Sorry, Out Of Gas

September 16, 2008

nogas.jpgIt could be a week or more before gas supplies are replenished at some service stations in Florida.

Hurricane Ike led to rumors of shortages and of price spikes, causing many people to fill up extra containers with gas. The fuel supply at many Pensacola area stations quickly ran out over the weekend. The  Florida Petroleum Marketers & Convenience Store Association says a near record amount of gas was sold between Thursday night and Saturday morning in the state, about triple the normal volume. 

The association says the state has plenty of gas, but there is going to be some delay between getting it from the terminals where it is located to the gas stations.

Gas station after gas station in Pensacola had empty price signs and bags over pump handles. At the Tom Thumb on Airport Boulevard in Pensacola, only regular unleaded was available at $3.63 a gallon. At a Tom Thumb on Nine Mile Road, only diesel was available Saturday night; the station was out of all grades of gas. There was a similar across Pensacola Saturday night.

A quick check of stations across the immediate North Escambia area found showed that stations had most or all grades available. But the out of gas situation persisted Monday at many Pensacola stations.

“I’m buying gas up here because the stations I stopped at down there (in Pensacola) didn’t have regular,” one traveler from Georgia said while filling up in Century early Monday evening.

Florida Agriculture and Consumer Services Commissioner Charles H. Bronson announced Monday that he is issuing subpoenas for financial information from 16 major oil terminals in Florida in connection with an ongoing investigation of gasoline price spikes associated with Hurricane Ike.

The subpoenas are scheduled to be hand delivered to the terminals on Tuesday, and they are seeking records to determine whether any of them illegally increased the wholesale prices that were passed on to retail gas stations and ultimately their customers. The subpoenas call for the records to be provided to Bronson’s office in seven days.

“It’s critical that we go to the source,” Bronson said. “A number of gas stations are claiming that they are only passing on increases that they have had to pay, so it is vital to examine where these price increases originated.”

Under state law, it is unlawful to charge excessive prices for essential items, including gasoline, water, ice, lumber, batteries and shelter, following the declaration of a state emergency unless the increases in the amount charged are attributable to additional costs incurred by those supplying the items.

Individuals or businesses found to have engaged in price gouging face fines up to $1,000 per violation, or up to a maximum fine of $25,000 a day.

Meanwhile, more than 2,300 price-gouging calls were received by Bronson’s office during the last the days, and the volume of calls remains heavy.

Century Discusses Code Enforcement With County

September 16, 2008


The Century Town Council is looking at options for bringing code enforcement back to the town, and Monday they sat down with the county’s top code enforcement official to discuss options.

“We enforce everything on our books equally and fairly,” Sandra Slay, Escambia County’s code enforcement manager, told the council at a workshop meeting.

“The best way to keep yourself out of a lawsuit is to follow the rules, not bend or break the rules,” she said

Typically, the code enforcement process begins with a code officer writing a “notice of violation” with some period of time from five to 30 days for the violator to work toward correcting the problem. If the alleged violator complies with the notice, or makes the effort to comply, the county’s code enforcement department  will usually work with them to solve the issue.

“The only time we write a citation is say when we give a notice you have two weeks to cut your grass, and you haven’t hit a lick,” Slay said, “You get a citation.”

“They are going to give you the time that is reasonable. They will work with you,” she said. For instance, a person that will need to hire a contractor to repair a cited building might not be able to get a contractor to start the job for several weeks.

Previously, Century ended an agreement with Escambia County to provide code enforcement in the town. Under that agreement, the county’s code enforcement officers worked Century and wrote citations that were turned over to the town for abatement. The services were provided by the county at no charge to Century.

The arrangement came under fire, with allegations that the county’s officers provided selective enforcement, citing some people but no others. That prompted the council to sever the relationship with Escambia Code Enforcement. Now, there is no code enforcement at all in the town.

But now, council members are ready to look at returning code enforcement to the town. The council has considered another agreement with Escambia County providing code enforcement, and they have also discussed the possibility of hiring their own code enforcement officer.

If Escambia County provides Century’s code enforcement, Slay said she would expect her officers to be able to fairly do their jobs in the town.

“I’m not bending the law for anybody,” she said. “We are going to enforce what is on the books.”

In the county’s current system, a ticketed violator can appeal to a special magistrate that will hear their case. It is a judicial process, with the magistrate having the legal authority to impose fees and fines, and place liens on properties when fines are not paid.

