Milwaukee Brewers’ Gindl Inspires Young Baseball Players

November 10, 2014

Northview High School held a baseball clinic Saturday with major leaguer Caleb Gindl of the Milwaukee Brewers.

Participants in the second annual clinic went through hands on training on various aspects of the game and received instruction from Gindl.

Gindl grew up around Molino and went on to play high school ball for the Pace Patriots.

In 2007, Milwaukee selected Gindl in the fifth round of the Major League Baseball draft.  He paid his dues year after year in the minors, until he was called up to the Brewers. A week later, he made history for the Milwaukee Brewers as he became the first in franchise history to hit a walk-off for his first MLB homer. It was his very first major league home run.

For more photos, click here.

Pictured top: Jax Fillmore and Jace Gifford each received an autographed baseball bat from Caleb Gindl of the Milwaukee Brewers during a baseball clinic Saturday at Northview High School. Pictured below: Clinic participants.  Photo by Ramona Preston for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

No Change In ECUA Pickup For Veterans Day

November 10, 2014

ECUA residential sanitation routes in the North Escambia area will be collected as usual on Tuesday, Veterans Day.

For further information or questions, call the Emerald Coast Utilities Authority customer service at (850) 476-0480.

Deputy Collides With Car At Hwy 29, Hwy 97 Intersection

November 9, 2014

There were no injuries when an Escambia County Sheriff’s Office deputy collided with a vehicle Saturday night at the intersection of Highway 29 and Highway 97 in Molino.

According to the Florida Highway Patrol, 59-year old Ellen Till of Pace stopped at a stop sign on southbound Highway 97 and then proceeded into the intersection and into the path of a 2011 Chevrolet Tahoe patrol vehicle driven deputy George Kichler that was southbound on Highway 29.

The Mercedes rotated about 90 degrees after the crash, coming to rest in the intersection. Kicher’s Tahoe continue 234 feet along Highway 29 before entering the shoulder of the road and traveled another 82 feet before running into a sun hemp field. The Tahoo came to rest another 52 feet into the field.

Till and her passengers, 22-year old Anna Lochas of Pace and 60-year old George Lochas of Pace, were uninjured. Kichler was also uninjured in the crash.

Till was cited for violation of right of way from a stop sign, the FHP said.

Pictured top: This Mercedes pulled into the patch of an Escambia County Sheriff’s deputy Saturday night at the intersection of Highway 29 and Highway 97 in Molino. Pictured inset: The deputy’s vehicle came to rest 52 feet into a sun hemp field. Pictured below: Damage to the deputy’s Tahoe as seen after it was removed from the field. Pictured bottom: The Mercedes came to rest in the intersection. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Walnut Hill Fire Department Holds Record Setting 45th Annual Fish Fry

November 9, 2014

The Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department honored members of the community and the department during a record-setting 45th annual fish fry Saturday.

Brian Rolin was named Officer of the Year, an award chosen by his fellow firefighters, while Andrew Peters was named Firefighter of the Year and recognized for his years of service to the department.

David’s Paint and Body of Atmore received the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department’s Community  Service Award for outstanding and dedicated service to the community. The company provides the department with scrap vehicles that are used for extrication and other training.

Volunteers served 676 catfish or grilled chicken plates were sold during the event, which was a record for an ordinary fish fry held by the department. Proceeds are used during the year to provide assistance to displaced fire victims in the area.

For more photos, click here.

Pictured top:  Walnut Hill VFD firefighters Chad Rigby (left) and Andrew Peters fry catfish Saturday for the department’s 45th annual fish fry. Pictured inset: Department Chief Chris Brown presents the Officer of the Year Award to Brian Rolin (left). Pictured below: Brown presents the Firefighter of the Year Award to Andrew Peters. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

County Grants To Fund Residential Painting In Areas Including Cantonment

November 9, 2014

Escambia County has approved a Community Redevelopment Agency residential painting grant program to help residents of blighted neighborhoods spruce up the exterior of their homes.  The program will provide homeowners in any of six Community Redevelopment Districts — including Cantonment — with up to $2,000 toward exterior paint.

Applications are accepted on a first come, first served basis and provide grants beginning at $1,000 that require a $1,000 homeowner match, to a full $2,000 with no required match,  based upon household income.

Escambia County has approved $60,000 for the program. Covered CRA areas include Cantonment, Barrancas, Brownsville, Englewood, Palafox and Warrington.

For program information and an application, click here.

