Cross Country Results: Northview, Tate, Flomaton, Ernest Ward (With Photo Gallery)

October 9, 2014

One hundred fourteen runners competed in a cross county meet Tuesday afternoon at Northview High School in Bratt. Runners represented Central High, Ernest Ward Middle, East Hill Christian, Flomaton High, Northview High, Pensacola Christian Academy, Pensacola High and Tate High schools.

For a photo gallery with most runners, click here.

Results were as follows:

Girl Teams

  1. Pensacola Christian Academy 28 points
  2. Central 55 points
  3. Pensacola High 70 points
  4. Northview 159 points
  5. Ernest Ward 185 points

Top 5 Girls From Each Team

Pensacola Christian Academy Girls

  1. Kaytlyn Buschman
  2. Lauren Cochran
  3. Macie Gilbert
  4. Mikayla Gagmon
  5. Miranda Gagmon

Central High Girls

  1. Camryn Gilliard 23: 14
  2. Christine Clark
  3. Erin Taylor
  4. Alexis Clark
  5. Kennedy Fuller

Pensacola High Girls

  1. Gabbe Ruiz 24:12
  2. Mackenzie Daine
  3. Carly Vonosienbridge
  4. Mong Nender
  5. Grace Penta

Northview High Girls

  1. Moriah McGahan 26:23
  2. Keondra Stanley 33:13
  3. Marry Sullivan  33:14
  4. Myishia Syria  35:03
  5. Bethany Reynolds 35:33

Ernest Ward Middle Girls

  1. Addison Albrittton 29:52
  2. Cailee Wilburn  33:30
  3. Anna Sullivan 33:42
  4. Payton Jackson 35:16
  5. Kaitlyn Kasslebrock 35:43

Varsity Boys Teams

  1. Pensacola Christian Academy 29 Points
  2. Pensacola High 92 Points
  3. Central 124 Points
  4. Flomaton 138 Points
  5. Tate 149 Points
  6. Northview 207 Points
  7. Ernest Ward 307

Top 5 Boys From Each Team

Pensacola Christian Academy Boys

  1. Hunter Stewart 18:19
  2. Hyum Lee
  3. Michael Frank
  4. Daniel Posy
  5. Zach Arine

Pensacola High Boys

  1. Jeit Crowdie 19:05
  2. Liam Neal
  3. Justin Polk
  4. Chandler Haines
  5. Joseph Nguyen

Central High Boys

  1. Morgan Givens 20:38
  2. Kyler Fuller
  3. Lee Henning
  4. Alan Carlson
  5. Garrett Price

Flomaton Boys

  1. Dustin Reaves 20:53
  2. Hayden Hammond
  3. Dwayne Hamby
  4. Dylan Patterson
  5. Mayson Kent

Tate High Boys

  1. Dave Nolen 18:57
  2. Jonathon Crabbe  21:37
  3. Cole Stillwater 22:06
  4. Dale Smith  23:23
  5. Matthew Blalock 27:53

Northview High Boys

  1. Brandon Korinchak 20:19
  2. Josh Borelli 23:23
  3. Austin Ates 25:14
  4. Triston Reeves 26:35
  5. Zach Calloway 27:31

Ernest Ward Middle Boys

  1. Brandon Sheldt 25:17
  2. Bryce Korinchak 29:00
  3. Shane Hardin 33:05
  4. Keaton Brown  35:20
  5. Alexander Floyd 37:24

New York Rapper Arrested In Escambia County

October 9, 2014

A self-proclaimed rapper who police said traveled the country with an entourage and didn’t pay bills for lodging and wages to his employees has been arrested in Pensacola.

Walker Washington, 46, aka Shameek Shamel of Brooklyn, NY, was arrested in Escambia County and charged with fraud/defrauding an innkeeper for $300 or more. A woman who was  traveling with him – Adnijah Niles aka Sharon Williams, 20, of Albany, NY – also was arrested on the same charge.

Pensacola Police officer Maria Landy began investigating the pair around 2:40 a.m. Tuesday after she  received information from Anthony Greer, 23, of Madison, TN. Greer and seven other people, including Washington, had stayed at the Lee House Bed & Breakfast, 400  Bayfront Parkway, for two nights.

Landy said Niles had tried to charge five rooms that had been rented for two nights at Lee  House. Niles was arrested because she knew the credit card she provided as payment was not valid.

During the investigation, Landy determined Washington and his entourage had defrauded catering services, recording studios, transportation services, and motels/inns in Mobile, Nashville and Panama City. The amount of unpaid bills is not yet known. Also, Landy contacted a business in Gallatin, TN, and learned Washington and his entourage had allegedly left there without paying a $10,000 bill.

