Northview, Tate, Jay Release Football Schedules

May 16, 2012

Northview, Tate and Jay high schools have released their 2012 football schedules, and all three teams will have spring games this month.

Northview will have a full 11-game season this year, including seven home games. The Northview Spring Game will be this Thursday at 7 p.m. as the Chiefs host the Jaguars of West Florida High School. General admission is $6.

The Tate Aggies will begin their season at home against Pensacola High School on August 24. Tate will have a Crimson and Gray intersquad game at home this Friday at 6:30 p.m. and will travel to Washington High for a Spring Game on May 28 at 7 p.m.

The Jay Royals will travel just over half of the 2012 season, with their first three games on the road. The Royals will host Rocky Bayou Christian School in a Spring Game on May 24 at 6 p.m.

Schedules for the Northview Chiefs, Tate Aggies and Jay Royals are below.

Man Charged With Shooting, Killing Two Horses

May 16, 2012

An Escambia County man was arrested Tuesday for shooting and killing two of his horses.

Richard Wayne Owen was charged after deputies responded to his property on Baronne Street in West Pensacola where Animal Control and Code Enforcement had discovered two dead horses that appeared to have been shot in the head. The skeletal remains of a third horse were also discovered.

Owen arrived on scene and was questioned by deputies about the dead horses. After taking witness statements and physical evidence, deputies arrested Owen.

Owen was charged with two counts of animal cruelty and carrying a concealed firearm. He was booked into the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $11,000.

BOE Lowers FCAT Writing Test Passing Score

May 16, 2012

To avoid a steep drop in student scores the Florida Board of Education on Tuesday lowered the passing grade on a statewide writing test in an effort to insulate schools from a decline that would affect school funding.

Meeting in an emergency session, the board agreed to lower the passing grade from 4.0 to 3.0 on the FCAT writing assessment for the current school year after statewide numbers showed the passing rate fell through the floor, dropping in fourth grade from 81 percent to 27 percent.

Eighth and 10th graders experienced similar drops in writing grades.

The emergency rule will be in effect for 90 days. The board will address permanent rules within that time

But even with the lower standards, more students this year will not receive a satisfactory score, a drop in success that state education officials say is prompted by tougher testing criteria and the fact that each test was scored by two people.

The Department of Education took some responsibility for the drop, saying it did not adequately prepare schools and teachers for more rigorous standards that were put in place this year, which included an increased focus on grammar and punctuation.

Instead the new standard appears to have been rushed, which led to the dramatic increase in unsatisfactory scores.

“This conversation should have come up earlier,” DOE Secretary Gerard Robinson acknowledged. “We’ll do better going forward.”

School specific writing scores will not be out until at least the end of the week, leaving many districts in limbo as they wait to see if their schools will garner the necessary scores to keep the overall school grade from dropping, which has financial implications for already cash-strapped districts.

Passing scores on the FCAT writing assessment for fourth graders plummeted from 81 percent to 27 percent. Passing scores in eighth grade fell from 82 percent to 33 percent.

Tenth graders taking the test saw a similar drop in success. While 80 percent passed the test last year, only 38 percent scored a 4 or above on a 6-point scale this time around.

At the 3.0 threshold, 81 percent of fourth graders, 77 percent of eighth graders and 84 percent of 10th graders passed the test.

Some board members reluctantly supported the lower standards, but made it clear they would not continue to do so. School scores are expected to be out by the end of the week.

“The change from 4.0 to 3.0 looks like we are lowering standards,” said John Padget. “I’m only voting on this so we can hold (schools) harmless for this year only:”

Other board members, however, said the lower scores are not a reflection of student aptitude, but a change in scoring that has raised the bar.

“This is absolutely not a retreat,” said vice chairman Roberto Martinez. “It is maintaining the equivalence with last year, we’re just using a much more rigorous application of the scoring rubric.”

The test score drop became the vehicle for parents, teachers and local administrators to vent on the FCAT writing test and testing in general. The board took numerous calls from parents who said the high stakes tests are stressing out their kids.