“It is not our intention to take your property,” Slay told the council and about a dozen citizens at the meeting. “But if you fail to take care of it, they could foreclose on it.” The foreclosure process, she said, does not ever happen on property with a homestead exemption.

If a citizen does not abate, or take care of, the problem for which they were cited,  they get to visit the special magistrate. The special magistrate, if the person is found guilty, can impose fines of $1 to $250 a day until a problem is corrected. A $1,100 court cost fee is also accessed to guilty parties. If unpaid, a lien for the amount of the fine and costs is placed on ever piece of property owned by the accused. Those liens stay active for 20 years, and carry 6.8 percent interest rate on unpaid balances.

If a person is physically or financially unable to correct the problem on their property, several community groups often step into help, Slay said.

Century Mayor Freddie McCall said that if a citizen of Century was about to face the magistrate, he wanted the town notified. That way, he said, the town could attempt to find a community group or church to help a person in need rectify their code violation.

“It take a community effort to get this area cleaned up,” Slay said. “It kills me see some of the things in this town.”

Slay said if the town only wanted her department’s county code enforcement officers to make the initial contact while the town served as its own magistrate board, she was not interested.

“If all you want is for us to go out there and write violations, then no,” she said. “If all you are wanting to do is get someone to just do your inspections, then we are not coming up here.”

The council recently discussed the council members acting as the appeals board for code violations in the own, but Slay said that would violate Florida law. “You cannot legally sit as that board,” she said.

“I don’t think we want to do that anyway,” McCall said. “That would be too political.”

Council President Ann Brooks said, “I don’t think we have any more money to spend”. If the council creates their own code enforcement division  and hires an officer, they will be looking at tens of thousands of dollars in expenses. If the county provides code enforcement for the town, the town’s cost will be zero.

The council voted to table any action on code enforcement until after a public meeting. That public meeting will be held at 6:00 p.m. on Monday, September 29, at the Ag Building on Highway 4.

Pictured above: An abandoned building on North Century Boulevard in the southern part of Century. Building such as these could become the target of code enforcement in Century. Pictured below: A dilapidated home on Freedom Road in Century. NorthEscambia.com photos.

Grenade Victims Identified; Photos Released

September 16, 2008

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(Updated) Officials have released the names of three people injured in a grenade explosion Sunday afternoon in Jay, along with photos of a second grenade found later.

Shortly after 4:00 Sunday afternoon, Santa Rosa deputies were dispatched to the 3800 block of Nowling Road just south of Jay for three males injured when a car battery exploded.

When the Jay Fire Department and deputies arrived, they found that three had be injured by a hand grenade that exploded.

One victim, Johnny Bruce Pyles 29, was transported by Life Flight to Sacred Heart Hospital with severe injuries and trauma to his body and hands. Pyles was holding the grenade in his hand when it detonated. The two other victims, James E. Grice, 37, and Zachary Talbot, 26, were transported to Jay Hospital with serous injuries suffered from the shrapnel from the grenade. They were later transported to other hospitals having the resources to care for trauma type injuries. All three men are from the Jay area.

grenade10.jpgInitial investigations reveal that the subjects were standing outside around the bed of a pickup truck (pictured left) when they were handling the grenade. When it exploded, the shrapnel pierced numerous parts of the pickup truck, leaving fragments from the grenade in the surrounding vicinity. The fuse, pin, and various fragments of the grenade were recovered at the scene, according Sgt. Scott Haines, spokesperson for the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’ Department.

In addition to sheriff’s office investigators and crime scene, ATF and the State Fire Marshal’s Office also responded and are participating in this joint investigation. Investigators searched the premises for other possible devices and none were located.

Investigators went to the residence of one of the other victims, which is also located in Jay, and located a second hand grenade and the ATF took it into their custody. Investigators are in the process of determining where the devices were obtained and what the victims were doing with the grenades.

The investigation into the incident is continuing.

Pictured above: A grenade found Sunday in Jay. Pictured below: An ATF agent hold the pin from a grenade. Pictured bottom: Shrapnel from the explosion hit the toolbox on the truck. Submitted photos.

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Century Imposes Fee For After-Hours Utility Reconnects

September 16, 2008

If you are a Town of Century Utilities customers and get cutoff for non-payment, it’s going to cost you more if you want your water or gas turned back out outside business hours.

