Habitat Plans To Build Homes In Molino; Families Are Needed To Move In

July 24, 2008

Pensacola Habitat for Humanity still has plans to build six houses in the Molino area next Spring, and now they are looking for  deserving families ready to move into them.

Janet Westlake, Habitat’s volunteer in charge of church relations, told NorthEscambia.com that as long as a few corporate sponsors work out, Habitat plans to build the homes during  the Spring Break 2009 period.

They will be built by college students in the Pensacola area for spring break. They will work on the houses in the mornings and enjoy the area beaches and attractions in the later afternoons and evenings.

The first house, the “Methodist House”, will be a joint project of Aldersgate, Cottage Hill, Allen Memorial, Lathram Chapel, McDavid and Farm Hill United Methodist churches.

A Habitat home is not a free handout; home recipients must have the ability to repay a small mortgage payment each month. That money goes into the program to build future Habitat homes.

habitatincome.gif

Qualification is based upon three primary criteria: the ability to pay the mortgage, the need for adequate housing and the willingness to partner with “sweat equity” of 300 hours of volunteer time in the construction of their own home or in community service with another community organization. Income guidelines are in the table to the left.

For more information on Pensacola Habitat for Humanity, visit www.pensacolahabitat.org or call 434-5456.

The homes will be located on donated lots on Schaag Road off County Road 95A in Molino.

Pensacola Habitat for Humanity is a non-profit Christian ministry whose purpose is to build homes and improve communities in partnership with low and very low income families in Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties.

Lightning Sparks Davisville House Fire, Minor Damage

July 24, 2008

daviscommfire11.jpg

Lightning was blamed for a fire that damaged a home in Davisville Wednesday afternoon.

The fire was reported about 2:30 at a home in the 9700 block of Highway 97 behind the Davisville Community Church.  At the time, a line of storms was moving through the North Escambia area.

Someone at the home had extinguished the exterior fire with a garden hose by the time the first firefighters arrived on scene. There were no injuries reported.

The Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department, Century Volunteer Fire Department and Molino Volunteer Fire Department responded to the scene.

Pictured above: Fire sparked by lightning damaged the exterior of the home. Pictured below: Fire damaged the outside of this home behind the Davisville Community Church. Pictured bottom: A firefighter removes a ladder from a truck in preparation to check to the attic of the home. NorthEscambia.com exclusive photos, click to enlarge.

daviscommfire10.jpg

daviscommfire13.jpg

Some Area Workers Received A Pay Raise

July 24, 2008

Some of the lowest paid workers in our area got a little raise Thursday.

Many workers in Alabama will got a raise Thursday as the federal hourly minimum wage went from $5.85 to $6.55 per hour. However, the change won’t put more in the pockets of minimum wage workers in Florida.

Florida’s minimum wage is already higher than the federal minimum. Florida’s mininum wage is $6.79 per hour. Florida voters approved a minimum wage admendment in 2004 that requires an annual increase on January 1 to adjust for the annual rate of inflation.

Next year, the federal minimum wage will increase to $7.25 an hour.

Tate Road Closed Until This Afternoon

July 24, 2008

Tate Road will be closed from North Tate School Road to Swift Creek Drive until about 4:00 this afternoon

Students and faculty attending events at Tate High School will need to use the entrances from Highway 29 on Tate School Road or North Tate School Road, according to Sonya Daniel, Escambia County’s public information director.

The road was closed early yesterday for asphalt repairs.

Jay Man Busted For Growing Pot In The Woods

July 23, 2008

godwin30.jpg

A Jay man was arrested for growing marijuana after deputies found him leaving a wooded area in the Brownsdale community southwest of Jay with the tools of the trade in his possession.

godwin10.jpgTharon “Buckshot” Godwin, 66, was was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to sell, manufacture or deliver, a third degree felony.

Santa Rosa deputies were dispatched to a wooded area off a Bud Diamond Road off Chumuckla Highway near Jay after a suspicious vehicle was reported in the area.  When they arrived, they found Godwin walking from the woods. The area was private property, and he did not have permission to be there. He was observed to be carrying water bottles and pruning shears, which is commonly encountered with individuals who grow marijuana, according to the  Santa Rosa Sheriff’s office.

