Photos: Northview’s Got Talent

March 2, 2013

Northview High School held their annual talent show Friday night.

Winners were:

1st place -  Dance Group
2nd place — Guitar Trio
3rd place — Alison Bardin
Honorable mentions — Morgan Ward, Anna Donald
“Crowd Pleaser” — Northwest Florida Swim Team

For a photo gallery, click here.

Pictured top: Talent show first place winners “Dance Group”. Pictured inset: Honorable mention winner Morgan Ward. Pictured below: Second place winning guitar trio. Pictured below: The “Northwest Florida Swim Team”. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

FWB Man Charged With Traveling To Escambia To Meet Teen

March 2, 2013

A Fort Walton Beach resident was arrested Friday night after he drove to Escambia County believing he was going to have sexual relations with a 13-year-old girl.

Joshua Patrick Baker, 22, of 554 Kanuah Dr., Fort Walton Beach, was charged with obscene communications using a computer to solicit parent/guardian consent, traveling to meet using a computer to solicit parent or guardian, and using a two-way communicate device to facilitate a felony.

Pensacola Police Department Detective Jeff Brown said Baker began talking with him via the internet on Tuesday and thought he was arranging to have sex with the Brown’s daughter. Baker coordinated tonight’s meeting through Brown.

When Baker arrived at their agreed upon location around 7 p.m., he was met by Brown and placed under arrest. Brown said officers are trying to determine if Baker had contact with any children.

In addition to the Pensacola Police Department, the investigation included members of the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force., U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS), FBI and Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.

No-Hitter For Jay Baseball; Mercy Rule Softball Win For Northview, Loss For Jay Royals (With Gallery)

March 2, 2013

Friday night was good to the Northview Lady Chiefs as their winning streak continued, and to the Jay Royals with a no-hitter mercy win over Chipley.

Northview 10, Freeport 0

Misty Doran pitched a no hitter as the Northview Lady Chiefs beat Freeport Friday night in Bratt 10-0 in a game that ended in the sixth inning due to the 10-run mercy rule. With the win, the Lady Chiefs improved their perfect season record to 5-0. The Lady Chiefs will be in action again on Tuesday as they host Flomaton. First pitch for the JV will be at 4:00, and the varsity plays at 6:00.

For a Northview versus Freeport photo gallery, click here.

Jay 13, Chipley 0

The Jay Royals beat Chipley 13-0 Friday night in a mercy rule win. Jay pitcher Dalton Edwards tossed a no-hitter for the Royals on the road at Chipley. The Royals will be in action gainst Monday at Century. The JV plays at 4:30 and the varsity takes the mound at 6 p.m.

Baker 10, Jay 0

In softball action, the Baker Gators defeated the Jay Royals 10-0 Friday night in Jay. The Lady Royals will host Holmes County next Tuesday at 6 p.m.

Pictured top: Northview beat Freeport 10-0 Friday night in Bratt. Pictured inset: Mistry Doran crosses home plate for Northview. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Free Spay/Neuter Program Now Available To Escambia Residents

March 2, 2013

A free spay/neuter program is now available for Escambia County residents who meet income guidelines.

The free program is available to Escambia County residents with a household income of $35,000 per year or less through a local animal group, Pet Come Home, Inc., and the Escambia County Low-cost Spay/Neuter program.

Pet Come Home, Inc. was awarded a $25,000 grant through the Florida Animal Friends license plate grant program to fund this program, which is expected to fund approximately 1,000 surgeries through August 2013. Pet Come Home  has partnered with Emerald Coast Animal Allies, another local animal rescue, to administer the grant.

Those interested in the free spay/neuter program can sign up at one of the Spay Your Pets! Application Stations being held all over the County or at the Escambia County Animal Shelter. Details can be found at www.spayyourpets.org or by calling (850) 780-3223, and choosing option #3.

