Burglars Strike Byrneville Community Center

May 8, 2012

Authorities are searching for the persons responsible for breaking into a local community center.

The burglary at the Bryneville Community Center was reported to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office on Monday afternoon  after an office filing cabinet was discovered on the ground just outside a door.

Community center officials said someone had broken into the building and an office in an apparent search for cash or other valuables.

“They pulled the filing cabinet outside, but I guess it was too heavy for them to load,” said Walter Porz, president of the Byrneville Community Center, Inc,  a local non-profit that manages the county-owned facility.

Porz said the thieves removed all of the paperwork from the filing cabinet, including the meeting minutes the group is required to keep.

“There was nothing valuable in there,” he said. “I’m not sure why they took all of that.”

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

Pictured: An Escambia County Sheriff’s Office crime scene unit at the Byrneville Community Center. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Lady Royals Advance To Historic State Championship Game

May 8, 2012

The Jay Lady Royals rallied top beat Port St. Joe 7-5 Monday in the state semifinal round to reach the Class 1A state championship game today.

Update: Jay lost to Lafayette Tuesday afternoon 12-9. A previous story is below.

Port St. Joe took an early 3-0 lead Monday afternoon in  the first inning. In the bottom of the first, senior Tessa Hendricks knocked a solo homer over the fence of the National Training Center to make it 3-1.

The Lady Royals were on fire in the bottom of the second with four runs for a 5-3 Jay lead. The Royals had RBI singles from Olivia Wright, Tessa Hendricks and Ashlyn Geek.

Port St. Joe made it a tie game in the third with a couple of a RBI singles, 5-5.

The fourth and five innings were scoreless.

In the sixth inning, the Lady Royals added two. Olivia Wright had a single and made second on sacrifice bunt by Ashlyn Geek. Tessa Hendricks was walked. Then Port St. Joe committed a grave error on a fly to right, allowing the ball to roll to the fence. That sent Wright and Hendricks across the plate.

Then with three up and three down for Port St. Joe in the seventh, the Lady Royals secured the chance at the state championship game on Tuesday.

Services Announced For Retired Fire Chief Robert Stewart

May 8, 2012

Funeral arrangements have been announced for Robert Stewart, the former chief of the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department who passed away on Sunday at age 62.

robert12.jpgVisitation will be Tuesday from 6–9 p.m. at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home in Atmore. Funeral services will be Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home in Atmore with the Rev. Homer Stewart and Rev. Kevin Stott officiating. Burial will follow at the Godwin Cemetery in Bratt.

Stewart will receive a full fireman’s funeral.  His coffin will be carried atop an Escambia Fire Rescue truck along the funeral route — from Petty Eastside Chapel on Highway 31 west of Atmore, through downtown Atmore along Highway 21 to Highway 97 in Florida, and west on Highway 4 to Godwin Cemetery. The public is invited to line the funeral procession route to pay respects to the man that first began answering fire calls 35 years ago.

Cantonment Rotary Foundation Ted Ciano Memorial Golf Tournament Planned

May 8, 2012

The Cantonment Rotary Club will host the second annual Cantonment Rotary Foundation Ted Ciano Memorial Golf Tournament on Friday, May 11 at the Scenic Hills Country Club in Pensacola.

“Mr C,” as he was affectionately known throughout Florida’s Panhandle, was a longtime member and past president of the Cantonment Rotary Club and was the driving force behind the establishment of the Cantonment Rotary Foundation. The Foundation presents at least eight scholarships per year as part of an endowed scholarship program, provides funding for the Miracle League, Council on Aging, Honor Flights, Loaves & Fishes, and numerous other local charities, as well as international projects through Rotary International Matching Grants.

The golf tournament is the primary funding source for the Cantonment Foundation and requires not only the dedicated efforts of club members, but also the support of the community. Tee sign sponsors, door prizes, and sponsored teams are the essential elements of any golf tournament.

The format is a four person scramble with the usual prizes for “closest to the pin”, “longest drive”, etc. In addition, every player receives a nice door prize. Last year’s door prizes ranged from $25 gift certificates, to an exquisite diamond ring from Jeweler’s Trade Shop. No one left empty handed and some were fortunate enough to get more than one door prize.

In addition to the first place prize, the winning team will have their names placed on the Ted Ciano Trophy which is permanently housed at Scenic Hills Country Cluband will also receive a fee paid invitation to defend their title in the 2013 tournament. The field will be limited to 32 four-person teams. To participate, contact Paul Fredrick at (850) 384-9745 or email ears_1@cox.net.

The Cantonment Rotary Foundation Ted Ciano Memorial Golf Tournament is sponsored in part by NorthEscambia.com.

