Century Can’t Conduct Business; Considers $1.5 Million Investment

November 2, 2010

The Century Town Council was unable to conduct business Monday night with two council members out ill and another absent for an unknown reason.

The council had few action items on the agenda — approving a “Hospice Month” proclamation, approving previous minutes and considering a $1.5 million investment proposal. But without the quorum of members present, the were unable to vote on any issues.

Council member Nadine McCaw is recovering at home after having a kidney removed, and Councilman Gary Riley was sick according to council President Ann Brooks. Councilman Henry Hawkins was expected at the meeting, according to Brooks, but he did not attend. Brooks and Councilwoman Sharon Scott were unable to vote on any issues without a third member present.

$1.5 Million Investment Proposal

Robert Lasher, a local financial advisor for Edward D. Jones, presented a investment proposal that he said would increase the towns earnings five-fold on $1.5 million currently invested with the state.

The $1.7 million total investment with the state currently earns a half percent interest, while Lasher said the Treasury securities would earn a current rate of 2.83 percent return. The Treasury securities are risk-free, backed by the federal government.

Lasher suggested that the town invest $1.5 million, leaving $200,000 in reserve in the state fund. He recommended that the investments be laddered in $100,000 increments, with each investment maturing in different years over a 15 year period.

“You would have to look and see what the cash needs are,” Robert Hudson, the town’s accountant, said. “To me, 15 years is long time.”

Lasher said the investments could be structured over a shorter period, like seven and a half years.

“We’ve been talking about using some of that money for paving, Brooks said, adding the town might need faster access to those funds. Lasher said the investments could be sold within one business day — with a possible loss — if the town needed the cash.

Without a quorum present, the council took no action on the proposal.

Hospice Month

Covenant Hospice asked the town to approve a resolution proclaiming November as “Hospice Month”.  The council was unable to approve the resolution without the quorum present.

Pictured top: Empty seats surround Century Town Council members Ann Brooks (left) and Sharon Scott Monday night as the council did not have a quorum to conduct business. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Photos: No Monkeying Around

November 2, 2010

No monkeying around — the ladies of the Molino Homemaker’s Club took a first place prize for their booth at the Pensacola Interstate Fair.

The booth entitled “No more MONKEYS jumping on the bed” featured a happy family of handmade sock monkeys in a playful setting of an old fashioned bedroom. The booth also includes instructions for making the simple toys.

Members of the club that worked on the booth, stitched quilts and created sock monkeys were Nancy Holland, Elizabeth Barlow, Barbara Jones, Carolyn Peterson, Frances Cheney, Becky Dorch, Terri Brown, Dawn Johnson, April Glass, Lucile Whitegon and Millie Brantley.

The next meeting of the Molino Homemakers Club will be Wednesday, November 3 at 10 a.m. at Aldersgate United Methodist Church in Molino. Annual membership dues are just $5, and anyone is welcome to join.

For more photos click here.

Submitted photos by Terri Brown for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Meeting: New I-10 Exit Under Consideration For Beulah

November 2, 2010

A new exit on I-10 at Beulah Road is under consideration, and the public will have the opportunity to offer their input next Tuesday.

A public meeting to discuss the proposed interchange in the vicinity of the overpass where I-10 and Beulah Road intersect has been scheduled for Tuesday, November 9, from 5:30 until 7:00 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall of Beulah Baptist Church, 5805 Beulah Church Road.

The meeting is being held to allow local officials, affected property owners and the public an opportunity to express their views and comments concerning the proposed interchange in an informal environment. The meeting will be hosted by PBS&J, the engineering firm retained by the county for the feasibility study and project design.

For more information, contact Eugene Harris, Escambia County Project Manager, 595-3434, or Greg Allen, PBS&J Project Manager, at 478-9844.

Party Money Is Big; Scott Dumps $73 Million Into Campaign

November 2, 2010

Spurred by a neck-and-neck race that has them smelling the governor’s office, Democrats had their best two-month fundraising period ever, making the electoral money race with the Florida Republican Party mirror the contest between Rick Scott and Alex Sink: pretty much tied.

The Florida Democratic and Republican Parties both raised just under $31.6 million in the two months since the primary election.