Deputies called K-9 officers from the Century Correctional Institute. Tracking dogs were able to follow Godwin’s scent back into the woods and to 85 marijuana plants, which had all been well maintained and pruned in order to yield a higher quality of marijuana, according to the sheriff’s department report.

A search of Godwin’s truck revealed more water containers, fertilizers, cultivation tools, packaging and collection materials commonly used in the production of marijuana, and human hair clippings, according to the sheriff’s report. Hair clippings are commonly used to repel deer from marijuana and other crops.

Based on all of the facts and circumstances that were observed, Godwin was arrested for Cultivation of Marijuana and transported to the Santa Rosa County Jail. Godwin’s truck was also seized by deputies, according to Sgt. Scott Haines from the Santa Rosa Sheriff’ Department.

Haines said all of the plants were cut and destroyed. Godwin has been released from the Santa Rosa County Jail on a $7,500 bond.

Pictured above: Santa Rosa County deputies cut marijuana plants found in a wood area by dogs from the Century Correctional Institute. Pictured below: Some of the 85 marijuana plants found southeast of Jay prior to them being cut and destroyed.

godwin20.jpg

If You Can Read This Headline, You Should Read This Story

July 23, 2008

Why should you read this story? Because about one in five people in North Escambia are unable to read and comprehend this story, or a story they might try to read in a printed newspaper. And those people need your help.

But Learn to Read of Northwest Florida is working to change that. Right now, there are four people in the North Escambia area that are ready to learn to read, but there are no tutors to teach them.

Learn to Read executives and volunteers meet with community leaders Tuesday in Century to ask for…almost beg for…help in finding tutors.

During the year that Learn to Read has operated a Century office, only six tutors have volunteered. That’s a number that Learn to Read leaders are not happy with.

ltr.jpg“We are committed to the program and to making it work,” Tom Allen (pictured left), president of Learn to Read, said. “We desperately, desperately need volunteers, especially volunteers that are willing to tutor.”

Allen cited statistics that about one in five Escambia residents are either unable to read at all, or they read at a low, non-functioning level.

“These people can’t function in society,” he said.

Learn to Read volunteer tutors typically meet with their students one on one for about an hour and a half two times per week, according to tutor trainer Georgia Brazzell. Complete training and materials are provided at no charge.

ltr20.jpgEdna Earle Barnes (pictured left), the Century coordinator for Learn to Read, said she would like to have found more than six tutors out of two workshops held in Century. “But it is six more than we had when we started,” she said.

Volunteer tutors must be 18 years old and have a high school diploma. A degree or teaching experience is not needed.

An orientation session for potential tutors will be held on Thursday, August 14 from 10:00 until 11:30 a.m. at the old Century hospital. The next tutoring workshop in Century will be held on Saturday, August 23. Registration is required. To register, call 256-0880 or 473-4347.

Tutors and students do not have to reside in Century or Escambia County, Florida. Everyone is welcome.

Where Are The Century Town Limits? The Town Does Not Know

July 22, 2008

centurymap10.jpgWhere exactly is the Town of Century? The town council has determined that it does not exactly know, and they may eventually turn to an engineering firm to find out.

The town limit discussion at Monday night’s meeting of the town council started over a trash can. The council voted to forgive a past due garbage bill for a resident on Pleasant Hill Road who has not had a can for years but has run up a $446 garbage bill. The council also voted to require the resident to pay a garbage bill from now forward.

“If we are going to exempt him from this point on,” Mayor Freddie McCall said, “are we going to be able to do this for the rest of the citizens?”

“If you are live in the city limits, you have to have garbage,” council member Nadine McCaw said. “The only thing to do is deliver him a can.”

“When did I get in the city limits?” the man asked. “I’ve been on that hill for 36 years.”

“Your dad voted for years,” McCall said of the father that had lived in the home. Only residents in the town limits can vote in Century elections.

Several residents said that the east side of Pleasant Hill Road is in the town and the west side is not. And that is exactly what several popular internet mapping services indicate, including Google Maps. But those maps are not legal.