Wahoos Fall 3-2 In 12

May 8, 2012

The Blue Wahoos led most of the way, but needed a ninth inning run to force extra innings before Keenan Wiley scored from third on a wild pitch with two outs in the 12th inning giving the Mississippi Braves the 3-2 win over Pensacola.

The Wahoos went up 1-0 when Joel Guzman unloaded for his fourth home run of the season in the top of the second. Mark Serrano kept it that way by working five shutout innings in his first start of the season. Mississippi tied the game in the seventh on an RBI single by Ian Gac which drove home Matt Kennelly from second. The hit was off Drew Hayes, though Clayton Tanner got charged with the run.

Mississippi took the lead with a solo home run by Evan Gattis to make it 2-1. Pensacola capitalized on a leadoff walk by Didi Gregorius in the ninth to tie the game and send it into extra innings. Josh Ewing drew a pinch hit walk to load the bases before Koyie Hill worked a walk from Ryan Butcher to force home Gregorius and tie the game.

It stayed tied until the 12th. After a double steal put runners at second and third, Chris Manno (0-1) threw a wild pitch which scored Wiley from third. Hill’s throw to Manno covering home looked to be ahead of the runner, but the ball got away allowing Wiley to get in safely for the winning run.

Henry Rodriguez waited until the top of the 12th to collect his first hit of the game, a double to right field, and extend his hit streak to a league-leading 15 games. Brodie Greene led the way for the Wahoos offensively with a four-hit game.

Manno was charged with the loss after allowing the winning run to score in the 12th after recording two outs. Chris Masters (1-1) earned the win for the Braves. He allowed a hit and a walk in a scoreless 12th inning.

The series continues on Tuesday night with the first pitch set for 7:00 p.m. from Trustmark Park in Pearl, Miss. Right-hander Kyle Lotzkar will make his Double-A debut for the Blue Wahoos after earning a promotion at the end of the Blue Wahoos homestand. He will be opposed by Mississippi left-hander Sean Gilmartin (0-4, 3.55).

By Tommy Thrall

Busted In Bed: US Marshals Nab Escambia Fugitive In Milton

May 8, 2012

The U.S. Marshals Florida Regional Fugitive Task Force caught up with a wanted Pensacola man Monday while he was sleeping in a hotel room one county away from where he was being sought.

Escambia County fugitive Dexter Antonio Locke awoke to Task Force officers standing over him Monday at the Red Roof Inn located at Avalon Boulevard and  I-10 in Santa Rosa County.

After he was placed under arrest by the Task Force, a powdery substance what is believed to be almost quarter pound of cocaine, several thousand dollars in cash and some marijuana were found in the room, according to U.S. Marshals.

An unidentified 18-year old female was also present in the room but was not charged.

Locke iwas wanted in Escambia County on a warrant from September of 2011 revoking his bond on an arrest in which he was charged with trafficking heroin and cocaine.

Task Force Officers from FDLE, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa Counties as well as Defuniak Police Department arrested Locke without incident around 12:30. It is unknown at this time what additional charges Locke will face. The apparent drugs and cash were turned over to Santa Rosa Narcotics Unit, which also assisted in the arrest.

The Marshals received this case about a month ago and have been following leads between the two counties. At times, the Task Force would conduct surveillance at this hotel and Monday they caught their break, according to a news released.

Once they confirmed it was Locke in themotel room, they immediately moved in. No resistance was met at the door as they were let in by the female. Locke was booked into the Santa Rosa County Jail.

Escambia Honors Shining Stars

May 8, 2012

The Greater Escambia Community Foundation and WSRE, PBS for the Gulf Coast, presented the Shining Star Award to 39 Escambia County elementary students in a ceremony Sunday afternoon at WSRE’s Jean & Paul Amos Performance Studio on the main campus of Pensacola State College.

Area principals and teachers selected the winners based on good citizenship, community service and adherence to the core values of the Escambia County School District: equality, responsibility, integrity, respect, honesty and patriotism. Each winner was awarded a certificate of achievement and a new bicycle and helmet.

From the North Escambia area, recipients (pictured at bottom of page) were:

  • Lydia Smith, Bratt Elementary
  • McKayla McConathy, Byrneville Elementary
  • Logan Nelson, Jim Allen Elementary
  • Dalton Brown, Molino Park Elementary

For a photo gallery, click here.

