Sweet Deal: ‘Project Sugar’ Could Mean 100 New Escambia Jobs

June 3, 2011

Escambia County is hoping for a sweet deal by pledging support for a project that could bring 100 new jobs.

The new business name has not been released yet, but officials say “Project Sugar” is a maker of confectionery products and is expected to bring over 100 full-time jobs to
the area. The average wage would be $43,000 plus  benefits. The company would have a minimum capital investment of $6 million.

Escambia County is pledging an incentive up to a quarter million dollars. The company would receive $125,000 when they reach 50 jobs, $2.15 million in payroll and a capital investment of $6 million. Once the company reaches 50 jobs and $4.3 million in payroll, the county would contribute another $125,000 in incentive money.

The $250,000 will come from Escambia County’s Economic Development Fund.

Northview Honors The Class Of 2011 (With Photo Gallery, Awards List)

June 3, 2011

The Northview Class of 2011 held Senior Honors Night at the school Thursday night, with over $1.25 million in scholarships and academic aid presented to members of the senior class.

During the event, the school also named Sarah Killam as valedictorian and  Emily Vickrey as salutatorian.

For a photo gallery from the event, click here.

(Editor’s note: Top academic honor students, Beta Club members and subject area awards will be in included in an upcoming story.)

The following scholarships and awards were presented Thursday nightL

Atmore Rotary Club Academic All Stars
Mallory Bell $750
Ashley Digmon $750
Laneicia Gomez $750
Sarah Killam $750
Sara Conner $500
Tyler Garrett $500
Jocelyn Gould $500
Jessynia McCall $500
Christina Sepulveda $500
Emily Vickrey $500
Dustin Yuhasz $500

Barrineau Park Historical Society
Dixie Picheo $500

FFA Alumni Scholarship
Allyson Bullard $500
Stephanie Solari $500
Allison Vidak $500

FFA National Scholarship Dodge/Ram
Allie Vidak $1000

First National Bank and Trust
Sarah Killam, Valedictorian $100 Saving Bond

Fortis Institute of Technology
Allison Freeman $500

Florida A&M University
Derrick Portis $2000

Jim and Jumi Ross Memorial Scholarship
Tyler Garrett $750

Nashville Auto-Diesel College
Adam Freeman $1000

NNOA Scholarship
Tyler Garrett $500

Pensacola Civitan Club Citizen of the Year
Ashley Digmon, Gift Card

Pensacola State College
Haley Simpson $1600 (renewable)
Jocelyn Gould $1600 (renewable)

Poarch Band of Creek Indians

Derek Lewis $3500 Fred L. McGhee Memorial
Dustin Lewis $4000 Indian Descent Scholarships
Shawna Montgomery $30,000 Tuition Assistance Program
Brooke Tullis $30,000 Tuition Assistance Program
Megan Flurnoy $30,000 Tuition Assistance Program

Spirit of the Chief Award
Sarah Killam $1000
Austin Arrington $1000

United Bank of Atmore Award
Emily Vickrey, Salutatorian $75 Saving Bond and 5 shares of stock

University of West Florida
Sarah Killam $17,000
Joshua Scott $1000

US Army Scholar Athlete
Sarah Killam, Medal
Colton Sims, Medal

USNA/NROTC
Tyler Garrett $180,000

Walnut Hill Ruritan Glenn Key Ruritan Award
Stephanie Solari $500

Walnut Hill Ruritan Service Award
Adam Freeman $100

NAACP
Laneicia Gomez
Jocelyn Gould

Auburn University
Tyler Garrett $1000 Board of Trustees Scholarship
Tyler Garrett $1000 Chick-Fil-A Scholarship

