approved a proposal that could funnel local tax dollars to charter-school construction (HB 7037), a bill (HB 665) relaxing penalties for school districts that don’t comply with the state’s class-size limits and a measure (HB 7043) that would make it easier for school districts to approve student dress codes and establish financial bonuses for districts that do so.

STORY OF THE WEEK: The House and Senate Appropriations Committees approved the chambers’ respective budget proposals for the fiscal year that begins July 1.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “I would say to our friends in the House, who have their own views about this matter — views that I respect — that ‘no’ is not a health-care policy. ‘No’ is not a solution for 800,000 people.”—Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, on the House’s reluctance to take up a Senate plan to help low-income Floridians purchase health insurance.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

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