Washington told Landy he was an artist and that he worked for Black Billionaires Inc. He has performed at various locations but has accrued thousands of dollars in unpaid bills, Landy said.

Greer told Landy he owned a business called The Royal Society and had been hired by Washington and Niles in Nashvill to provide personal security and transportation.  Greer said he estimated he and his employees were due more than $136,000 for services  and expenses for approximately the past month.Greer also said the entourage had left in the middle of the night without paying bills at  other locations, and the reason he contacted police was he feared Washington and Niles were getting ready to leave Pensacola without paying him and his employees.

In addition to claiming he is a rapper, Washington also travels the country and holds “open casting calls” for a reality show called “The Originator,” which he tells people he plans to film, police said. Potential cast members pay a $20 fee, which investigators said Washington pockets, and they  are not contacted for the show.

Landy said active warrants for illegal use of credit cards and failure to appear on charges have been issued for Washington in other cities. She also said Washington, who uses many aliases, was arrested in 2005 for fraud by not paying for services with numerous  businesses when he presented himself as a rapper.

He also had an active warrant with the U.S. Marshal’s Office for probation violation,  Landy said.

Taking A Bite Out Of Hunger: Peanut Butter Drive Underway

October 9, 2014

The Escambia County Extension office, Santa Rosa County Extension office along with the University of Florida Institute of Food & Agricultural Sciences and the Florida Peanut Producer Association are collecting peanut butter now through mid-November to help take a bite out of hunger.

The groups are accepting donations of unopened jars of peanut butter to be donated to local food pantries during Farm-City Week.

Unopened jars of peanut butter of any brand can be dropped off until November 21 at any of the following locations:

Escambia County

  • Escambia County Extension Office, 3740 Stefani Road, Cantonment
  • Escambia County Farm Bureau, 153 Highway 97, Molino
  • Escambia County Public Safety, 6575 North W Street
  • Gilmore Services, 31 East Fairfield Drive

Santa Rosa County

  • Jay Extension Office at 5259 Booker Lane, Jay
  • Santa Rosa County Extension Office at 6263 Dogwood Drive, Milton
  • South Santa Rosa Service Center, Master Gardener Help Desk at 5819 Gulf Breeze Parkway
  • All Santa Rosa County Library locations
  • Lowe’s Stores in Pace and Gulf Breeze

Peanut butter collected in Escambia County last year was donated to food pantries in Molino, Bratt and Century.

Pictured: The Godwins of Godwin Farms in Santa Rosa County, (L-R) Steven, Laryn, Valarie, Kylei, Rachael. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Local VFW Voices Of Democracy Writing, Speaking Competition Winners Named

October 9, 2014

Northview High School has named winners of their school level  VFW Voice of Democracy writing and speaking competition. Winners were (L-R) Alyssa Borelli, second; Mitchell Singleton, first; and Alyssa Bell, third. The three students will now compete for cash prices at the district, state and national levels. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

A/C Unit Prompts House Fire Call Near Ransom Middle

October 9, 2014

Firefighters reported to a reported structure fire on West Kingsfield Road, directly across from Ransom Middle School, Wednesday tonight.

A resident in the 900 block of West Kingsfield reported a possible fire under their home.  Firefighters traced the source of smoke to an air conditioning unit. Besides the A/C unit, no other damage was reported.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Kristi Price, click to enlarge.

Molino Man Identified As Victim In Alabama Fatal Wreck

October 8, 2014

A Molino man has been identified as the victim in a fatal wreck with an 18-wheeler Sunday night in Brewton, Ala.

The accident happened shortly after 9 p.m. on Highway 31 near the Georgia Pacific Mill. Authorities said 42-year old James Thomas Ward was pronounced deceased at the scene. He was trapped in his  Chevrolet Blazer that came to rest underneath the truck’s trailer.

Officials have not released further details concerning the crash.

A traffic homicide investigation by the Brewton Police Department is continuing.

Crist Pushes For Medicaid Expansion; Scott Stays Low Key

October 8, 2014

Theoretically, Gov. Rick Scott and former Gov. Charlie Crist agree on one thing in their hotly contested gubernatorial race — Florida should expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

But Crist, the Republican-turned-Democrat, said the difference is that he would fight to extend Medicaid to hundreds of thousands of Floridians, while Scott, a Republican who first ran for office as a fierce critic of the federal health-care law, has been lukewarm since a surprise turnaround on the Medicaid issue last year.