Northview, Byrneville Dance Groups Perform At Arts Festival

November 9, 2014

Members of the Northview High School Dance Team and groups from Heather Leonard’s Danceworks based in Byrneville performed Saturday afternoon at the Great Gulf Coast Arts Festival in Pensacola. Photos by April Maholovich for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: The Election Is Finally Over

November 9, 2014

The national clock-cleaning that Republicans administered to Democrats in this week’s midterm elections reached into Florida, helping carry Gov. Rick Scott to victory over former Gov. Charlie Crist, his Democratic challenger, and strengthening the GOP’s hand in the Legislature.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgCrist, a former Republican, failed in his attempted political comeback. Democrats lost six seats in the state House, giving the GOP a two-thirds majority and making the minority party largely irrelevant. The composition of the state’s congressional delegation didn’t change — one Democrat and one Republican lost — but that was about the only bright spot for Democrats.

The fallout: The GOP once again has total control of state government. House Democrats are once again ensnared in a fight over who will lead them for the 2015 legislative session. And Florida is once again primed to be one of the central states in the 2016 presidential election.

The campaign is over. Let the campaign begin.

SCOTT 2.0

In March 2013, it looked for all the world like Crist would be able to walk into the Governor’s Mansion. Scott was trailing his predecessor by 16 percentage points, according to a Quinnipiac University Poll, which showed Crist with a 50-34 lead that included leads in essentially every demographic category.

They don’t hold elections in the spring of odd-numbered years, though, and Scott used an avalanche of negative ads and a stronger ground game than Republicans have run recently to hold onto his seat for four more years. It was one of the more improbable comebacks in the state’s political history.

It came after a bitterly personal and extraordinarily expensive race — one that eventually lightened Scott’s wallet to the tune of $12.8 million, the amount he and his wife pumped into the Republican Party of Florida in October to ensure victory.

“They’re going to announce at 8 o’clock that we are going to kick Charlie’s rear. And he deserves it. Because he doesn’t worry about our families,” Scott said Monday during a rally in The Villages, a retirement community that is ruby-red Republican.

It wasn’t 8 p.m. when Scott claimed victory Tuesday. In fact, it was closer to midnight. It came after an unsuccessful legal effort by Crist’s campaign to keep the polls open in Broward County — no Florida election would be complete without a court fight — and a margin that started out strong in Scott’s favor and narrowed but never closed.

In the end, unofficial results showed Scott carrying about 48.2 percent of the vote, with Crist picking up almost 47.1 percent. There was no talk of kicking anyone’s rear in Scott’s victory speech.

“It’s time to put all the division behind us and come together,” Scott told cheering supporters at the Hyatt Regency Coconut Point in Bonita Springs. “Forget about all the partisanship. Florida is on a mission. And that mission is to keep growing, and to become the very best place in the world to get a job, to raise a family, and live the American dream.”

Crist took the stage in a nearly empty ballroom at the Vinoy Renaissance resort in St. Petersburg to make a similar case. He was interrupted when he said he had called Scott and congratulated him. “Demand a recount!” a supporter cried out.

“We need to come together. We really do,” Crist said.

WAVE GOODBYE TO DEMOCRATS

The wave didn’t just hurt Crist, of course. It ravaged Democratic chances up and down the ballot. The only truly high-profile challenger to a Republican Cabinet official was George Sheldon, who ran against Attorney General Pam Bondi.

But Bondi crushed Sheldon, beating him by 13 points while Libertarian Bill Wohlsifer garnered just 3 percent of the vote.

Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam and state Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater also easily won re-election. And House Democrats, trying to hold onto at least 41 seats to either sustain Crist’s potential vetoes or cause trouble for the Republican majority, instead lost six seats to fall to 39 and yield a supermajority to the GOP. Republicans can now essentially run the House as they see fit.

Outgoing House Speaker Rep. Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, called the Tuesday night results a “validation of the policies we’ve been fighting for the last several years.”

“This is a great Republican night across the board,” Weatherford said.

The bad night for Democrats prompted a challenge to incoming House Minority Leader Mark Pafford, D-West Palm Beach. Rep. Dwayne Taylor, D-Daytona Beach, said he would run against Pafford at a caucus meeting set for Nov. 17. The meeting had been expected to result in a pro forma vote to elevate Pafford to the position.

“Moving forward, we don’t have the time to take a chance on what else (Pafford) might not be able to do,” Taylor said.

Pafford indicated that Democrats were hurt by the national climate and the Republicans’ strong fundraising advantage.

“There was never any guarantee that we would come back with all of our members,” Pafford said.

Also, an amendment that would have allowed for the broader use of medical marijuana, supported by many Democrats, narrowly failed to get the 60 percent approval from voters necessary to take effect.

There were two bright spots for Democrats: In South Florida, Congressman Patrick Murphy managed to hold onto his Treasure Coast area seat, fighting off Republican challenger Carl Domino, a former state House member.

And in one of the few Democratic pickups anywhere in the nation Tuesday night, Gwen Graham — daughter of former Gov. and U.S. Sen. Bob Graham — ousted two-term incumbent U.S. Rep. Steve Southerland, a Panama City Republican who was elected in the tea-party wave of 2010.