The complete list of  2012 Community Foundation of Northwest Florida and WSRE Shining Star recipients is as follows:

  • Connor Queen, A.K. Suter Elementary
  • Katelynn Barber, Bellview Elementary
  • Bethany Faucett, Beulah Elementary
  • Kristian “Nealy” Ard, Blue Angels Elementary
  • Lydia Smith, Bratt Elementary
  • Kiara Betts, Brentwood Elementary
  • McKayla McConathy, Byrneville Elementary
  • Gregory Posey, C. A. Weis Elementary
  • Lillian Wiggins, Cordova Park Elementary
  • Kyla Homewood, Creative Learning Academy
  • Abdul Alsubaie, Ensley Elementary
  • Allee McDonald, Episcopal Day
  • De’Aveon Fisher-Primm, Escambia Christian
  • Sara Siler, Ferry Pass Elementary
  • Scarlett Nguyen, Global Learning Academy
  • Mallory Mott, Hellen Caro Elementary
  • Michelle Luther, Holm Elementary
  • Logan Nelson, Jim Allen Elementary
  • Aronje Palmer, Lincoln Park Elementary
  • Alisha L’Orange, Little Flower Catholic
  • Avery Resmondo, Longleaf Elementary
  • Cason Forst, McArthur Elementary
  • Dalton Brown, Molino Park Elementary
  • Kayla Therrien, Myrtle Grove Elementary
  • Trinity Holmes, N. B. Cook Elementary
  • Michael Young, Navy Point Elementary
  • Tejaun Browne, O. J. Semmes Elementary
  • Kimberly Anguilu, Oakcrest Elementary
  • Carlee Amberson, Pensacola Beach Elementary
  • Madeline Markham, Pensacola Christian
  • Natalie Gandy, Pine Meadow Elementary
  • Rhapeepan Antrim, Pleasant Grove Elementary
  • Griffin Pearce, R. C. Lipscomb Elementary
  • Erin Meszaros, Redeemer Lutheran
  • Dalton Wulzer, Scenic Heights Elementary
  • Morgan Jacobs, Sherwood Elementary
  • Helen Driscoll, St. Paul Catholic
  • Ritchie Knutie, Warrington Elementary
  • Exiquio Enriquez, West Pensacola Elementary

Above: Lydia Smith, Bratt Elementary.

Above: McKayla McConathy, Byrneville Elementary.

Above: Logan Nelson, Jim Allen Elementary.

Above: Dalton Brown, Molino Park Elementary.

Photos courtesy WSRE for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Retired Walnut Hill VFD Chief Robert Stewart Passes Away

May 7, 2012

robert10.jpg

Retired Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department Chief Robert Stewart passed away Sunday surrounded by loved ones at his home in Bratt after a battle with cancer. He was 62.

stewart11.jpg

Stewart retired as the department’s chief in 2008 after 30 years of service as a volunteer fireman in Bratt and Walnut Hill, the last 15 of those years as chief of the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department. He retired to spend more time with his grandson “Little Man” and to fight cancer. He later became active again in the department as his health permitted.

Stewart answered his first fire call in 1967 after the formation of the Bratt Volunteer Fire Department. The Walnut Hill Ruritan Club founded the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department in 1964 and donated a  truck to form the Bratt department three years later.

For 10 years, he served the Bratt community as a volunteer fireman until Bratt VFD’s truck finally “wore out”. Walnut Hill and the Atmore Fire Department began answering calls in the Bratt community in 1977.

He was out of a volunteer fire department for about 10 years, until he joined the Walnut Hill VFD in 1987. For 21 straight years, he served the Walnut Hill department — the last 15 of those years as chief.

Visitation will be Tuesday, May 8 from 6-9 p.m. at at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home. Funeral services will be held Wednesday, May 9 at 10 a.m. at at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home. Graveside services will follow at Godwin Cemetery in Bratt.

Reprinted below are portions of an earlier story and interview with Robert Stewart after his retirement.

“1501 enroute”

March 9, 2001, was the beginning of what Stewart said was the most memorable call of his career.

valeriecar11.jpgThe call was not far from Stewart’s house. It was a single vehicle accident, car versus a tree, on Highway 99 near Oakshade Road. When Stewart arrived, he and the other members of the WHVFD found a small sports car, literally cut in half,  two pieces of car on the side of the highway. Inside, the passenger was not seriously injured.

But the driver, a 16-year old local girl, was gravely injured. Her leg was partial severed, a major artery cut. Her situation was worse than serious. In fact, she coded at least twice before arriving at the hospital. “Coded”, as in “code blue”, as in cardiac arrest. But Stewart and the rest of the emergency workers that day worked hard to get this young lady on LifeFlight.

In the end, she lost her leg, but she survived. Today, she’s a healthy, happily married 27-year old mother.

“I’ve been to a lot of bad wrecks,” Stewart said. “Sometime, people die. It’s always a good call when you can help someone that doesn’t die.”

But two words made this wreck different than many for the chief.

“Thank you.”

From death’s door, the young girl was able to return to tell Stewart and the rest of the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department “thank you”.

“Sometimes they come back to tell you ‘thank you’,” he said. “It makes you feel good, and you know your department has accomplished something, when they came back to thank you.”

There have been others to return to thank the department over the years. But Valerie Baker’s accident just sticks out in Stewart’s memory.