It’s hardly a toss-up, however, in terms of what will be spent overall because of Scott’s willingness to dip into his own incredible personal wealth. Scott reported late Friday night that he dumped another $11.6 million into his campaign, bringing the total amount he’s put into the race to an astounding $73 million, boosting the governor’s race to the most expensive ever in the state.

Sink finished the fundraising part of the campaign having raised about $11.2 million in cash and got about $6 million in in-kind contributions, not counting the money spent on her campaign by the party.

As pundits talk of a big year for the GOP and an expected landslide win for Republicans in national congressional race this Tuesday, Democrats in Florida have been encouraged by Sink’s strong showing in polls – she has been ahead slightly in some, trailing slightly in others – while the Florida GOP all year has faced difficulties from a leadership and financial scandal that resulted in the criminal indictment of its former chairman earlier this year.

The Florida Republican Party’s $31.6 million for the general election campaign brings its total contributions for the 2010 election cycle to just about $60 million, according to finance reports filed Friday night. Despite its highly-publicized internal troubles, the RPOF still bested Democrats by more than $10 million during the entire two-year period.

Thanks to the Democrats’ big cash grab during the last two months – besting by $11 million its previous best reporting period, which came during the party’s giddy run-up to the 2008 election of President Barack Obama – the Democrats finish the two year cycle having collected just under $49 million.

Republican Party officials have acknowledged that the bad press over the excessive spending on the watch of indicted former Chairman Jim Greer, and the defection from the party of one of its big fundraising draws, Gov. Charlie Crist, have hurt their money-raising cause this year.
But the party needed less for this gubernatorial election – because of Scott’s $70-plus million from his own pocket. Scott spent more than the Democratic Party on the election.

Still, Republicans had plenty of enthusiastic donors.

Underscoring the importance of which party commands the governor’s office heading into 2012 legislative and congressional redistricting, the Republican Governors’ Association was the single biggest contributor to the state GOP — pumping $6.4 million into Florida between Aug. 20 and midnight Thursday, the state’s fundraising deadline for next week’s election.

The Democratic Governors’ Assocation is also a major contributor to Florida Democrats. The DGA pumped money into Sink’s campaign, and was a major donor to the party through an intermediary, a Tallahassee Democratic PAC called MARK Pac that took in $1 million from the DGA this month and then was one of the largest contributors to the state Democratic Party.

Other big givers to the Republican Party included U.S. Sugar Corp., which gave $1.6 million to the state party, despite Scott’s condemnation of Florida’s $197 million buyout of company land on the edge of the Everglades. U.S. Sugar completed the sale of 27,000 acres to the South Florida Water Management District, which intends to use the land to help restore the Everglades — although Scott has said the purchase was mainly to benefit the company. Scott’s vanquished primary rival, Bill McCollum, supported the deal — which the nominee said made him “bought and paid for” by U.S. Sugar.

Indeed, amid scores of contributions from health-care companies, utilities, Realtors, developers, and pari-mutuel companies, some of the GOP’s biggest donors were those who had fought hard against Scott in the governor’s race primary. Insurer Blue Cross/Blue Shield, gave $475,000 in homestretch cash to the state GOP after siding heavily with McCollum. Automated Healthcare Solutions, a Miramar company headed by a pair of doctors, Paul Zimmerman and Gerald Glass, steered $605,000 to the party after also helping finance some of the primary’s fiercest attacks on McCollum.

The doctors, who played a central role in fighting legislation supported by Sink that would have reduced the cost of prescription drugs in workers’ compensation cases – a measure vetoed by Crist — donated $1 million through companies they lead to political spending committees controlled by incoming legislative leaders Sen. Mike Haridopolos, R-Merritt Island, and Rep. Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park. The money was used to air TV ads during the primary against Scott.

Another organization which flipped its support was the Florida Chamber of Commerce, which had backed McCollum but put $115,000 into the state party through its Florida Jobs Political Action Committee. Scott has made peace with the chamber — and today is scheduled to attend a Winter Park airing of the film “Waiting for Superman,” which the state and national chambers have been promoting as part of a push to revamp the public school system and diminish the strength of teachers unions.

Sink is attending a statewide conference today with the union, the Florida Education Association, where she is expected to echo her resistence to ending teacher tenure, which Scott supports.