When asked exactly where the town limits are, the mayor said the town really did not have an accurate map.

“I’ve got no earthly idea,” McCall said of exactly where the town limits lie.

The council voted 5-0 to have the mayor attempt to find an accurate survey or map depicting the town limits. If he is unable to locate one, the town may end up paying an engineering firm for a survey.

Pictured above: A 1990 map from Century’s Comprehensive Plan. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

A Rocky Road: Dump Truck Overturns, Blocks Hwy. 31 Near Flomaton

July 22, 2008

fannie11.jpg
Morning traffic came to a standstill on Highway 31 east of Flomaton Tuesday  after a dump truck full of small rocks overturned.

The accident happened a little after 7:00 at the intersection of Highway 31 and Fannie Road, about a mile and a half outside Flomaton. The driver of the truck and a passenger were injured and transported by ambulance to D.W. McMillan Hospital in Brewton. LifeFlight was originally called to the scene, but was unable to respond due to poor visibility.

Preliminary reports indicate that the truck overturned when the driver entered a curve too fast, causing the load to shift.

fannie19.jpgWhen the dump truck overturned, its load was spilled across Highway 31. The resulting pile of gravel took heavy equipment and about an hour to cleanup.

The Flomaton Fire Department, the Century Volunteer Fire Department, the Flomaton Police Department, the Escambia County (AL) Sheriff’s Department and others reponded to the accident.

The accident is under investigation by the Alabama State Troopers.

Photos and information by Alisa Hart for NorthEscambia.com

For more photos from the scene, click here.

Town Council Votes To Post Public Notices On NorthEscambia.com

July 22, 2008

The Century Town Council voted Monday night to post all future town public notices on NorthEscambia.com.

Currently, the town’s public notices are posted on the door of the town hall, at the Century Post Office, at the library and at the Piggly Wiggly.

“The best place I know to post public notices would be NorthEscambia.com,” council member Ann Brooks said. “NorthEscambia.com has quite a readership right now.”

The council unanimously approved posting all future public notices on NorthEscambia.com in addition to the paper notices posted on bulletin boards around town and the door of town hall.

NorthEscambia.com will be posting the public notices at no charge to the Town of Century.

Council Talks Backwoods Water Again; Denies Funding For Trip

July 22, 2008

Improved water service for Backwoods Road was once again a topic of discussion for the Century Town Council at their Monday night meeting.

The council recently voted to include Backwoods Road in a $1.7 million project to be funded with a USDA Rural Development loan.

The fee for the town’s engineer company Fabre Engineering was not included in the original loan amount, according to Dale Long from Fabre. Engineering design and permitting fees associated with Backwoods Road will be $26,588, he said. The council approved payment in that amount.

Long said additional cost will be incurred if Fabre must work to obtain right of way easements along the road. Obtaining the right of way has delayed any water improvements along Backwoods Road for years.

But Long said he recently was told that the right of way easement may already exist without the need to obtain additional easements.

“I’d like to think that at the end of the day we’d have enought right of way,” he said.

“There just seems to be a hangup between the county and the city,” Backwoods Road resident Elbert Dixon told the council. While Backwoods Road is served by the Town of Century water system, it is actually not in the city but in the county.

“We as a neighborhood out there are tired of being bounced around,” Dixon said. “It’s time to do something. We are fed up with it. It is time to do something.”

In other business, the council refused to accept their meeting minutes from a council meeting and Community Development Block Grant public hearing on July 7.

“I found so many errors that I’m not willing to vote on this tonight,” council member Ann Brooks said. “I don’t feel like I need to be the proofreader.”

  • The council voted to deny fund for Brooks to attend a league of cities training session in October. Brooks requested that the funding be denied, by the league actually offers a scholarship for city officials denied funding.
  • The council decided to approve a bill list twice per month rather than just once per month.
  • The council was informed by Mayor Freddie McCall that he did not have any new information about the status of Helicopter Technologies in the Century Industrial Park.

The council’s next meeting will be August 4 at 7:00 p.m.

« Previous PageNext Page »