Cantonment Man Injured In Highway 97 Crash
January 14, 2012
A Cantonment man was injured in a single vehicle rollover accident Saturday morning south of Walnut Hill.
The accident happened about 10 a.m. on Highway 97 just north of Tungoil Road. The Florida Highway Patrol said 56-year old Jerome Allen of Cantonment lost control in a curve while heading north on Highway 97. His 1999 Honda left the roadway and rolled over multiple times before coming to rest upright in a ditch.
Allen was transported to a Pensacola hospital by ambulance with minor injuries
Charges against Allen are pending.
NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Man Spends Night In Broken Down Truck, Treated For Cold Exposure
January 14, 2012
One person was transported to the hospital Saturday morning after spending a freezing night in the their broken down truck alongside Highway 97 in Davisville.
Atmore Ambulance transported the 46-year old male to Atmore Community Hospital about 7:30 Saturday morning. The person had reportedly spent the night in their truck near Highway 97 and Pelt Road and was suffering from cold exposure. The injuries were not considered severe.
According to a nearby weather station in Walnut Hill, the temperature dipped to 24 degrees early Saturday morning.
Pictured: A 46-year old man was transported to the hospital after spending a freezing night in this broken down truck along Highway 97 in Davisville. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.
No Serious Injuries In Two Highway 29 Wrecks
January 14, 2012
There were no injuries reported in a wreck Saturday morning in Molino or in an unrelated accident in Bogia.
In the first accident, two vehicles reportedly collided on Highway 29 just south of Molino Road about 7:30 a.m. There were no injuries among the three people involved in the accident. The Molino Station of Escambia Fire Rescue and Escambia County EMS also responded to the crash.
The second accident happened abut 7:45 a.m. on Highway 29 near Bogia Road. There were no injuries in the crash.
Both accidents are under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol. Further details have not been released on either accident.
One Seriously Injured In Wreck That Caused Power Outage
January 14, 2012
A traffic crash late Friday night seriously injured one person and plunged area homes into darkness.
The accident happened about 11:15 p.m. at Frank Reeder Road and Tower Ridge Road in Beulah. The Florida Highway Patrol said 24-year old Gregory Scott Lloyd of Pensacola was traveling east on Frank Reeder Road at a high rate of speed when his 1998 Pontiac Firebird left the roadway and struck a mailbox and then a utilty pole, splitting it in half.
Lloyd was transported to West Florida Hospital in serious condition. Charges against him are pending, according to FHP.
The power was out for several hours as Gulf Power worked to replace the pole.
Poarch Creek Indians Partner In $24 Million Pensacola Hotel Development
January 14, 2012
The Poarch Creek Indians of Atmore are partnering in a $24 million development that will bring a new hotel, retail and offices spaces and over 200 jobs to Pensacola.
Innisfree Hotels official began construction of their “Airport & 12th” development connected to the Pensacola International Airport terminal with a groundbreaking ceremony Friday morning.
The project includes a 127 room Hyatt Place Hotel along with office and retail sites on 12 acres
“We’re proud to introduce a new prototype of the Hyatt Place Hotel brand to the Pensacola area market and will choose the tenants of the other outparcels carefully to ensure quality amenities at our city’s international gateway,” said Rich Chism, Innisfree’s director of development.
The $24 million project, when completed, is projected to generate over $420,000 annually in non-airline revenue for the airport through lease fees, and $100,000 in local option sales taxes for the City of Pensacola. It will also create over $4 million in payroll revenues through the addition of about 235 new jobs to the local economy.
Innisfree’s founder and CEO Julian MacQueen said the company is proud to partner with the Poarch Creek Indians on the project.
“Our relationship with the Poarch Band of Creek Indians has spanned almost two decades. We’ve collaborated on other successful projects during this time and are very excited to work with them again,” he said.
Tim Martin, president/CEO of Creek Indian Enterprises Development Authority, said, “We are fortunate enough to be able to reinvest into the community with quality investments like the Airport and 12th project.”