And as expected, teachers’ unions have been one of the major bases of support for Sink and the Democrats. The aforementioned MARK Pac that has pumped so much money into the state party counts the National Education Association among its major donors, having received a half million dollars from the NEA just this week.

And the Florida Education Association is among the biggest donors directly to the party, giving about $2.8 million just during the last two months.

Other unions are big names on the Democrats’ list. The party’s big donors also include AFSCME, which represents state and local government workers, the Service Employees International Union Healthcare union, which represents nurses and nursing assistants, including the many front line nursing home workers. Teamsters locals and the Police Benevolent Assocation also made several major donations to the Democratic Party during the period.

But Sink and other Democrats will also benefit from some corporate largesse. One of the major contributors to MARK Pac and a contributor directly to the Democratic Party is Florida Power & Light, the state’s largest electric utility.

As it always is, the list of Democratic donors is also heavily made up of trial lawyers, who are expecting a major fight in the coming year over lawsuit rules. Incoming Republican legislative leaders have made it clear they want to again pursue some of the major tort reform fights of the last decade, particularly in health care.

Both of the state parties spent more than $35 million each this fall, mainly paying for the TV ads and staff for Scott and Sink, as well as pitching in for other candidates.

Lawmakers’ 527 committees also ponied up big, particularly for Republicans. Cannon’s Florida Liberty Fund gave $300,00 to the party this fall; Senate President Jeff Atwater, now the Republican nominee for chief financial officer, gave $438,000 to the party this month from his Preserve the American Dream Committee; and another, the Alliance for a Strong Economy, run by a half-dozen senators, including Haridopolos, gave $310,000.

Other big GOP contributors included the Seminole Tribe, which gave $550,000 to the party which controls the Florida Legislature, which last spring ended a three-year standoff by approving a lucrative gambling compact with the tribe. The tribe also gave at least $75,000 to the Democratic Party.

Joe Anderson, the retired president of paving giant Anderson-Columbia Corp., individually gave $505,000 to the Florida GOP, while the company donated another $125,000.

Management of The Villages, the sprawling Central Florida retirement community that has been ground zero for a handful of Republican Party rallies, including those by Scott and former vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, also has contributed $300,000 to the party this fall, records show.

Some contributions to the state GOP may have been made defensively against the expected tort reform proposals. With Scott already unveiling a proposed legislative package that makes it harder for doctors, car manufacturers and insurers to be sued, the state’s trial lawyer-backed Florida Justice PAC gave $10,000 to Republicans, while major law firms, Tampa-based Wilkes & McHugh, and Orlando-centered Morgan & Morgan each gave $100,000 to the Florida Republican Party.

The Florida Justice PAC, as expected, was also a major donor to the Democratic Party, having given about $150,000 to the party just during the last two months.

The state parties were about even in fundraising during the previous period leading up to the primary as well, with the Republican Party of Florida having raised $7.72 million from April 1 to Aug. 19 and Democrats raising $7.69 million during the same time period.

Candlelight Prayer Vigil Held For Deputy; Benefit Fund Established

November 1, 2010

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office held a Candlelight Prayer Vigil Tuesday for Deputy Jeremy Cassady at Seville Square Park in Pensacola.

Cassady was shot in the line of duty Friday while responding to a home invasion in the 8000 block of Baywind Circle in Pensacola. Cassady is a four-year veteran of the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.

There has also been a benefit fund established to assist the Cassady Family during this difficult time. The “Benefit Account for Jeremy Cassady” is available through Gulf Coast Community Bank, and individuals interested in donating to the Cassady family can visit any of the Gulf Coast Community Bank locations in the area, including:

Nine Mile Branch — 1554 W. Nine Mile Road
Downtown — 40 N. Palafox Street
Cordova Branch — 1177 College Boulevard
Gulf Breeze Branch — 2871 Gulf Breeze Parkway
Pace Branch — 4885 Highway 90

Man Wanted For Texas Body In A Barrel Found Hanged In Escambia County

November 1, 2010

The convicted killer that federal authorities believed was in Escambia County was found hanged in a Pensacola motel room.

The Harris County (Texas) Sheriff’s Office says Dennis Ray Anderson, 64, was found dead in the motel room on Friday. He was wanted for obstruction of an investigation by tampering with evidence of a human corpse and was a suspect in a woman’s murder in Texas.