To participate, applicants need to prove income and residency in Escambia County, FL. Applicants must bring the required proof of residency with them when they apply. All animals are required to have current rabies vaccinations to participate. If the pet does not have the required shots, rabies shots are available for $15 through at the Escambia County Animal Shelter Spay/Neuter Program and can be purchased when the pet in brought in to be spayed or neutered. Every dog and cat in Escambia County must have a rabies vaccination license. Licenses are $11 per pet, or $7 for pet owners that are 60+ years old. The license fees go to support the Spay/Neuter Program.

Applications will be taken at upcoming events:

  • March 9,   1:30-4:00 p.m. – Fran’s Country Grill, 5939 Highway 29 N, Molino, FL. No rabies shots will be offered; do not bring your pet.
  • March 23,  Noon-4:00pm – PetSmart, 6251 Davis Hwy, Pensacola, FL.  Rabies shots will not be available at this location
  • March 24, 2013  12:30 – 2:00 p.m. – Tractor Supply Company, 3 W Nine Mile Rd.. Rabies shots will be available at this location for $13.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Quietly Getting Ready For The Session

March 2, 2013

When Carlos Carbonell, the CEO of the company charged with building the House’s smart-phone app, decided at a press conference to demonstrate the video stream that would soon show live action on the House floor, there ended up being a slight echo in the room.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgThe app was providing streaming video of the press conference.

It was a lot like that over the last week: plenty of signs that the annual legislative session was about to get started, but little happening that actually demanded attention.

Gov. Rick Scott spent much of the week dashing around the state, whether working at spring training in Lakeland or touting his initiative to get rid of sales taxes on manufacturing equipment. Many lawmakers spent a few last, fleeting days in their home districts. And the courts were still in action, much to the chagrin of Scott and supporters of drug-testing welfare applicants. Artifact thieves had a bad week as well, after 13 people were hit with more than 400 combined felony charges.

Foreshadowing echoes of what will get started on Tuesday: Scott pitching his ideas to lawmakers, hopes that new laws will pass muster with the courts, and some people undoubtedly left unhappy with what’s happened on state property. All of it captured on live, streaming video.

COURTS ON DRUG-TESTING LAW: NEGATIVE

Even as legislators were preparing to get started on the 2013 session, some of their old handiwork looked like it could be headed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta struck down a law requiring drug testing of applicants for Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, and Scott vowed to take the measure to the highest court in the land.

“The evidence in this record does not suggest that the population of TANF recipients engages in illegal drug use or that they misappropriate government funds for drugs at the expense of their own and their children’s basic subsistence,” the court wrote in a 38-page opinion. “The state has presented no evidence that simply because an applicant for TANF benefits is having financial problems, he is also drug addicted or prone to fraudulent and neglectful behavior.”

Scott, whose administration has undoubtedly gotten used to the mechanics of court appeals over the last two years, promised another.

“Welfare is 100 percent about helping children,” said Scott, who along with the Republican-controlled Legislature, approved the law. “Welfare is taxpayer money to help people looking for jobs who have children. Drug use by anyone with children looking for a job is totally destructive. This is fundamentally about protecting the well-being of Florida families.”

The judges were just the latest in a line to have turned back, at least temporarily, some aspect of policy passed by Scott and the Legislature in the first half of his term. And critics were once again giddy at having done in court what they couldn’t do during the legislative debate.

“The state of Florida can’t treat an entire segment of our community like suspected criminals simply because they are poor and are trying to get temporary assistance from the government to support their families,” said Maria Kayanan, an ACLU of Florida attorney and lead counsel in the case.

In state court, the online travel industry scored another victory

The 1st District Court of Appeal, in a 2-1 ruling, said companies such as Expedia and Orbitz cannot be forced to pay local tourist-development taxes on part of the money they collect from customers. The majority found that the disputed amounts relate to reservation charges — not to the actual amounts paid to rent hotel rooms — and described the companies as “conduits.”

SEQUESTER THIS

Looming over the entire week was something that wasn’t about to happen in Tallahassee, but something that was happening hundreds of miles away, in a city where lawmakers spend even more time arguing than they do at the state Capitol. In Washington, D.C., Republicans and Democrats couldn’t figure out what to do about the sequester.