In addition to the Windcreek Casino in Atmore, the Poarch Creek Indians operate several other properties, including the Pensacola Dog Track and Poker Room. The Florida Legislature is considering allowing additional casinos in Florida, or allowing existing dog and horse tracks to add slot machines. None of the laws have passed that would allow gaming at the Pensacola airport property.
The groundbreaking came on the heels of a recent announcement that project financing was secured with the support of two local credit unions; Pen Air Federal Credit Union and Navy Federal Credit Union.
“The commitment of the credit unions and the Poarch Band of Creek Indians to this project has helped Innisfree expand in very difficult economic times”, MacQueen said. “We’re fortunate to have their support. They are good neighbors to the Pensacola community.”
The land for the development is being leased from the City of Pensacola and will be connected to the main airport terminal via a covered walkway. Robins & Morton, the project’s general contractor, has completed some key infrastructure work and is currently building the foundation for the hotel. The hotel is expected to open in the spring of 2013.
Innisfree currently owns and operates six full service hotels and resorts in the Gulf Coast region of Florida and Alabama as well as four focused service properties in the southeast United States.
Courtesy images for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Senate Has New Plan To Privatize Numerous Florida Prisons
January 14, 2012
After being rebuffed by a judge for its effort to privatize several prisons because of the way lawmakers went about it, the Legislature will try again to shed several prisons, this time doing it in statute.
The Senate Rules Committee on Friday quietly released a proposal and scheduled a hearing for this coming Wednesday to discuss the proposed committee bill (SPB 7172), which would require the Department of Corrections to privatize all prisons and other correctional facilities in 18 counties in the southern half of the state.
Private companies wishing to bid on the prisons – which could go to multiple companies or in one big contract to just one company – must be able to find 7 percent cost savings to the state to get the contract.
The Legislature passed nearly the same measure last year, but it did it in the fine print of the state budget known as proviso language, rather than passing a bill that went through the committee process. That violated the Florida Constitution, Judge Jackie Fulford ruled in September. That decision is on appeal currently.
The bill would appear to take care of that concern, at least, though it won’t appease the critics of privatization in general. The head of the Teamsters Union local that represents corrections officers said Friday that the state is rushing into a wholesale privatization effort without thinking it through or hearing from everyone who has an interest in the issue.
“There has to be a comprehensive study – this makes a tremendous impact on the different communities … we kind of think this is a rush to judgment,” said Ken Wood, acting president of Teamsters Local 2011.
The measure’s release comes a day after the Department of Corrections announced it will also close seven prisons around the state by the middle of the year. Those seven prisons, and four additional work camps also slated for closure, wouldn’t be included in the privatization plan.
The bill would require the department to privatize all prison facilities, including annexes, prisons, and work release centers in Manatee, Hardee, Indian River, Okeechobee, Highlands, St. Lucie, DeSoto, Sarasota, Charlotte, Glades, Martin, Palm Beach, Hendry, Lee, Collier, Broward, Miami-Dade and Monroe counties.
That would include several prisons classified as “major institutions” by the Corrections Department, including Everglades Correctional Institution, Homestead C.I., Dade C.I., and the South Florida Reception Center, all in Miami-Dade County; Charlotte C.I. in Charlotte County; Martin C.I. in Martin County; Hardee C.I. in Hardee County; and Okeechobee C.I., in Okeechobee County.
A spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections, Ann Howard, said the Legislature makes the policy.
“Whatever it is that goes through, we will enforce,” Howard said.
David Stafford Seeks Third Term As Elections Boss
January 14, 2012
Incumbent David Stafford prefiled Friday for his third term as Escambia County Supervisor of Elections. Stafford, a Republican, was first elected to the position in 2004.
No other candidate has prefiled to date for the position.
Brush Fire Burns Several Acres
January 14, 2012
Firefighters battled a waterfront brush fire in Walnut Hill Friday afternoon.
The Walnut Hill Station of Escambia Fire Rescue fought a brush fire around several ponds mid-afternoon Friday on South Highway 99 and Eicher Road. There were no structures threatened by the blaze. The cause of the fire was not immediately known.
