Featured Recipe: Fresh Rosemary Chicken with Pesto Pasta

February 13, 2011

This weekend’s featured recipe from Janet Tharpe is a Fresh Rosemary Chicken with Pesto Pasta. Fresh herbs, sun dried tomatoes and pesto sauce team with chicken for this impressive but simple pasta dish.

To print today’s “Just a Pinch” recipe column, you can click the image below to load a printable pdf with a recipe card.

Florida Weekly Government Roundup

February 13, 2011

Gov. Rick Scott rolled out his first budget proposal this week in Eustis with the tea partiers that brewed up his election. While that was sweet for the governor, when the tea budget got to Tallahassee the reception was iced, and bitter.

Republican legislators said they’d give it a look, but many were openly skeptical and more of them privately perplexed about how this two-year plan would work. It was reminiscent of Gov. Charlie Crist’s last budget, which was roundly dismissed by the Republican Legislature, though Crist was on his way out of the GOP, and Scott just arrived at the party.

But when Scott rolled out his $65.9 billion proposed budget, he turned to the tea party that propelled him into office, not the official party he is a member of, which largely supported his primary opponent.

“This is the budget you asked for,” Scott said to applause in Eustis.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgThe cheers did not come back with him to Tallahassee, where House education, transportation, and health care panels grilled Scott’s budget office staff – and sometimes chastised them – on the governor’s plans for cutting the budget, moving money around, consolidating agencies, and shifting the burden for some services to local governments.

“Do you realize that at the local level there’s not going to be any funds for some of the services you say need to be funded at the local level?” Rep. Daniel Davis, R-Jacksonville, asked an administration official. “We need to be honest with ourselves and the local community.”

Particularly troublesome to some lawmakers was a $298-per-student cut – and that’s if expected pension savings are put back into education – that Scott budget officials attributed to the loss of federal stimulus dollars. If pension savings aren’t realized, or the local governments haven’t saved wisely some of their own federal money, some counties could see a much bigger reduction. The governor’s office says it isn’t proposing to cut education spending, it’s simply not in favor of replacing federal money the state shouldn’t have relied on in the first place. For parents, the result would be the same. Rarely has cutting education been popular with voters.

The proposed cut is “pretty steep,” said Rep. Marti Coley, R-Marianna and chairwoman of the House Prek-12 Education Appropriations Subcommittee. “So we will consider his proposals and we will make our own proposals as well.”

That was a familiar refrain as Scott’s proposal worked the halls of the Capitol building this week.

“How flexible is the governor on this?” Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, who campaigned for Scott last fall as Florida Republican Party chairman, asked Scott’s budget director Jerry McDaniel.

“You’re doing away with 619 jobs to save $2.8 million-a-year. Are we benefiting from that?,” Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, asked of Scott’s plan to cut the Corrections Department by $82.4 million. Doing so would eliminate 1,690 jobs and close two prisons, which Scott says would offset an 8,000-bed surplus throughout Florida’s prison system.

Rep. Mike Horner, R-Kissimmee, chairman of the House Transportation & Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee, was one of the few lawmakers to not immediately dismiss Scott’s budget as unworkable.

“By investing additional dollars in economic development, by preserving the transportation trust fund, I think (that) shows that he’s got an interest in job creation,” said Rep. Mike Horner, R-Kissimmee, chairman of the House Transportation & Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee.

Horner was probably happy that overall transportation spending would drop from just under $10 billion this year to $9.3 billion next year and then just under $8.8 billion the next year, a far less steep cut than Scott suggested for other areas of the state budget. He also preserved most of the transportation trust fund, a fate far unlike 124 other trust funds that will be raided or eliminated under Scott’s proposal to the tune of $8.5 billion.

And it wasn’t just in the Legislature where Scott’s “supporters” weren’t fully supportive.

Among those upset with Scott’s proposal to have existing government employees put more of their paycheck into a retirement account was Pinellas County Sheriff Jim Coats, a Republican who had been on Scott’s law enforcement transition team. He said he had gotten the impression from Scott that a much smaller contribution would be proposed by the governor.

