Spay, Neuter Program For Low Income Pet Owners

February 19, 2009

dog.jpgThroughout the month of February, Concerned Citizens for Animal Welfare, a local animal welfare organization, will pay for half the cost of spay or neuter procedures for eligible low income pet owners during “Spay and Neuter Month” at the Escambia County Animal Shelter.

“We’ve sponsored spay and neuter programs since 1988,” said Dorothy Kaser of Concerned Citizens for Animal Welfare. “It’s very important that we do everything possible to reduce the number of unwanted animals being born.”

“The spay and neuter assistance program is available to qualified citizens year-round, but providing these services at half price during Spay and Neuter Month is a huge benefit, not just to the low income pet owner, but – in the long run – to all residents of Escambia County,” said Animal Shelter Manager Candace Stordahl.

For information on low cost spay and neuter services, call the Escambia County Animal Shelter at 595-3075 or visit the shelter at 200 West Fairfield Drive in Pensacola, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Saturday.

Litter From ECUA Trash Trucks?

February 19, 2009

As more and more North Escambia residents begin to use the  ECUA residential waste and recycling services, we have received more and more complaints here at NorthEscambia.com about trash/litter along the roadways apparently left behind by ECUA trucks.

The big problem, according to Larry Walker, District 5 ECUA board member, is loose bags placed into the recycling containers.

Walker tells us that this past Tuesday he investigated the problem following an ECUA truck on its route from Cedartown Road and through Molino.

“I again observed that debris sometimes blew out, or floated out, of the truck, but only after particular cans had been emptied into the truck,” Walker told NorthEscambia.com. “Most litter from the trucks blew out immediately after certain cans were emptied–sometimes before the truck began to move, even. ”

Plastic bags like those the daily newspaper is delivered in, and the grocery store type of plastic bags were the most common litter coming from the ECUA trucks observed by Walker.

“The moral is, to reduce roadside litter from the garbage trucks, ‘bag your bags’,” Walker said. “Don’t toss individual plastic bags into the garbage can; instead, stuff other bags into one bag and tie it up.  Better yet, put a bottle or some other weightier item into the bag.  The same rule holds true for lightweight paper items.  Tie them up inside a bag or sack before putting them in the can.”

Do you have an issue you would like NorthEscambia.com to address? Email news@northescambia.com with your concern.

NHS Baseball Game Rescheduled

February 19, 2009

This afternoon’s Northview High School baseball varsity baseball game as been moved to Pensacola..

NHS was set to be at home this afternoon against West Florida Tech. But now the game will be played  in Pensacola at West Florida Tech.

King In Town: Expect Traffic Delays; Listen To Speech Live On Radio

February 19, 2009

A king and queen are in Escambia County this morning, and that will cause traffic delays for you if you travel to downtown Pensacola.

King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofia of Spain are in Pensacola to help celebrate the city’s 450th anniversary.  The king will address the public from the baloney of the T.T. Wentworth Museum at 11:45 this morning. He will be joined by Gov. Charlie Crist and Senators Mel Martinez and Bill Nelson.

The king and queen will then head to a luncheon at the Pensacola Naval Air Station.

The king and queen’s visit will, of course, cause traffic delays with road closures and lots of extra traffic in the downtown area.

You can listen to the royal visit on NewsRadio1620  at 1620 AM on online at www.NewsRadio1620.com The live broadcast begins at 11:30 a.m. and concludes when the king departs for the luncheon at the National Naval Aviation Museum.

Three Burglary Suspects Captured After Manhunt

February 19, 2009

burglarysuspects.jpg

Three burglary suspects were captured in a two hour manhunt Wednesday in Davisville after a deputy interrupted a burglary in progress.

The incident began just after 10:00 Wednesday morning when a neighbor called police to report suspicious persons at an unoccupied trailer at 10881 Highway 97. The trailer is located in a secluded wooded area off Highway 97, just south of Greenland Road.

When Deputy Rudy Brown arrived at the trailer, he saw two of the suspects flee into a wooded area behind the mobile home. He called for backup and tracking dogs from the Century Correctional Institute.

One by one, the suspects were tracked down by the prison dogs, according to Escambia County Sheriff’s Department Spokesman Sgt. Ted Roy.

Deputies arrested Joseph Wigginton, 39, of Atmore. He was charged with burglary, criminal mischief, theft and resisting officers without violence. He was being held in the Escambia County Jail Wednesday night. His bond was set at $11,000.

Ronnie B Peavy, 48, of Atmore was charged with  burglary, criminal mischief, theft and resisting officers without violence. His bond was also set at $11,000.

Charles W. Phillips, 56, a Pensacola transient, was charged with burglary, criminal mischief, theft, and resisting officers without violence. His bond was also set at $11,000.

Deputies reportedly discovered a bucket of copper wire near the buglarized mobile home, and they said it appeared the trio had removed more copper from the Davisville mobile home. Roy said no one currently lives in the mobile home.

The first suspect was taken into custody about 11:10 am. behind a mobile home on Greenland Road. The second was arrested about 11:25 a.m., and the third, Peavy, surrendered to an officer on Highway 97 about 12:05 p.m.

Deputies also located a car  belonging Wigginton parked on Highway 97.

Officers from the Escambia County (Fla.) Sheriff’s Department, Escambia County (Ala.) Sheriff’s Department, Atmore Police Department, the Escambia County (Ala.) Drug Task Force and the K-9 officers from the Century Correctional Institute participated in the manhunt.