“The ‘thank you’ means a lot, especially when they came to the department and thank everyone,” he said. “It just means a lot.”

robert12.jpg“Not a Hero”

Stewart said he doesn’t consider himself a hero. The Walnut Hill volunteers are team, he said, with everyone working together to help the community.

He was labeled a  hero at least once. It was another wreck, this one on State Line Road. A car was upside down in a water-filled ditch with three children inside. Stewart was the first on the scene, responding from his nearby home.

“I managed to get the door open and got the three children out of the ditch,” he said. “Their mom called me a hero. I was just doing my job.”

Cat In Tree? Been there, done that. Twice.

It’s a scene that’s usually in a children’s program…the fireman rescues the cute little kitty cat from a tree. But in real life, it’s not exactly so pretty.

One cat-in-a-tree call was on Highway 97 several years ago. 1501 and his wife, Diann Stewart (a.k.a. 1503) responded to the call.

“She ran the ladder up the tree,” he said. “I knew what I was in for. I put on a bunker coat, and gloves before going up to the cat.”

“The ole cat just froze on the tree,” Stewart said with a chuckle. “I needed both hands to peel it off the tree. It stuck like Velcro on that tree. I had to keep peeling that ole cat off the tree.”

The second time Stewart responded to a cat-in-a-tree call, he was perhaps a bit smarter. He sent his son Sam Stewart, also a volunteer fireman, up the tree. This call was at the home of a local pastor. The pastor told them to drop the cat, and drop it Sam did. The can landed on a lower limb of the tree, uninjured.

Scary Stuff

“When my youngins were in school, I did not like it when you’d get a call in the direction they were suppose to be coming from,” he said. “You were always it afraid it was going to be one of yours.”

“When you live up here, you are kin to somebody,” he said. “You always care about who it is.”

whvfdfish21.jpgA Time To Work, A Time To Play

Stewart was quick to thank all of those that have volunteered with the Walnut Hill VFD over the years. And he expressed his thanks to the other volunteer fire departments in the area the assisted Walnut Hill, as well the county deputies, state troopers and others he worked with for years.

The biggest thanks went to those Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department members, a group he said he always enjoyed being around.

“I had the best bunch of firemen in the county he said, “and when they were done working and got ready to play, I had the biggest bunch of youngins in the county.”

“1501 Completed Assignment”

“It’s hard not to answer a call,” he said. The fire department pager still goes off in the Stewart home, alerting them of emergency calls. Diann remains with the Walnut Hill VFD as an EMT. “After 20 years, it’s hard not to go help someone.”

“I just always tried to help.”

Funeral arrangements for Robert Stewart are incomplete at this time.

Pictured top: Retired Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department Chief Robert Stewart and his grandson Drew (”Little Man”) Kennedy watch from the sidelines at an accident on Pine Barren Road. Pictured top inset: Stewart receives a large plaque with his helmet during a retirement reception. Pictured bottom inset, Stewart is honored by the Walnut Hill VFD. Pictured below: Robert Stewart teaches fire safety to students at Bratt Elementary School in October 2011. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Weekend In Photos

May 7, 2012

If you missed NorthEscambia.com over the weekend, you missed over 425 photos from several community and news events. Click an item below to view the corresponding story and/or photo gallery.

Elections Office: Make Your Mailbox Your Ballot Box

May 7, 2012

With a little more than 100 days to go before the August primary election, now is the time for voters to prepare, according to Escambia Supervisor of Elections David Stafford.

Stafford said one way to get ready is to request a mail ballot, which allows voters to avoid the lines on Election Day and vote from the convenience of their home.

Escambia County voters will be receiving a post card from  Stafford with instructions on how to request to vote by mail for the August primary and November general elections.
Voters have several ways to make their request:
1. Visit EscambiaVotes.com and click Absentee Voting in the upper right hand corner. Follow the instructions for completing the online request form.
2. Send an email to absentee@escambiavotes.com. Voters must include their address and date of birth with their e-mail request.
3. Contact the Supervisor of Elections office by phone (850-595-3900), or in person.
4. Send a request through the mail or via fax to (850) 595-3914. Written requests must include the voter’s address, date of birth, and signature.
Absentee voters may track the status of their ballot by clicking Track My Ballot at EscambiaVotes.com. And by clicking Am I Registered? on the home page, a voter can verify their registration status, check their precinct number and location, party affiliation, and important future election information.

Absentee ballots can be requested for up to two election cycles. As Florida does not allow for a permanent absentee voter designation, voters must periodically renew their absentee request so be sure to verify your absentee ballot status. For further information on absentee ballots, early voting, or precincts and polling locations, call (850) 595-3900, email soe@escambiavotes.com or visit EscambiaVotes.com.

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