“To make existing employees contribute, what is it 5 percent? I think that’s a little harsh,” Coats told the St. Petersburg Times. “I think it will have a potentially adverse impact on our recruiting activities and retention, and I think it will have an impact on morale.”

SAME PARTY, DIFFERENT PAGE

The budget differences were the first hint that that the establishment’s embrace of Scott after he defeated GOP primary rival – and establishment candidate – Bill McCollum may run into some rough spots. But it wasn’t the only difference this week.

The new governor and the ambitious Senate president were singing a different tune on when Florida should hold its 2012 presidential primaries.

Despite calls from leaders of the Republican Party of Florida and Florida Democratic Party to hold the primary within parameters approved last year by the national political parties, Senate President Mike Haridopolos said this week that he’d like the primary to remain early – before there’s a clear front runner – so that more presidential candidates will court Florida voters during the campaign.

But Scott, who would likely not be governor if he had taken the advice of Haridopolos and the rest of the GOP establishment last summer, countered that it wasn’t worth risking Florida’s delegate strength at the Republican nomination convention.

“I want to have it as early as we can, but I don’t want to lose any of the delegates,” Scott said.

Haridopolos had a different take on the possibility that Florida could lose some delegates, – which is what happened in 2008 when both parties stripped the state of some delegates at the nominating convention because of the early primary.

That could be even more embarrassing to Republicans this time around because they’re hosting the Republican National Convention in Tampa.

“That’s, I guess, a risk we take,” said Haridopolos.

Two Democrats were not particularly interested in taking that risk this week, however, and they filed legislation to avoid it. Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, and Rep. Marty Kiar, D-Davie, filed bills (SB 860, HB 695) that call for the primary to be held on the first Tuesday in March, which would result in a March 6 primary in Florida.

CELEBE-RHEE

Teacher-firing former D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee, a hero of the conservative education reform community, brought her talents to Tallahassee this week. And while she was here, she received a reception from lawmakers usually reserved for the likes of Dan Marino or Tim Tebow.

No footballs were thrown in the halls of the Capitol, as has sometimes been the case when athletes are in town, but lawmakers hung on Rhee’s every word as she talked of reforms that have made her simultaneously beloved and hated by education watchers around the nation. One committee even delayed its meeting for an hour so it could wait for Rhee, a Democrat, to finish addressing another one.

Rhee pressed Florida lawmakers to abolish tenure and fire ineffective teachers as she did in D.C. in the state’s quest to overhaul its education system. Little mentioned was the political consequences that appeared to follow those moves, when D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty was denied re-election in a campaign that turned in part on Rhee’s decisions. Democratic-leaning D.C. could never be confused with Florida, where Republicans hold supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature, so Rhee’s proposals here were mostly met with fawning.

The Senate did pass a merit teacher pay bill through its first committee, though a key element is missing – exactly how teachers would be evaluated.

“We just have the skeleton and not the bones and meat on it,” Senate Prek-12 Education Committee Chairman Steve Wise said of the bill, which is a sequel of sorts to the bill that ran into enormous opposition from teachers last spring and was vetoed by Gov. Charlie Crist.

For her part, Rhee was not as impressed with the current education system in Florida as lawmakers here were with her.

“No. 5 in this nation? This nation is not where we need to be in the global marketplace,” Rhee said of the state’s recent No. 5 ranking in Education Week.

Elsewhere, Gov. Scott toured several state agencies and sought to assure workers who he has sharply criticized – and whose positions have been squeezed by his budget – that he really liked them. On one, a visit to the Department of Environmental Protection, Scott pledged not to close any state parks.

Additionally, months after promising to give the Florida Legislature hell for not approving a proposed constitutional oil drilling ban last summer, former Gov. Charlie Crist was in Tallahassee to announce how he is going to do it. Crist and Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced they would co-chair the Save Our Florida Beaches campaign that was launched in October by the Florida Wildlife Federation, Progress Florida and the Sea Turtle Conservancy. The move is aimed at getting a ban on new drilling.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Gov. Rick Scott rolled out his budget before his staunchest tea party supporters in Eustis, with a model of the Boston Tea Party ship Dartmouth on hand. But by week’s end, the budget proposal was clearly taking on water.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “This is basically a visionary budget. You envision these reductions occurring,” Rep. Gayle Harrell, R-Port St. Lucie, making clear she did not see what Scott saw in the numbers.