Teachers said they were not given an adequate heads up on what the new criteria would mean.

“We literally didn’t receive much information at all,” said Holly Wallace, a writing teacher. “We were a little out of touch as far as what exactly the expectations were.”

Leon County Superintendent Jackie Pons, worried that contrary to the board’s assertion that school districts would not be penalized by the new standards, many school districts would still see their school grades fall based on the results of the writing assessment.

Despite the lower standard, some districts will still be adversely affected. School grades are partially determined by FCAT scores. Schools that perform poorly must divert resources to fixing the problem, which takes funds away from other areas.

The low scores brought concern from the top as well. Gov. Rick Scott, in a sharply worded statement Monday, said the lower scores were of great concern.

“The significant contrast in this year’s writing scores is an obvious indication that the Department of Education needs to review the issue and recommend an action plan so that our schools, parents, teachers and students have a clear understanding of the results,” Scott said.

Critics of FCAT testing also used the opportunity to take their shots.

“Florida’s overemphasis on testing is insane,” said former state Sen. Dan Gelber. “We have become a school system whose entire purpose seems to be to prepare kids for minimal competence tests.”

The Board plans to get updates at it June meeting.

Former Century Vol. Fire Chief, Charter Member Passes Away

May 16, 2012

A former chief of the Century Volunteer Fire Department has passed away. Charles Sansom, Sr., died Wednesday, May 9 at his home in Pensacola. He was 72.

Samsom was a charter member of the Century VFD. His family moved to Century in 1954 where he met his future wife of 51 years, Ruth, and graduated from Century High School.

He also served at the Monsanto Fire Department and was a member of Escambia Search and Rescue.

A visitation for Charles Herman Sansom, Sr. will be held Saturday, May 19 from 10-11 a.m. at St. Luke United Methodist Church on Nine Mile Road with a funeral service to follow.

For his complete obituary, click here.

Molino Woman Charged With Pawning Grandma’s Ring

May 16, 2012

A Molino woman has been charged with allegedly selling a stolen family heirloom ring at a Pensacola pawnshop.

Ashley Jogan was charged with dealing in stolen property, a second degree felony. She remained in the Escambia County Jail Wednesday morning with bond set at $10,000.

According to an Escambia County Sheriff’s Office arrest report, she pawned a stolen lady’s gold ring with eight red stones surrounding one dark center stone at the Cash America Pawn on Fairfield Drive.

The ring allegedly belonged to Jogan’s grandmother.

LCpl Travis Nelson Scholarship 5K Trail Run Is Saturday

May 16, 2012

The Winged Warrior Centennial 5K this Saturday will benefit the LCpl Travis Nelson Scholarship Fund.

The United States Marine Corps and the University of West Florida Semper Fi Society will present the trail run to celebrate 100 years of Marine Corps Aviation. The run will take place at 7:30 a.m. Saturday on the University of West Florida nature trails. The race starts at the Multipurpose Field on the UWF campus.

Race proceeds benefit the LCpl Travis Nelson Scholarship Fund, named in honor of LCpl Travis Nelson of Bratt, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on August 19, 2011. The scholarship is presented to outstanding seniors in the Northview or Pace high school ROTC programs or outstanding students in the Young Marines of Pensacola.

Registration is $22. To register, click here.

Tate Senior Chase Carroll Honored By Escambia School Board

May 16, 2012

Tate High School senior Chase Carroll was recognized Tuesday night by the Escambia County School Board.

Carroll was honored for winning the Florida High School Athletic Association’s state 2A weightlifting championship in his weight class, as well as numerous academic achievements.

In April, Carroll’s total lift was at 655 pounds with a best bench of 380 and a best clean & jerk of 275. Carroll’s total lift was 20 pounds greater than the second place finisher in the state finals.

It was the third trip to the FHSAA finals for Carroll, who also excels off the bench. He has a 3.7 GPA, and is in the National Honor Society, BETA Club, Rho Kappa, FFA, is FCA president and has participated in football and track.