Mayor Freddie McCall told the council Monday night that the town pays a minimum of two hours to a water or gas employee to turn service back on after-hours. At $18 an hour for the town’s highest paid employee that might make the after-hours call, that’s $36 the town spends to turn a person’s water back on. Add in an additional employee certified to turn the gas back on for a customer, and it’s another $36 cost to the town.

The town has a $20 reconnect fee in place for customers that are disconnected. Now, disconnected customers will be given the option of paying an additional $36 per gas or water reconnect, up to $72 total, to have their service restored after-hours or on the weekend. The customer can choose, McCall said, to wait until the next business day to have their service restored without paying the extra $36 or $72 fee.

“We have some customers that do this every month,” Town Clerk Dorothy Sims said. “They come in 10 minutes before we close.”

The utility office in Century currently closes at 3:30, and utility system employees get off at the same time. If a disconnected customer requests that their service be restored before the water or gas employees go home, that might be able to avoid the additional fees since the employee will not be called out for an after-hours reconnect.

The additional after-hours reconnect fees will not apply if the town made any error in disconnected someone’s service, McCall said.

Public Defender Candidate Speaks In North Escambia

September 16, 2008

tonyhenderson.jpgTony Henderson, Democratic candidate for public defender in the First Judicial Circuit, brought his message to North Escambia Monday night.

The First Judicial Circuit Court of Florida’s public defender office covers Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa and Walton counties.

Henderson has ran the public defender’s office in Santa Rosa County for the past seven years,  The public defender’s office is responsible for providing legal representation to those in the court system charged with crimes that are unable to afford their own attorney.

“I believe that equal representation for everyone,” Henderson said. “It should not be based on how much money you have to hire an attorney.”

Not everyone assigned an attorney by the public defender’s office is unemployed, Henderson said. Attorneys are often assigned to defendents from middle class families that are unable to afford $3,000 to $10,000 for a criminal defense attorney.

Henderson played championship football at Milton High School and later turned his football abilities into a scholarship at Marshall University. He then attended law school at Florida State. His first job out of college was in the public defender’s office where he worked for 15 years.

“I have a passion for this type of work,” he said. One part of the job he feels is important is simply doing his job to make sure that the innocent do not go to prison.

Henderson said crime in our area is not a black-white issue.

“We have to fight the battle together,” he said. “The battle is education, education, education.”

Grenade Explosion Injuries Three In Jay Sunday

September 15, 2008

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(Updated 9:00 a.m.)Three men in Jay were injured Sunday afternoon in what authorities say was a grenade explosion.

The incident happened about 4:00 Sunday afternoon on Nowling Road in just south of Jay.

Authorities say three men took the grenade out of a pickup truck toobox.  Johnny Bruce Pyles, 29, pulled the pin, causing it to explode in his hands.  James E. Grice, 37, and Zachary Talbot, 26, were standing nearby and were also injured in the explosion.

Pyles was transported to Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola by LifeFlight with serious injuries.  Grice and Talbot were taken by ambulance to Jay Hospital and later tranferred to another hospital.

The Jay Volunteer Fire Department, the Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Department, the state ATF, the state Fire Marshal and military officials all responded to the scene.

It was not immediately known where the men obtained the grenade or why they would have moved it and pulled the pin.

Trial Delayed Yet Again For Molino Man Accused Of Killing His Daughter

September 15, 2008

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The  trial of a Molino man accused of killing his infant daughter in 2006 has been delayed yet another time.

A continuance was granted back on July 28 until September 15, but now the trail has been delayed another week until September 22.

Christopher Paterson, 28, was scheduled to stand trail July 14 for the death of his one year old daughter Ali Jean Paterson. But Assistant Public Defender Fred Carmody requested that the trial be postponed so an expert witness could prepare for the trial. The continuance request was granted by Circuit Judge Michael Allen until July 28.

Paterson’s trial was first  been set to begin on May 12, but was postponed after the defense announced a new witness in the case.

The girl died on November 26, 2006, from burns she received two weeks earlier when she was left unattended in a hot bath, according to authorities. Paterson told deputies he placed the child in shower that just felt warm and went to another room to get a towel. He said that when he returned, Ali was screaming, and there was steam rising from the shower. He then called 911 after noticing red sores on the child.

Ali survived at Children’s Hospital in Birmingham for two weeks before she died.