Pictured: This brush fire scorched several acres at South Highway 99 and Eicher Road Friday afternoon. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Auburn Coach Gene Chizik Visits Local Recruit, Tiger Fans
January 14, 2012
Auburn Tiger head football coach Gene Chizik paid a visit to Escambia County High School in Atmore Friday morning to visit with a small group of fans and a future Tiger defensive tackle.
Escambia County Blue Devil Tyler Nero has verbally committed to play at Auburn this fall. He chose Auburn over Alabama, Florida, Florida State, Clemson, Georgia, Arkansas, Kentucky and others, according to Rivals.com.
Chizik led the Auburn Tigers to the 2010 BCS National Championship.
Pictured top: Auburn Tigers Head Coach Gene Chizik with Tyler Nero. Pictured inset: Chizik with Ernest Ward Middle School Principal Nancy Perry. Pictured below: Chizik with Auburn fan Toby Weaver of Walnut Hill. NorthEscambia.com photos by Edie Jackson, click to enlarge.
Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: And They’re Back
January 14, 2012
State lawmakers kicked off an election-year, budget-cutting, once-a-decade-political- remapping session this week as Gov. Rick Scott called for further tax cuts and $1 billion more for education while assuring Floridians that good times are returning.
Ushered into a January session in a constitutionally mandated effort to draw new political boundaries in time for the 2012 elections, legislative leaders took little time to caution voters of potentially painful cuts as they work to craft a budget that may fall up to $2 billon short.
Meanwhile, proposals to make significant changes to the state’s no-fault automobile insurance, and a controversial piece of gambling legislation began their separate treks through the chambers, which both cranked back into action.
SCOTT TALKS DONUTS, JOBS AND EDUCATION:
Visibly more at ease than he was a year ago, Gov. Rick Scott delivered his second State of the State speech to a joint session of the Legislature, saying the signs of economic recovery are in the air and his plans to bring 700,000 new jobs to the state are on track.
Scott kept his message limited by focusing on public education, auto insurance reform and his mantra of more jobs.
“The decisions we make in the next few months will determine whether we continue to create a business climate that will provide new jobs and opportunities for Floridians; whether we fully recapture that spirit of human potential that is at the core of what it means to be a Floridian,” Scott said. “I’m absolutely convinced that we will.”
Otherwise short on specifics, the governor called on lawmakers to find at least a $1 billion more for public education while holding the line or reducing taxes, and warned lawmakers he “cannot budge” on that number.
CLAIMS BILLS:
Taking a cue from Scott’s 2010 campaign, the Senate got right to work, passing a pair of claims bills that have caught the attention of Senate President Mike Haridopolos.
Hours after the session started Tuesday, the chamber approved (SB 4), which calls for Eric Brody to receive $15.575 million as compensation for debilitating injuries he suffered in a 1998 car crash with a Broward County sheriff’s deputy. It then passed the other bill (SB 2) to provide $1.35 million to William Dillon, who spent 27 years in prison after being wrongfully convicted of a murder in Brevard County.
“Today’s simply about justice,” Haridopolos said in presenting the Dillon bill, which passed 39-1.
PIP MY RIDE:
With Scott calling for swift action, both chambers released proposals this week backers say are needed to curb costs that have crippled the state’s no-fault system set up 40 years ago to pay medical costs up to $10,000 for victims of automobile accidents.
The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation in April estimates that the number of personal injury protection claims grew by 28 percent between 2006 and 2010 despite no significant increase in the number of drivers on the road. Between 2008 and 2010, estimated claims payments jumped 70 percent to $2.37 billion.
The Senate plan, SB 1860, places tighter restrictions on clinics and makes sure hospitals get paid first. Unlike the House plan, HB 119, the Senate version does not place caps on attorney fees.
The House version, which passed the Insurance and Banking Subcommittee on a 10-5 vote Wednesday, caps overall legal fees and prevents plaintiffs’ attorneys from using multipliers to boost their fees. The House plan also funnels accident victims to hospital emergency rooms or satellite urgent care facilities associated with ERs in an effort to curb costs.