Better Business Bureau Student Ethic’s Scholarship
Sarah Killam $1000

Charles and Alice Mayson Scholarship
Sarah Killam $12,000

Faulkner State
Mallory Bell $5500

Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
Derrick Portis $2000

Florida Bright Futures Recognition
25 – Florida Medallion $200,000 (4 years, $8000 each)
Jansen Bodiford
Caitlyn Brown
Allyson Bullard
Haley Coleman
Trestine Dean
Ashley Digmon
Laneicia Gomez
Jocelyn Gould
David Lambert
Dabney Langhorne
Derek Lewis
Dustin Lewis
Dixie Picheo
Derrick Portis
Brianna Roley
Megan Ryan
Joshua Scott
Christinal Sepulveda
Hayley Simpson
Colton Sims
Stephanie Solari
Diamond Tullis
Ladarion White
Katie Wieborg
Dustin Yuhasz

Florida Bright Futures Recognition
1 – Florida Academic $12,120 (4 years)
Sarah Killam

Henry H. Reichhold Scholarship
David (A.J.) Lambert, Jr $16,000

International Papers Cantonment Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholarship
Derrick Portis $1000
LaDarion White $1000

Jay Hospital Employee Foundation Scholarships
Jocelyn Gould $1000
Sarah Killam $1000

John E. Frenkel Sr. Educational Grants
Stephanie Solari $1000
Allison Vidak $1000

Quint and Rishy Studer Citizenship Scholarship
Katie Wieborg $1000

Trevecca Nazarene University
Naomi Cooler $10,000

Tri-City Rotary Club Scholarship
Joshua Scott $250

University of Mobile
Emily Vickrey $28,000

University of South Alabama
Allyson Bullard $14000
Colton Sims $33,250

Results Announced In Log A Load Bass Tournament

June 3, 2011

The recent 15th annual charity Log A Load For Kids Bass Tournament raised $15,000 for Sacred Heart Hospital.

The tournament at the Swamp House Marina and Landing offered $10,000 guaranteed prize money, including $3,000 for first place.

Top ten tournament winners were:

  1. Eddie Milstead and Tony Clements
  2. Leon Jernigan and Bobby Jernigan
  3. Kenneth Morris and Chazz Morris
  4. Larry Bullock and Rodger Caldwell
  5. JerryManning and Reggie Carper
  6. Jamie Franklin and Jeff McNiel
  7. Cole Griffith and David Foshee
  8. James Purvis and Shane Garrett
  9. Daniel C. Griffith and Danny R. Griffith
  10. Josh Halford and Jason Terry

Mystery Weight Fish

  1. Doug Tipton and Larry Tipton

Appeal Rejected: W.D. Childers Conviction Reinstated

June 3, 2011

A federal appeals court Thursday ruled against former Senate President W.D. Childers in his quest to overturn a 2003 bribery conviction related to a Pensacola land deal.

The full 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta rejected Childers’ argument that his constitutional rights were violated because he was prevented from fully cross-examining a crucial witness.

The 88-page ruling includes a dissenting opinion that said Childers did not receive a fair trial.

Childers  was convicted of bribery and accepting unlawful compensation for official acts in connection with a Highway 29 soccer complex scandal in 2002 while he served as an Escambia County Commissioner.

The soccer complex scandal eventually landed four Escambia Commissioners in jail on charges that included Childers, Willie Junior, Terry Smith and Mike Bass. Junior was later found dead under a house, committing suicide the day before he was to be sentenced.

Childers, once known as “The Banty Rooster” for bringing home the bacon for Northwest Florida, was released from state prison on June 17, 2009, having served almost three years of a 42-month sentence on the charges related to the $3.9 million soccer complex purchase. Junior testified that he received a collard green pot full of cash in exchange for his vote to purchase the soccer complex.

Childers was also the first man in Florida jailed for violating the open-meeting portion of the Sunshine Law for a phone call he and Smith made to then Supervisor of Elections Bonnie Jones. Childers served about a month in jail before being released.

Scott Signs Off On Medicaid Rewrite, Other Health Bills

June 3, 2011

Gov. Rick Scott on Thursday signed a landmark Medicaid overhaul that calls for shifting hundreds of thousands of low-income and elderly Floridians into managed-care plans.