The U.S. Marshals Florida Regional Fugitive Task Force and Texas authorities believed Anderson fled the Lake Charles, Louisiana area October 24 on a Greyhound bus and was headed to Pensacola due to arrive around 5:30 a.m. last Tuesday morning. Police and Marshals in Houston began their search for Anderson after a Crime Stoppers tip led authorities to find a woman’s body in a barrel at his Houston-area home last Thursday.

Anderson had been sentenced to life in prison for the 1972 slayings of a woman and her 3-year-old granddaughter during an antique shop robbery. In 1973, he was also convicted in Hardin County, Texas of arson, for which he was sentenced to 20 years in prison and a theft, for which he was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Anderson was paroled in 1989 and ordered to remain on parole supervision for life. In February of 2010 Anderson was charged in Harris County with robbery causing bodily injury after he was accused of choking a woman and threatening to kill her.

Work Continues On New Molino Library, Community Center And Museum

November 1, 2010

seeplansclick.jpgWork is continuing toward the renovation of the old Molino School into a community center, library and museum.

The architects, DAG, have completed the programming and schematic design phases. Escambia County Facilities Management is reviewing the 50 percent construction documents.

The drawings show one section of the main building converted into a library with both a children’s and adult area, computers and thousands of linear feet of book shelving. The old auditorium will remain a community auditorium with available seating for 242 people. The rest of the building will include a museum, classrooms and meeting rooms.

In May, 2009, commissioners approved the $400,000 purchase of the building from the Escambia County School District. Commissioners have since approved a budget of $2,089,156 from Local Option Sales Tax monies for the renovation project. DAG Architects is being paid $214,580 to design the renovations.

molinoschooltour99.jpgThe school campus includes 9.66 acres and four buildings — the largest of which is 16,630 square feet.

First opened in 1939, the Molino School closed in 2003 when the new Molino Park Elementary School consolidated Molino Elementary and Barrineau Park Elementary.

Friday Was 4th Time Deputies Have Been Fired On In One Month

November 1, 2010

The shooting of three Escambia County deputies on Friday was one of several incidents in the past few weeks in which deputies have been shot at, including one in North Escambia last week.

September 29 –  Suspect Michael Lee, 21, was shot and killed by deputies at the Motel 6 on Pensacola Boulevard after he opened fire at deputies Jason Ates and Jennifer Lovley Gandy. Ates was hit in the upper thigh.

October 13 — Deputy Stephen Schaff took cover and did not return fire when a woman shot at him from her house on Walters Court. She told the deputy that she would “blow his brains out”. The woman, Alucia Dykes, 62, surrendered.

October 27 — Deputy Bobby Cook was shot at after a domestic violence suspect fled into a wooded area on York Road near Northview High School. Cook was not injured and did not return fire. Marvin Anthony Haynie, 46, was taken into custody on domestic violence charges on October 28 on the Poarch Creek Indian reservation north of Atmore. He has not been charged in connection with the shooting incident.

October 29 — Deputies Jeremy Cassady (pictured), Chad Brown and Sam Parker were shot during a home invasion and hostage situation on Baywind Circle in Pensacola. Brown and Parker were released later that day from the hospital. Cassady continues to fight for his life at Sacred Heart Hospital. Jackie Rosenbloom, 45, was also shot in the incident; she remains hospitalized in fair condition.

Fire Damages Cantonment Home: Neighbor Hears Smoke Alarms

November 1, 2010

Fire heavily damaged a Cantonment home Sunday night.

A neighbor heard the smoke alarms just before 7 p.m. at the home on Isabella Road in Cantonment. When she looked through a bedroom window, she could see flames and called for help.

The first fire units on scene reported flames coming though the roof of the wood frame home. There was no one home at the time of the blaze, and there were no injuries. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

Traffic Delays On North Century Blvd.

November 1, 2010

Drivers can expect possible delays on North Century Boulevard (Highway 29) in Century just south of East Highway 4 as roadway improvements are made for new restaurant.

Crews from Northwest Development, Inc. will remove and replace curb and concrete and reconstruct the entrance to a new Chinese restaurant located across from Whataburger. During the construction phase, drivers can expect intermittent lane restrictions between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily for the next two weeks, according to the Florida Department of Transportation.

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