Pictured above: Tate Senior Chase Carroll is honored Tuesday by the Escambia County School Board. Pictured below: School Board members (L-R) Gerald Boone, Patty Hightower, Jeff Bergosh and Bill Slayton; Chase Carroll and Superintendent Malcolm Thomas. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

State Moves Prison Privatization Oral Arguments

May 16, 2012

The First District Court of Appeal has moved back by two weeks oral arguments in the state’s appeal of a prison privatization ruling.

The court will now hear the case at 9 a.m. on June 27, instead of the original time, 2 p.m. on June 13.

The state is appealing a ruling by Circuit Judge Jakie Fulford that struck down an privatization plan approved by the Legislature after the the Florida Police Benevolent Association sued to block the initiative. Fulford said lawmakers improperly folded the privatization plan into the fine print of the budget.

Pensacola Shuts Down B’ham 2-0

May 16, 2012

Pensacola starting pitcher Tim Crabbe, along with relievers Curtis Partch and Donnie Joseph, combined for the team’s fourth shutout win, while pinch hitter Josh Fellhauer launched an eighth inning two-run homer to give the Blue Wahoos a 2-0 win over the Birmingham Barons on Tuesday night at Pensacola’s multi-use stadium.

The win gives the Blue Wahoos a 3-2 series victory and improves their record to 19-21, while the defeat drops Birmingham to a 21-19 mark in 2012.

Crabbe (7.0 IP, 6 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 4 BB, 4 SO) tossed his best outing of the year despite not receive a decision after yielding six hits in seven scoreless frames, while Partch and Joseph combined for two perfect innings of relief. Partch (1.0 IP, 2 SO) earned the win and struck out two before Joseph (1.0 IP, 3 SO) notched his seventh save of the year after striking out the side in the ninth. Barons starter Jose Quintana (7.0 IP, 2 H, 2 BB, 8 SO) did not factor in the decision either despite allowing just two hits in addition to eight strikeouts in seven scoreless frames, while RHP Henry Mabee (1.0 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 SO) suffered the loss after allowing the two earned runs on two hits in one frame.

Both offenses were held quiet until the eighth, when Fellhauer broke the scoreless draw with his second homer of the year. DH P.J. Phillips reached with a one out single up the middle before the pinch hitter came to the plate and launched the 0-1 pitch over the left field wall to make it 2-0.

Birmingham had a runner past second base once, with a solid defensive play in the fourth keeping them off the scoreboard. After Barons 1B Seth Loman led off the frame with a double, C Damaso Espino lined a single up the middle to Pensacola CF Ryan LaMarre. Loman was waived home on the play as LaMarre fired a strike home to C Mark Fleury, who held on to the ball after colliding with Loman to end the inning and prevent the run.

Loman and Espino were the lone batters to record multi-hit efforts for either side, while SS Tyler Saladino reached base three times via a free pass. No Blue Wahoos batters collected two or more hits, though LaMarre and SS Didi Gregorius each did make it on base twice.

Pensacola has an off-day Wednesday and will travel to Jacksonville in preparation for their five-game series with the Suns, with the opening game set for Thursday night at 7:35 ET.

By Andrew Green

Pictured: Tim Crabbe fired seven shutout innings in the Blue Wahoos’ 2-0 win Tuesday night over Birmingham. Photo by Chris Nelson for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Davisville Business Burglary Under Investigation

May 16, 2012

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the burglary of a business in Davisville, just south of Alabama/Florida state line.

Deputies responded to a burglar alarm just before 10 p.m. Monday night at 11216 Highway 97 in the Piggly Wiggly shopping center. When they arrived, they discovered that  the retail business “Seven J’s”  had been burglarized. The story offers a variety of merchandise, including movie rentals, hair accessories, jewelry and wigs.

The were no arrests made in the burglary, according to Deputy Matt Baxter, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office. Due to an ongoing investigation, further information was not released.

Anyone with information on the burglary is asked to call the Sheriff’s Office at (850) 436-9620 or Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP.

Pictured above: This business in the Davisville Piggly Wiggly shopping center was burglarized Monday night. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

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