Scott’s signature on a two-bill package (HB 7107 and HB 7109) was not a surprise — he has long pushed for transforming the Medicaid system.

Now, it will be up to the state to convince the federal government to go along. The state Agency for Health Care Administration is required to submit a proposal to federal Medicaid officials by Aug. 1 and is scheduled to start a flurry of public hearings June 10.

If the overhaul is approved, AHCA in July 2012 would start moving forward with a mandatory managed-care program for seniors who need long-term care. That phase would be finished by October 2013.

AHCA would then start putting in place the managed-care requirement for a broader Medicaid population — such as low-income women and children — in January 2013 and finish by October 2014.

The plan, however, has faced opposition from Democratic lawmakers and some patient advocates. They argue, in part, that relying on HMOs and other types of managed-care plans could squeeze needed services for Medicaid beneficiaries.

Lawmakers spent more than a year considering changes to the $20 billion Medicaid program and passed the two bills on the final day of the 2011 legislative session.

Also late Thursday, Scott signed one in a series of controversial bills dealing with abortion.

The bill (HB 97) would ban abortion coverage from policies sold through a health-insurance exchange — a type of insurance marketplace that is scheduled to start operating in 2014 as part of last year’s federal health law.

Scott also approved another measure (HB 1193) that takes aim at the hotly debated federal law. That bill says people cannot be compelled to buy health insurance, except in limited circumstances.

The Republican-controlled Legislature passed the bill in response to what has become known as the “individual mandate” in the federal law. That mandate will require almost all Americans to have health insurance starting in 2014.

By Jim Saunders
The News Service of Florida

500 To Keep Their Jobs At Clearwire

June 2, 2011

About 500 employees at Clearwire in Milton will keep their jobs, although many of them will now work for a new company, according to the company.

Clearwire notified employees Thursday of an agreement that will transition parts of their customer care operates to TeleTech, a company with which Clearwire currently holds a partnership agreement.

About 700 employees, including 380 in Milton, will transition to to TeleTech, the company said, with TeleTech managing day-to-day customer care services for Clearwire customers.

Clearwire will retain approximately 180 personnel, including nearly 120 in Milton. Those employees remaining with Clearwire are responsible for a variety of back office activities,
including operations, workforce management, process management and vendor management.

“The agreement will help Clearwire increase efficiencies and reduce costs in the company’s customer care organization by leveraging the global resources of a leader in care center support,” Clearwire said in a news release.

Clearwire also began steps Thursday to return $2 million in incentive payments from the state. The money was received from the state in advance of an expansion that will no longer occur.

Deputies: Man Opened Fire Because Business Was Out Of Crawfish

June 2, 2011

Investigators say the man that opened fire with an AK-47 along busy Highway 29 in Ensley Sunday evening did so because a seafood market had sold out of crawfish.

Larry Wayne Kelly, 42, is being held on numerous felony weapons charges in the Escambia County Jail. His bond is set at $575,000.

About 7 p.m., multiple 911 calls of a tan Ford Ranger driving erratically at a high rate of speed and shots fire in the area of the Ensley Walmart. Deputies were unable to immediately determine where the gunshots had originated.

Escambia County Sheriff’s deputies were able to later determine that the gunfire came from a Ford Ranger driven by Kelly and gave chase. The short pursuit came to an end when Kelly crashed into another pickup and a deputy’s vehicle at Palafox and Ensley streets.

Kelly called the L&T Seafood Market, located south of Walmart on Highway 29, about a dozen times during a 30 minute period that began just before 5 p.m. During the first call, Kelly reportedly told the business owner that his business was a “joke” and  became “incredibly irate” that the store was out of crawfish, according to a Sheriff’s Office report. Many of the calls went unanswered because the business closed at 5:00.

At about 7 p.m., witnesses saw Kelly fire numerous times at the seafood market from his truck. Investigators later found 11 bullet holes in the building where round entered the building through the walls, roof awning, windows and doors. The seafood business was closed at the time, but adjacent businesses were open, but the shots came within 1,000 feet of persons and employees entering or leaving.