By KeithLaing
The News Service Florida

Boil Water Notice Lifted For West Kingsfield Road

February 12, 2011

The precautionary boil water notice issued for ECUA customers residing on W. Kingsfield Road, from 297A to Fox Quarry Road was lifted Saturday morning, including the following:

  • Brightleaf Circle
  • Natalies Way
  • Tall Oak Drive
  • Burr Oak Drive
  • Flintstone Drive
  • Avalon Street
  • Badger Circle
  • Bentley Oaks Circle

Standing Strong: NJROTC Annual Inspection Held (With Photo Gallery)

February 12, 2011

Northview High School’s NJROTC Annual Inspection was held Friday at the school, with cadets undergoing  face to face scrutiny with a retired Navy commander.

Commander Merlin Ladner, USN (Ret) conducted the inspection. The day’s events began with a personnel inspection, drill demonstration and a pass-in-review in the school gym. Other events Wednesday included a financial record review, briefings, administrative inspections, supply inspections and more.

For a photo gallery from the inspection, click here.

One by one, Cmdr. Ladner went face to face with each cadet, asking them questions about their NJROTC experience and conducting a complete inspection of their uniform.

“I will spend a few seconds with each cadet asking them questions,” he told the audience. “You won’t hear what I have to say to them, but it will help me get a sense of the unit’s health and how it’s going.”

“Yes, sir,” the cadets answered as they faced the questions about their NJROTC service, their ribbons, the shine on their shoes and some less than expected questions that left some cadets trying not to crack a smile.

“I am very proud of how you look this morning,” Ladner, who conducts annual inspections at about 60 high schools in the Southeast, told the entire group following his inspection. It has been two years since he was last at Northview. A visiting officer conducts inspections during the years Lander does not visit Bratt.

Ladner said the voluntary military service, and a voluntary Navy JROTC program is a good thing for the United States.

“I don’t want to be in the country that’s number two in the world,” he said.

For their outstanding personal appearance during the inspection, cadets Kasie Braun, Michelle Carnley, Christina Donald, Amber Francis, Jacob Peterson, Kent Smith, and Victoria Wright were awarded the Exemplary Personal Appearance ribbon.

Northview’s NJROTC is under the command of Senior Naval Science Instructor Captain Charlie Code and Chief Jeffrey Simpkins. The unit is led by Company Commander LCDR Tyler Garrett and Executive Officer Cadet LT Melissa Moretz.

For a photo gallery from the inspection, click here.

Pictured top: Commander Merlin Ladner, USN (Ret) addresses the audience during Northview High School’s NJROTC Annual Inspection Friday morning. Pictured insets and below: More scenes from the inspection. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Amber Alert Kidnapping Suspect Extradited Back To Florida

February 12, 2011

The man who allegedly kidnapped a 17-month old Tuesday night has been extradited from Alabama to the Escambia County Jail in Pensacola.

Keith Square Sr., 36, of the 500 block of North B Street, Pensacola, is being held without bond on charges of kidnapping, interference with custody and a probation violation. He is a former resident of Blackmon Street in Century, according to Escambia County Circuit Court records.

Square Sr. is accused of kidnapping Keith Square, Jr. Tuesday, prompting a nationwide Amber Alert for the toddler. According to police, Square Sr. is not the father of Square Jr., and the mother has sole legal custody.

The child’s mother, Monique Slater, 29, of Pensacola, was visiting friends in the 1200 block of Cervantes Street in Pensacola Tuesday, according to police, when Square Sr. showed up and asked to take the baby to see some friends.

Davis said the mother agreed. A short time later, the suspect  Square called Slater and told her she would never see the baby again. Pensacola Police said Square called Slater several times threatening to harm the baby and also said that he and the baby “would not be taken alive.”