“His heart’s not in it,” Crist said, adding that if elected, he would call a special session, sign an executive order or use budget vetoes to push the GOP-led Legislature to pass Medicaid expansion.

Democrats have long decried the House’s refusal to accept $51 billion over a decade from the federal government to expand access to health care coverage via Medicaid or a similar program. Estimates are that 800,000 to 1 million uninsured Floridians could gain coverage as a result.

But House Republican leaders made clear in 2013 they wouldn’t accept the money, arguing that the federal government couldn’t be trusted to keep its commitment to Florida.

“This is classic Charlie Crist, who’s desperate right now because I think he’s in trouble in his race,” said House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel. “And he’s throwing out a lot of ideas, trying to garner some support and create and stimulate activity with the Democratic base.”

Scott, too, has to think about his base. When he came out in favor of expanding Medicaid just days before the 2013 session, calling it a “compassionate, common-sense step forward,” the move stunned Florida’s political world.

Republicans, including Scott, had spent more than two years fighting the Affordable Care Act, which passed in March 2010. The fight included a Florida-led legal challenge that ended up in a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case. Justices upheld most of the law, but said states must be able to decide whether to carry out the law’s Medicaid expansion.

Scott cited that ruling, along with the 2012 re-election of Barack Obama, when he announced his support for Medicaid expansion in February 2013. He said the combination had cemented Obamacare as the “law of the land.” He said he still believed the best way for people to get health coverage is through their jobs, but that his decision was aimed at making sure all Floridians gained access to care.

Scott has mostly ignored Medicaid expansion since.

“He supported it for about five minutes,” said former Senate Minority Leader Nan Rich, who lost the Democratic nomination to Crist in August. “When you support something, you work to make it happen.”

The governor’s surprise announcement came hours after the Obama administration sent a letter to the state indicating it would approve a proposal to shift almost all Medicaid beneficiaries into managed-care plans. Scott and Republican legislative leaders had long championed the controversial idea, which is now in effect statewide.

As of Oct. 1, there were 2,947,812 Florida Medicaid recipients either enrolled in managed-care plans or pending enrollment, according to the Agency for Health Care Administration. That is the vast majority of the Medicaid population.

Asked if Scott would support Medicaid expansion in a second term, Scott campaign spokesman Greg Blair wrote in an email, “We have already accomplished historic Medicaid reform that improved access and quality while controlling costs. We got a waiver from the federal government to make our system more accessible and affordable, and our Medicaid system is already better off today than it was before we took office, when it was growing at three-and-a-half times our general revenue. And Charlie Crist did nothing about it.”

Asked if Crist’s charge that Scott hadn’t fought for Medicaid expansion because his heart wasn’t in it, Blair replied, “There is no doubt our health care system needs to be improved, but we cannot say that the answer is Obamacare — a bad law that just seems to be getting worse as people learn that they could lose their doctor and their insurance while premiums continue to increase.”

By the same token, Weatherford questioned Crist’s commitment to providing health care. “Gov. Crist had his opportunity to be the governor,” he said. “If he thought more people should have had government-subsidized health care, why didn’t he propose a plan back then?”

A House plan in 2013 would have offered $2,000 subsidies to targeted groups of low-income residents to help them buy health coverage, but rejected the possibility of drawing down federal money that would otherwise have been used for Medicaid expansion.

A Senate plan, which Scott supported, would have used the federal money to offer private health insurance to people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Senate Republicans were careful to say the plan would not be a Medicaid expansion, but it would have targeted the same low-income people who would have otherwise qualified under a Medicaid expansion.

Neither plan passed.

Crist said if he’s elected, the upcoming transition from Weatherford to Speaker-designate Steve Crisafulli, R-Merritt Island, could open the door to a new proposal.

“I know Steve Crisafulli, and I think that he is less adamant than Will Weatherford has been on this issue,” Crist said. “And so I have some hope that we can make some inroads, and just reach out to the House and Senate, Republican and Democrat alike, and appeal to the better angels in them.”

But Crisafulli, who supported Weatherford and other House leaders on the issue, dismissed that possibility in an email. Crisafulli will become speaker in November if he wins re-election in his Brevard County district.

“President Barack Obama crafted a confusing, unworkable, expensive and ineffective healthcare plan,” Crisafulli wrote. “Charlie Crist, who once opposed it, is now Obama’s biggest cheerleader. Not everyone is like Charlie. The fact of the matter is I have not heard from a single Republican member or candidate who supports the Obamacare expansion of Medicaid.”

by Margie Menzel, The News Service of Florida

Century Purchasing New Playground Equipment With $50,000 Grant

October 8, 2014

The Town of Century has received a $50,000 state grant to renovate the existing playground area at Showalter Park.