The sequester is a series of cuts set to hit domestic and military programs in the haphazard fashion, slicing tens of billions of dollars in federal spending in a more or less across-the-board manner. And Florida stood to get hit hard as the deadline for stopping the sequester came and went with no agreement.

A White House report released during the week listed the toll for Florida: 31,000 civilian Defense Department employees furloughed, a $183 million hit; reductions for Air Force and Army operations in the state, along with a possible cancellation of $135 million for aircraft depot maintenance in Jacksonville; and $54.5 million for K-12 education funding.

A dip in consumer confidence in the state would be even worse if the cuts kick in, said Chris McCarty, director of the University of Florida’s Survey Research Center in the Bureau of Economic and Business Research.

President Barack Obama and Congress agreed to the sequester in an effort to force a deal between the two on spending and taxes, but about all the two parties could agree on was that they were disappointed that the sequester was kicking in. And a fair number of them thought it was so bad that members of Congress shouldn’t get paid.

“No one should get paid for inaction,” said U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., announcing his support for legislation cutting congressional pay while federal workers are furloughed. “And Congress clearly hasn’t done the job to avert the sequester.”

Scott agreed, but took things a step further.

“I don’t believe Congress or the President should continue to get paid while they haven’t solved this problem,” he said.

MULLING OBAMACARE

There was no blockbuster decision like Scott’s declaration last month that he would support the optional expansion of Medicaid under the federal health-care law Obama signed in 2010, but there were signs that the Legislature was prepared to go along with another of the law’s provisions.

Faced with the possibility of huge penalties under the Affordable Care Act, a Florida House committee charged with looking at the impact of “Obamacare” appeared likely to support offering health-insurance coverage to about 8,700 temporary state workers.

Members of the committee Thursday unanimously expressed support for the move, which would affect temporary employees in state agencies and the higher education system who work an average of 30 or more hours a week. If Florida doesn’t start offering coverage to those workers, it could face fines of about $320 million.

Officials said the coverage would cost an estimated $35.6 million during the upcoming 2013-14 fiscal year, only a fraction of the potential fines.

“You either play their (the federal government’s) way or you get hit with a significant penalty,” committee member John Wood, R-Winter Haven, said.

Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi said she was against Scott’s endorsement of Medicaid expansion, becoming the second member of the Cabinet to speak out, after Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam.

“I am opposed to this dramatic expansion of Medicaid, because of the ultimate cost to Florida’s taxpayers and because I don’t think our state should surrender even more control over health care to the federal government,” Bondi said in an email Tuesday.

CFO Jeff Atwater also criticized the expansion Friday.

GUN FIGHT?

Meanwhile, with the final days ticking off the clock for lawmakers to file their bills, a few proposals that could be highly controversial were added to the fray.

Perhaps most prominent was a set of gun proposals, coming from either side of the aisle.

Rep. Neil Combee, R-Polk City, marked the one-year anniversary of the shooting death of Trayvon Martin by filing legislation to clarify that those firing warning shots could be protected from harsher penalties that they could otherwise face under criminal gun laws.

Co-sponsor Rep. Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, the original sponsor in 2005 of the state’s “stand your ground” bill, and a member of a task force that examined the law in the wake of Martin’s shooting, said Combee’s bill is based upon a task force recommendation to clarify Florida’s 10-20-Life law regarding displaying a firearm.

“There is an edge there with the law if you fire a weapon or display a weapon, you could be charged with a felony,” Baxley said.

The man who shot Martin has said he was acting in self defense and should be covered by the law.

Meanwhile, Rep. Greg Steube, R-Sarasota, filed a measure asking school principals to decide which teachers and staff can carry concealed weapons while at work. Conservatives nationwide and in Florida have called for arming teachers and guards after the December shooting in Newtown, Conn., that killed 20 children and six adults. But some educators are nervous about proposals to allow firearms into schools.

Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, filed a bill that would impose a 4 percent fee on dealers’ sales of guns and ammunition, with the money going to mental health treatment. It wasn’t clear whether the bill would get any traction in the GOP-dominated Legislature.