Inside Kelly’s Ford Ranger, deputies found a 12 gauge shotgun, a 38 Special, a Luger TEC-9 and an AK-47 — all loaded. In the backseat of the truck, deputies found the book “The Sociopath Next Door”.

According to deputies, Kelly said that he is a “sovereign citizen”, not subject to the law or the orders of law enforcement officers.

According to court records, Kelly is facing 27 separate  felony charges in connection with incident, including multiple counts of discharging a firearm from a vehicle, firing into a building, eluding law enforcement, assault of an officer and aggravated assault.

$32.3 Million For Road Projects In North Escambia, North Santa Rosa

June 2, 2011

The new Florida budget signed by Gov. Rick Scott last week includes $32.2 million for five major transportation projects in and around northern Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.

In Escambia County:

  • $7,709,279 to resurface Highway 29 in North Escambia from about Pine Barren Road through Century to the Alabama state line. (Read more…)
  • $17,703,796 for resurfacing and construction engineering on the entire length of Nine Mile Road from the Perdido River Bridge to the Escambia River Bridge.

In Santa Rosa County:

  • $1,609,325 for preliminary engineering on State Road 4 from Market Road (about four miles east of Jay) to the Okaloosa county line.
  • $3,924,041 for resurfacing  Highway 89 from Chumuckla Highway  to the Jay city limits
  • $1,362,582 for preliminary engineering on Highway 87 from two miles south of the Yellow River to County Road 184

Pictured above: The new Florida budget signed last week by Gov. Rick Scott includes $7.7 million to resurface a portion of Highway 29 in North Escambia. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Area Graduations Scheduled; Warning Issued For Parking At Civic Center

June 2, 2011

Graduations for high schools in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties will continue through Tuesday.

Many of the graduations will take place at the Pensacola Civic Center where school district officials are warning of potential problems due to parking restrictions. These parking restrictions are due to the recently constructed Commerce Park in downtown Pensacola.  Graduates and guests attending area high school graduation ceremonies are encouraged to car pool to the civic center, allowing extra time in order to find parking.  Parking in the immediate area of the Civic Center will be limited; those participating in and those attending graduations should be prepared to walk from where they park, according to school district officials.

Here is the schedule of graduations for Escambia and Santa Rosa counties:

FRIDAY

  • Central High School: 6 p.m., Central High gym

SATURDAY

  • Gulf Breeze High: 11 a.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Pace High School: 2 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Northview High School: 4 p.m., Northview High gym
  • Navarre High School: 5 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center

MONDAY

  • Escambia High School: 1 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Pensacola High School: 4 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Jay High School: 6 p.m., Jay High auditorium
  • Washington High School: 7 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Milton High School: 8 p.m., Milton High stadium/gym

TUESDAY

  • Pine Forest High School: 1 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • West Florida High School: 4 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center
  • Tate High School: 7 p.m., Pensacola Civic Center

For The Kids: Free ‘Water Camp’ To Be Held At Lake Stone

June 2, 2011

Escambia County Extension will offer two free water camps this summer, including one at Lake Stone in Century.

The water camps are for children 8-12 on June 29 and 30. Water Camp has fun, hands-on activities designed to get kids excited about water resources and healthy lifestyles. Although registration runs through June 22, there is a limit of 20 children per session, so early registration is encouraged.

The June 29 camp will be held at Lake Stone, 801 West Highway 4, Century and the June 30 camp will be held at the Langley Bell 4-H camp, 4810 West Nine Mile Road. Both camps start at 9 a.m. and end at 1 p.m.

There will be sprinklers and a slip-and-slide, so a swimsuit and sunscreen are needed. Lunch will be provided for all attendees. Parents are not required to stay during the session.

Call ahead if assistance is needed with transportation to the Century site.

For more information or to register, contact Carrie Stevenson, ctsteven@ufl.edu or Libbie Johnson, libbiej@ufl.edu or call (850) 475-5230.

« Previous PageNext Page »