The vehicle believed to have been used in the kidnapping was later located in Brewton Tuesday night, where the driver told Brewton Police that the suspect and baby were dropped off at a residence near Century Woods on West Highway 4 in Century.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Department unsuccessfully checked several possible suspect locations in Century, including homes on Blackmon Street and West Highway 4, Tuesday night in an effort to the find the child.

Someone dropped the child off at East Brewton (Ala.) Police Department Wednesday morning. About an hour later, Square, Sr. turned himself into authorities in Alabama and was booked into the Escambia County (Ala.) Detention Center in Brewton.

Chiefs Lose In Semi’s, Plus Other Florida And Alabama Playoff Scores

February 12, 2011

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/basketball.jpgIt was a heartbreaking, season-ending loss for the Northview Chiefs Friday night as they lost in the District 1-2A Basketball Semifinals.

Freeport defeated the Chiefs 73-67 to advance to the finals Saturday night against Baker.

..

Here is a look at other area semifinal basketball games from Friday night:

FLORIDA

District 1-5A Semifinals

Escambia 55 Navarre 44
Pine Forest 59 Milton Milton 49
Escambia vs. Pine Forest 7 p.m. Sat. at Tate

District 1-4A Semifinals

Washington 64 West Florida 41
Pensacola 48 Choctaw 45
Washington vs. PHS 7 p.m. Sat.

District 1-2A Semifinals

Freeport 73 Northview 67
Baker 61 Pensacola Christian 39
Freeport vs. Baker, 7 p.m. Sat. at Baker

ALABAMA

4A Area 1 Semifinals

Escambia County (Atmore) 71 Saraland 40
B.C. Rain 57 UMS-Wright 54
B.C. Rain at ECHS, 7 p.m. Monday

2A Area 1 Semifinals

Flomaton 66 Mobile Christian 37
Cottage Hill 72 J.U. Blacksher 35
Flomaton at Cottage Hill, 6 p.m. Monday

Escambia Investigators Seek Robbery Suspects

February 12, 2011

Investigators are asking for the public’s help in identifying a couple of accused armed robbery suspects in Escambia County.

Two black males are believed to have worked together to commit several armed robberies in Escambia County recently.

The first suspect is believed to be in his mid to late 20’s, possibly has a light complexion, about six-feet tall, thin build, possibly with short dreadlocks, and has worn dark clothing and a jacket with a zippered hood that covers his entire face.

The second suspect is a black male in his mid 30’s, about six-foot two-inches tall, 220 pounds, short black hair, sometimes wears a baseball cap, sometimes has a pencil behind his ear and has used a bicycle on at least one occasion.

They have used a new model silver sedan that may be a rental car.

Anyone with information about the identity of either armed robbery suspect is asked to contact Gulf Coast Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP or visit www.gulfcoastcrimestoppers.org to submit an anonymous tip online.

Ernest Ward Holds Valentine’s Dance, Names Court (With Photo Gallery)

February 12, 2011

Ernest Ward Middle School held its annual Valentine’s Dance Friday night, naming a queen and her court based upon student votes.

Eighth grader Kamryn Brock was named queen, and TyDre Bradley was named king. From the seventh grade, Brianna Parker was named maiden, and Gavin Grant was named knight. Sixth grade maiden was Peighton Dortch and sixth grade knight was Hunter Kite.

For a photo gallery with the complete court, click here.

Pictured above: (L-R) Seventh Grade Maiden Brianna Parker and Knight Gavin Grant; Queen Kamryn Brock and King TyDre Bradley; and Sixth Grade Maiden Peighton Dortch and Knight Hunter Kite. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Florida Urges Public To Burn With Caution And Care

February 12, 2011

Officials with Florida Division of Forestry’s Blackwater District are urging residents in Escambia, Okaloosa and Santa Rosa counties to use caution if they decide to burn yard waste in the near future.

Since December 2010, the Division of Forestry has responded to more than 50 wildfire calls, more than half were the result of escaped debris burns. Despite recent rains, the forecast calls for pleasant weather this weekend and into next week. Fine fuels such as grasses and small brush which have been killed by winter frost and freezes and burn readily. Low humidity (less than 40 percent) and gusty winds cause these vegetative fuels to dry quickly. If grass feels dry to the touch, it will probably burn.