A QUICK PROMOTION

The path from senator to president usually takes at least a couple of years, but Sen. John Thrasher made it happen in just 48 hours. On Thursday, two days after he was re-elected to his Northeast Florida Senate seat, Thrasher was officially approved as the president of Florida State University by the state university system’s Board of Governors.

Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, won approval alongside Kent Fuchs, the provost of Cornell University who will now lead the University of Florida.

“I have no doubt both universities will thrive under these leaders,” university system Chancellor Marshall Criser said.

Thrasher resigned from the Senate, effective at midnight Sunday, sparking the need for a special election to fill his seat. Rep. Ronald “Doc” Renuart, R-Ponte Vedra Beach, and Rep. Travis Hutson, R-Elkton, quickly moved to run for Thrasher’s seat, saying they would resign from the House a day before the special election.

Thrasher’s selection was contentious as it played out across the summer in Tallahassee. But Thrasher, who was Gov. Rick Scott’s campaign chairman when the FSU search began, was the front-runner for the job throughout the process.

Thrasher acknowledged he may have had a hand in state schools not being as adequately funded the past few years as some board members would want. But, he added, that in order to achieve higher standards at the university he wants to quickly prepare the school for the legislative session, focus on the university’s ongoing $1 billion capital campaign and look into increasing faculty pay.

“If we’re going to get in the top 25, we’ve got to be realistic about the salaries we pay,” Thrasher said.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Gov. Rick Scott beat former Gov. Charlie Crist to win re-election after one of the most expensive and bitter races in Florida history.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “If the campaign hadn’t built the ship and raised the sail, that last little bit of wind wouldn’t have moved us.”—Rick Wilson, a Republican political operative, on the effect of the national Republican victory on Scott’s re-election.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Burger King In Cantonment Damaged By Fire

November 8, 2014

Fire caused significant damage to Burger King in Cantonment Friday night.

The fire was reported about 7:10 p.m. after workers begin to smell smoke in the restaurant on Highway 29 at Old Chemstrand Road. Firefighters arrived to find the front of the building filled with smoke.

The Florida State Fire Marshal’s Office was called into determine the cause of the fire.

The restaurant will be closed for repairs for an unknown amount of time.

Photos by Kristi Price, Holly Boureaux and Jennifer Day for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Attorney General’s Office Arrests Escambia Assisted Living Facility Administrator

November 8, 2014

Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit arrested an Escambia County assisted living facility administrator, 43-year-old Adrienne Taylor, for allegedly tampering with or harassing a witness, tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, and giving false information to a law enforcement officer.

According to the investigation, Taylor withheld evidence, created false reports, and had others provide false statements during an investigation into her employer, Kipling Manor. Taylor could receive 31 years in prison and fines. The case will be prosecuted by the Office of the State Attorney, William “Bill” Eddins, in the First Judicial Circuit.

Taylor was also arrested in July, along with Belie Brock Williams, for allegedly refusing psychological nursing caregivers entrance into the Kipling Manor facility to assist mental health residents resulting in residents without care for two to three weeks. Taylor allegedly failed caregiver responsibilities to protect the residents from the abuse and did not ensure residents received prescribed nursing services. Investigators received information regarding the alleged abuse and neglect from the Northwest Florida Long Term Care Ombudsman Program Office.

The Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit investigates and prosecutes fraud involving providers that intentionally defraud the state’s Medicaid program through fraudulent billing practices. Medicaid fraud essentially steals from Florida’s taxpayers. From Jan. 2011 to Aug. 2014, Attorney General Bondi’s MFCU has obtained more than $460 million in settlements and judgments. Additionally, the MFCU investigates allegations of patient abuse, neglect, and exploitation in facilities receiving payments under the Medicaid program.

Former Band Director Gets Three Years For Sex Acts With Students

November 8, 2014

Friday, a former band director at T.R. Miller High School in Brewton was sentenced to three years in the county jail for sexual contact with multiple students.

Jeffrey Lance Ganious pleaded guilty to one felony count of a teacher having a sexual act with a student, and two counts of sexual contact with a student. Circuit Judge Jeff White handed down a 20 years suspended sentence. Ganious will serve three years in the Escambia County (AL) Detention Center in Brewton, rather than state prison, to be followed by five years supervised probation. If he should violate his probation, he’ll  be sent to state prison for the remainder of his sentence.

He will also be required to register as a sex offender.

Gainous was arrested in August for sexual contact with several girls ages 14 to 18. The contact ranged from sexting – sending explicit text messages — with at least a half dozen girls, to tying up  girls and using various bondage devices during sexual contact. The incidents, authorities said, occurred at both his former Brewton home and inside the T.R. Miller High School band room.

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