Last fall, the town followed a recommendation from the Century Recreation Advisory Committee a submitted two Florida Recreation Development Assistance Program applications. In addition to the Showalter renovation grant, the town also applied for a $125,000 grant to install a splash pad at the Anthony Pleasant Sportsplex, but that grant was not approved.

The town accepted playground proposals through Monday and is expected to approve a vendor soon.

FRDAP is a competitive program which provides grants to local governments for outdoor recreational projects. The grants are administered by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.

Pictured: The existing wood playground equipment at Showalter Park in Century. The town has received a $50,000 state grant to purchase new playground equipment. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Florida Judge Gets Request To Allow Gay Marriages

October 8, 2014

Pointing to a “pathbreaking development” at the U.S. Supreme Court, attorneys for same-sex couples quickly asked a federal judge Tuesday to move forward with ending Florida’s ban on gay marriage.

U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle in August found that Florida’s voter-approved ban was unconstitutional but placed a stay on the decision while the Supreme Court considered similar cases from other states. Justices on Monday declined to hear those cases, immediately clearing the way for same-sex couples to marry in Virginia, Oklahoma, Utah, Wisconsin and Indiana.

Hinkle ruled in two combined cases, including a case filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida on behalf of same-sex couples who live in Florida but were married in other states. In a five-page motion filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Tallahassee, ACLU attorneys asked Hinkle to lift the stay and wrote that Monday’s decision sent a “strong signal that any remaining doubt about the Supreme Court’s ultimate resolution of the legal issue does not justify continuing to deny recognition of same-sex couples’ valid out-of-state marriages.”

“The Supreme Court’s action yesterday shows that the Supreme Court has decided to let stand decisions — like this court’s (Hinkle’s) — enjoining as unconstitutional state laws that refuse to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples,” the motion said.

Attorney General Pam Bondi, whose office has defended the state’s ban, said Monday during a campaign debate that there are additional cases that could reach the U.S. Supreme Court and “we’re going to be reviewing everything in Florida to see what to do next.”

Gov. Rick Scott issued a statement Tuesday pointing to the role of Bondi and the courts in resolving the issue. Florida voters approved the gay-marriage ban in 2008.

“The attorney general is defending Florida’s constitution, which is her duty,” Scott said in the statement. “This is a matter that will be decided by the courts. Whatever the eventual outcome is from the courts, Florida will of course abide with it.”

If Hinkle decides to lift the stay, it is not clear when same-sex marriages could start in Florida.

In his August ruling, Hinkle wrote that the stay would remain in place until resolution in the Supreme Court of the Virginia, Oklahoma and Utah cases, plus an additional 90 days. The additional 90 days would give Florida time to seek another stay, possibly from the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta or the Supreme Court.

Hinkle’s rationale, at least in part, was to make sure there is a final decision before same-sex marriage is allowed in Florida. He wrote that there “is a substantial public interest in implementing this decision just once — in not having, as some states have had, a decision that is on-again, off- again. This is so for marriages already entered elsewhere, and it is more clearly so for new marriages.”

But in the motion Tuesday, ACLU attorneys noted a line in Hinkle’s ruling that said the stay “may be lifted or extended by further order” and asked that the judge lift the stay immediately.

They pointed to “ongoing harms” from the state’s refusal to recognize same-sex marriages. As an example, the motion said a same-sex couple married in Washington, D.C., must pay hundreds of dollars a month for insurance because one of the spouses works for a public employer that does not recognize their marriage.

“If defendants are permitted to wait an additional 90 days to make arguments (they are) very well equipped to make in short order, the harms to these and other Floridians —harms that the court has already deemed to be irreparable — will only grow,” the motion said.

The ACLU attorneys said plaintiffs would not object to a seven-day period to allow the state to request a stay from the appeals court or the Supreme Court.

by Jim Sanders, The News Service of Florida

Tribal Beat Coed Softball Tournament Registration Underway

October 8, 2014

The Northview High School Tribal Beat Band will host their 1st Annual Coed Softball Tournament on Saturday, October 18 from 9 a.m. until at NWE Bradberry Park.

The entry fee is $150 per team, due by Friday, October 10. Mail payments to NHS Band Boosters, P.O. 25, Walnut Hill, FL 32568 or drop the payment by Northview High School. All of the proceeds will go directly to support the band with travel, new uniforms and other expenses.

Tournament rules require a minimum of four females per team with three on the field. Winner will receive trophy and bragging rights. For information on the rules or any other questions, contact Thomas Long at (850) 529-7502.

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