DESTINATION UNKNOWN
Debate over expanding gambling in Florida continued as neither side of the controversial issue was ready to fold. A Senate proposal to allow three mega-resort gambling venues in Florida was amended to allow for expanded gaming in more pari-mutuels around the state. The measure, SB 710, also backed away from earlier promises to shut down Internet cafes.
The Senate Regulated Industries Committee approved the bill in a 7-3 vote to allow developments of at least $2 billion to spring up in Florida. Supporters face long odds getting it through the full Senate and House.
The House Business & Consumer Affairs Subcommittee, meanwhile, held a workshop later in the week, on its proposal, but committee chairman Rep. Doug Holder, R-Sarasota said he has not made up his mind about whether he would support the House bill, HB 487, a more limited proposal that would also allow up to three destination resort casinos.
Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi issued an advisory opinion rejecting proposals for slot machines at pari-mutuel facilities outside Miami-Dade and Broward counties. The opinion came less than three weeks before Gadsden and Washington counties are scheduled to hold referenda about whether to allow slot machines.
ECONOMIC FORECAST
As lawmakers eye gambling as a way to produce revenue several years from now, state economists left their revenue estimate for the next year and a half all but unchanged, prompting renewed calls from the House for lawmakers to finish their budget on time despite the Senate leaders’ hesitance to move too quickly.
The new estimate issued Thursday changes the overall projection by $26.1 million — about 1 percent of the projected $2 billion budget shortfall and an increase of 0.05 percent in projected revenue. It includes an increase of $46 million in the estimate for the current year and a drop of $19.9 million for the fiscal year beginning July 1.
“You don’t hardly get any closer to the current estimate than that,” said Amy Baker, coordinator of the Office of Economic & Demographic Research.
Earlier in the week Haridopolos said lawmakers should consider postponing budget action until after revenue data from December and January was available. The idea gained momentum as the week progressed.
By Friday, Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, said a majority of members were in favor of taking a break on budget items until another round of revenue estimates is calculated, if that’s the approach the Senate president wants to follow.
So far, House Speaker Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park, has said he is confident the session will end in 60 days.
PRISONS
Scott’s push to get the state out of the prison business took a step forward this week as his prison chief announced plans to close seven prisons and four work camps as part of a consolidation plan that’s possible because of declining numbers of prisoners.
The largest facility slated to close is New River Correctional Institute in Raiford, a part of the so-called Iron Triangle of prison facilities that surround Florida State Prison in northeast Florida.
Later in the week, bills to privatize prisons, work camps and other facilities in South Florida were introduced. The fast tracked measures are scheduled to be taken up next week by the Senate Rules Committee, a sure sign the push to get the state out of the corrections business remains in play.
BROWNING, WALLACE TO STEP DOWN.
Two veteran administrators announced this week they would step down. Two-time Secretary of State Kurt Browning said Wednesday he would step away from the position again. Browning, first hired by former Gov. Charlie Crist in 2006 and then brought back by Scott in 2010, said he will return to Pasco County and would at least consider taking a run at school superintendent. Browning will remain in office until Feb. 17, allowing him to oversee the Jan. 31 presidential primary.
Another veteran to hit the road is Scott Wallace, who will step down this spring as CEO of Citizens Property Insurance Corp. the state-backed company that is now the largest property insurer in the state. Wallace, who has spent six years at Citizens’ helm, gave no reason for his decision to quit effective April 6.
STORY OF THE WEEK: With an election looming and an expected $2 billion budget hole facing it, the Legislature convened this week for a 60-day(?) session that will include redrawing all the political boundaries.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “My fellow Floridians, I’m here today to tell you that promise and opportunity will return; in fact ARE returning even as we meet here today. While we have many miles to go, and some of them will be painful, our higher journey is already under way. This year and today we see the rebirth of an even greater Florida.” Rick Scott, during his state of the state speech.
By The News Service of Florida