This was not Paterson’s first involvement with authorities over Ali. The Department of Children and Families investigated a broken leg she suffered in May 2006. Paterson and Brittany Knapp, Ali’s mother, took Ali to the hospital with a broken leg. They said her leg was broken when it became trapped in a slot in her crib. DCF did not find that the incident was abuse at that time.

Paterson was indicted by a grand jury on second degree manslaughter charges in February of 2007. He was arrested on May 1, 2007, near Gainesville. He has remained in jail since his arrest.

The latest delay in the trail stemmed from a defense motion to allow expert witnesses to exam the hot water system at the home were Ali suffered her fatal injuries. A hearing on that motion is scheduled for this afternoon.

Northview Downs Chipley 20-7; Photo Gallery

September 15, 2008

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The Northview Chiefs downed Chipley 20-7 Friday night on the road.

The Tigers were first on the board with 6:20 in the first quarter. Jacques Givens hit the end zone from one yard out. The kick was good, 7-0, Chipley.

The Chiefs made a 77 yard drive in the second quarter to even the score. Quarterback Jay Jackson finished the nine-play drive with 13-yard TD run. The kick was good.

The Chiefs and the Tigers were tied 7-7 at the half. The Tigers were unable to score again the the second half, but Northview put another 13 on the board in the second.

Jackson picked up another touchdown run, this one at 13-yards, early in the fourth quarter to end a 14-play drive for the Chiefs.

Junior Shakel Holmes picked up a huge interception in the fourth quarter, putting Northview on the Chipley 32. After two more plays, Jackson was in the endzone for the third time with 9:02 to go in the game.

QB Jackson, a senior, had 26 carries on the night for 122 yards. He had three touchdowns against the Tigers, racking up 208 of the Chief’s 372 offensive yards.

For the Chief defense, sophomore Cole Gandy had 10 tackles.

Northview Head Coach Cody Keene said victory over the Chipley Tigers was one of the biggest wins of his career. Northview had never beaten Chipley since Keene has been the Chief’s head coach.

The Chiefs (1-1) will be at home next Friday night against Walton County. Northview’s first district game will be the following week on the road against Holmes County.

For a photo gallery from the game, click here.

Pictured above:  Montaio Mitchell with the ball for Northview. Pictured below:  Northview’s big win Friday night against Chipley. Heather Leonard photos for NorthEscambia.com.

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Gulf Power Crews Head To Texas To Help After Ike

September 15, 2008

Gulf Power storm restoration teams have been dispatched to assist another utility for the second time this year, this time to help restore power near Galveston, Texas.

Sunday morning, a 20-truck caravan carrying 51 Gulf Power employees departed for the Lone Star state to assist crews from the Texas New Mexico Power Company as they restore outages caused by Hurricane Ike.

Because Gulf Power has finely-honed and experienced storm restoration teams, the company is called upon regularly to help other areas of the Southeast restore electric service after major storms.

“Our crews are recognized as some of the best in the industry,” said John Hutchinson, Corporate Services general manager, “They have a reputation for safe, fast, high quality work, so they get called on often.”

Of the 51 Gulf Power employees, 12 are from the Panama City are, 16 are from the Fort Walton Beach area and the other 23 are from Pensacola. They expect to be on assignment as long as they’re needed.

“Having a lot of help makes a big difference in how fast you can get the power back on,” Hutchinson said. “Companies from around the country have been there for us after previous storms, and we believe it’s the right thing to do.”

Flomaton Hurricanes Beat Southern Choctaw, 50-27

September 15, 2008

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The Flomaton Hurricanes came from behind Friday night to take a huge victory against Southern Choctaw.

The Canes (3-0) were trailing 13-8 with about six minutes to go in the half. The Hurricanes then took over and stormed ahead with three touchdowns in the last five minutes of the first half. The score was 28-13 at the half.

Southern Choctaw picked up the last TD on the night with just less than 12 seconds on the clock. The Southern Choctaw Indians made the two point conversion, making the final 50-27.

Flomaton had 262 yards on the night; the Indians had 240 yards.

Tony Ellis had five touchdowns for the Canes against Southern Choctaw.

Flomaton is now 2-0 in regional play. The Hurricanes will travel to Leroy next Friday night to take on the Leroy Bears.

For more photos from the game, click here.

For even more photos, visit www.mikenewtonphotography.zenfolio.com.

Pictured above: The Flomaton Hurricanes beat Southern Choctaw Friday night. Submitted photo by Mike Newton Photography for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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