While there currently are no burn bans in our area, some cities and municipalities prohibit outdoor burning or require a special permit. If you are not certain about burning in your area, check with the Division of Forestry office by calling (850) 957-6145 and listen to the requirements and restrictions when prompted.

Click the graphic to enlarge and see setback requirements for burning.

Some tips and requirements to keep in mind before you burn yard waste include:

  • Legal burning hours are between 8 a.m. and one hour before sunset.
  • It is illegal to burn household garbage (including paper products), treated lumber, plastics, rubber materials, tires, pesticide, paint and aerosol containers.
  • Piles greater than 8 feet in diameter will require an authorization from the Division of Forestry.
  • Clear down to bare, mineral soil around your pile to prevent the fire from spreading.
  • Don’t burn on windy days.
  • Never leave a fire unattended – even for a moment. One gust of wind can cause a fire to escape.
  • Grass fires can spread quickly. Be prepared. Keep handy a water hose, shovel or other means to put out the fire.
  • Make sure the fire is completely out before leaving it – no smoke and no heat.
  • If your fire escapes, call for help quickly. Several minutes may pass before a fire department or the Division of Forestry can arrive on scene.
  • If your fire escapes, you might be held liable for the cost of suppression and damages to the property of others.

Minimum required setbacks to legally burn yard waste:

  • 25 feet from any forested area (grasslands, brush or other wildlands).
  • 25 feet from your home or other combustible structure.
  • 50 feet from any paved or public roadway.
  • 150 from any occupied dwelling other than your own home.

Think Roses In February

February 12, 2011

theresafriday.jpgWith Valentine’s Day just around the corner, out thoughts go to roses. Roses grown in Florida require regular maintenance, but growing roses can be a rewarding hobby for those who like to spend time in the garden each week. Pruning will help keep your plants healthy and productive.Hybrid tea and grandiflora roses, in particular, should be pruned every year during the first or second week in February. Otherwise, these roses tend to become leggy, less vigorous and unattractive, and they won’t bloom as well.

Other types of roses, such as floribunda, shrub and everblooming old garden roses, generally require less drastic pruning, but they still benefit from pruning to improve their shape or control their size, when necessary.

Following a logical sequence of steps while pruning will help make the job seem less complicated. The first step is to remove the three D’s: any dead, diseased or damaged wood. Cut the stems one inch below darkened areas, making sure you are cutting back to green wood. Make the cut at a 45 degree angle about ¼‐inch above an outward facing bud. If no live buds remain, remove the entire cane. Weak, spindly canes, which are the diameter of a pencil or less, should also be removed the same way.

To avoid dieback and encourage rapid healing, pruning cuts should be made just above a dormant bud (eye). When an entire branch is removed, make a smooth cut at the point of juncture.

The second step is to remove branches that grow toward the center of the plant. This opens up the plant for better air circulation and allows sunlight to penetrate the inner portion of the plant. The third step is to locate crossing branches and remove the weakest one. Crossing branches may rub against each other, causing abrasions that may serve as openings for disease organisms to enter the plant. Also remove sucker growth, which is growth  coming from below the bud union. Sucker growth can be from the root stock and a different rose variety; if not removed, sucker growth will crowd out the desired variety

Finally, prune to shape the plant. Hybrid teas, grandifloras and floribundas can be pruned 12 to 24 inches in height, leaving up to four to eight large, healthy canes the diameter of your finger or larger. Shrub and species roses should be pruned lightly, removing no more than 1/3 of the growth. Miniature roses need only minimal pruning. Old‐fashioned roses and climbers that bloom only once a year should be pruned

Immediately after flowering. Do not prune these types of roses heavily in the early spring since they bloom on wood from the previous year’s growth. If you have purchased new rose bushes you don’t have to worry about pruning them. Newly purchased roses have already been pruned, and no further pruning is required.

Pruning back roses takes some getting used to. Many new gardeners have a hard time getting up the nerve to cut their bushes back. If you don’t, however, the result will be tall, rangy, overgrown bushes that will not be nearly as attractive.

Theresa Friday is the Residential Horticulture Extension Agent for Santa Rosa County.

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