Bills were also filed to add a consumer advocate to the Citizens Property Insurance Corp. board of directors (Sen. Anitere Flores, R-Miami); ban committees of continuous existence (Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater); and overhaul the state’s pension plan without closing off the traditional pension to new employees (Sen. Wilton Simpson, R-Trilby.)

STORY OF THE WEEK: A federal appeals court strikes down a law allowing the state to drug-test applicants for public assistance.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “If we can make people drive to Georgia and Alabama and South Carolina to buy fireworks that are illegal in the state of Florida, then certainly we can make them drive to get crack pipes and marijuana pipes.”–Rep. Darryl Rouson, D-St. Petersburg, on a bill banning drug paraphernalia

By The News Service of Florida

Highway 164 Bridge Closed Due To Structural Deficiencies

March 1, 2013

Highway 164 was closed Friday afternoon from Velor Road to Pine Barren Road. The Highway 164 bridge between those intersections will be closed for about 60 days for repairs.

Officials said the bridge was inspected earlier this week, and a decision to close the bridge due to structural deficiencies was made Friday after the inspection report was completed.

The Highway 164 bridge is located in an area between Walnut Hill and McDavid. The concrete on wood piling bridge was constructed 55 years ago.

Pictured top: The Highway 164 bridge closed Friday afternoon is constructed out of concrete on wood pilings. Pictured below: The bridge was closed Friday afternoon for about 60 days following a failed inspection. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Log Truck Overturns In Atmore

March 1, 2013

A log truck overturned as it turned off South Main Street in Atmore just before noon Friday, spilling its load into the Arby’s parking lot. The accident happened as the truck driver attempted to turn into unnamed road between Arby’s and KFC. There were no injuries. Photos by Annie Wiedel for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.


FORTUNE Magazine: International Paper One Of America’s ‘Most Admired’

March 1, 2013

International Paper announced Thursday that it has once again been named by FORTUNE magazine as the No. 1 company in the Forest and Paper Products sector according to FORTUNE’s annual report of “America’s Most Admired Companies”.

This is International Paper’s tenth time in the last eleven years to top the Fortune list within this category. Out of the nine key attributes on which companies are judged International Paper took the top spot in seven of those categories within its industry. Those categories included, people management, quality of management, financial soundness, quality of products and services, global competitiveness, use of corporate assets and innovation.

“This is well-deserved recognition and a reflection of International Paper’s 68,000 talented employees around the globe,” said John Faraci, chairman and chief executive officer. “Managing through an uneven global economy while continuing to generate solid results is what good execution is all about. Congratulations to all of our employees.”

Nine Tons Of Free Food Distributed To North Escambia Residents

March 1, 2013

About 18,000 pounds of free food were distributed to hundreds of North Escambia residents Thursday afternoon.

The Florida Department of Children and Families, AmeriCorps and Farm Share hosted  the free food distribution for residents of the town of  Century and  North Escambia area residents at at the old Carver Middle School.

The nine tons of food and dairy products included potatoes, tomatoes, broccoli, pepper, squash, milk, yogurt, cereal and water. An estimated 300 families were served, with over 200 families signed up during the first hour of the event.

For more photos, click here.

The food was distributed with the help of Americorp and volunteers from the Carver Community Center in Century.

Farm Share is a Florida non-profit organization working to alleviate hunger and malnutrition by recovering fresh and nutritious food and distributing it to those who need it most. The group specializes in obtaining donated fresh fruits and vegetables from Florida’s farmers and putting the food into the hands of the of low-income families in need of nutritious food. Every year, Farm Share provides more than 15 million pounds of nutritious food to more than 600,000 low-income households across Florida.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Rigby Named Escambia Teacher Of The Year

March 1, 2013

Susan Rigby, a ninth grade alegbra instructor at Pine Forest High School, was named Escambia County’s Teacher of the Year Thursday night during the  28th Annual Golden Apple Awards Banquet at New World Landing.

Other finalists for the honor were Randall Van Sickle, Blue Angels Elementary;  Tina Grady, Hellen Caro Elementary;  Debby Dorough, Pine Meadow Elementary; and Stephanie Hurst, West Florida High School.

The finalists were chosen from about 60 Teachers of the Year at individual schools in the county.

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