Pictured above: Burglary suspects arrested after Wednesday manhunt in Davisville: (L-R) Ronnie B. Peavy, Charles W. Phillips and Joseph Wigginton. Submitted photos from the Escambia County Sheriff’s Department.

North Escambia History Began With The Spanish

February 19, 2009

North Escambia can  trace its history back to the Spanish with the first settlers in the area arriving when this area was a Spanish territory.

With the King and Queen of Spain in Escambia County today, we thought we would take a trip back to the early 1800’s when North Escambia was part of the Spanish kingdom.

landgrant1s.jpgThe first recorded settler in Walnut Hill was John Gaylor in or about 1816. Gaylor received a land grant for acreage near Walnut Hill from the Spanish government. North Escambia was part of the Spanish Territory at the time. The land grant was for land located in the vicinity of the present-day Bradberry Park in Walnut Hill. Gaylor was under contract to use the land to raise cattle to be sold to the Spanish in Pensacola.

Many of the first settlers in the Davisville area also lived on land from Spanish Land Grants along Pine Barren Creek, known then as the Paxesco River.

The Spanish Land Grants were land claims filed by settlers in Florida after the transfer of the territory from Spain to the United States in 1821 in order to prove land ownership. Starting in 1790, Spain offered land grants to encourage settlement to the sparsely populated and vulnerable Florida colony. When the United States assumed control of Florida, it agreed to honor any valid land grants.

landgrant2s.jpgResidents had to prove that validity through documentation and testimonials. Those records became the dossiers filed by grantees to the U.S. government. They were either confirmed (found to be valid) or unconfirmed (found invalid) by the US government through land commissions, federal courts, or by the U.S. Congress. Most of the records for West Florida are missing.

King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofia of Spain are in Pensacola today to help celebrate the city’s 450th anniversary.

Pictured: Copies of the Land District West Territory of Florida records from 1826 confirming John Gaylor’s Spanish Land Claim for land in Walnut Hill. Click to enlarge.

Severe Thunderstorm Watch

February 18, 2009

A severe thunderstorm watch has been issued by the National Weather Service for the entire North Escambia area.

The severe thunderstorm watch is in effect until 1:00 a.m. Thursday.

County’s Top Firemen Out; One Had Been Fired In The Past By Sheriff’s Dept.

February 18, 2009

The three men at the top of Escambia County Fire Rescue are out.

Fire Chief Ken Perkins (pictured left) and Assistant Chief Robbie Whitfield were asked to resign to by Escambia County Administrator Bob McLaughlin. Deputy Chief Kurt Isakson is out as Deputy Chief, but will remain with the department as a battalion chief.

McLaughlin said he wants a new administration to finally unify the department, eliminating problems between paid staff and volunteers. The county’s paid firefighters and 15 volunteer departments were all brought together with one unified leadership  back in September. But McLaughlin said the departments three leaders did not have the skills needed to move the unified department forward with paid and volunteer firefighters working together.

“The majority of the career and volunteer personnel are working toward a common goal,” Dan Brask, president of the Escambia County Professional Firefighters Local 4131 union said. “The resignation of Chief Perkins has hindered those efforts by catering to a very vocal minority.”

“It is apparent that your approach to cleaning house to take care of the issues is an easy way out to say the least,” Whitfield said in his resignation letter to McLaughlin. “One would expect more from someone in your position.”

whitfield.jpgWhitfield (pictured left) has recently come under fire from several angles, including from the firefighters union.

“The lack of professionalism, along with the political interferences in the appointment of Robbie Whitfield has created a massive divide and resentment for the future of this department,” the firefighters union said in a statement after Whitfield was announced as the county’s new deputy chief, one day before the application process for the job was officially closed.

Whitfield was fired by the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Department on December 22, 2005, for untruthfulness and misdirecting another officer that was under investigation.

Whitfield was serving as a lieutenant at the time, and he allegedly lied about a relationship with a subordinate deputy, Rebecca Johnson.  Johnson told investigators that Whitfield was the father of her child. Investigators asked Whitfield for a paternity test, but he never provided a DNA sample. Whitfield later appealed the termination, but that appeal was denied by a Santa Rosa County judge in October 2006.

Perkins’ resignation letter was more subdued than that of Whitfield.

“I don’t necessarily agree but understand where a ‘clean house’ solution may seem to be the easiest solution,” he wrote to McLaughlin.

Battalion Chief Jim Sanders has been named as acting county fire chief. The county plans to begin a search for a new fire chief immediately.

Pictured top: Former Escambia Fire Chief Ken Perkins addresses the Walnut Hill Ruritan Club. Pictured middle: Former Assistant Fire Chief Robbie Whitfield addressed the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Two Area Teachers Recognized For National Certification

February 18, 2009

Two North Escambia teachers were among the 23 honored last night by the Escambia County School Board for attaining National Board Certification.

Rebecca Hatch, a fifth grade teacher at Molino Park Elementary, recently received her certification.

Holley Driver, a Century resident and a music teacher at  R.C. Lipscomb Elementary in Pensacola, received her certification as well. She is a former teacher at Molino Elementary and Byrneville Elementary.

The certification shows that Hatch and Driver have mastered high standards from from the  National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. There are only 171 teachers in Escambia County with National Board Certification.

Personnel Changes At North Escambia Schools

February 18, 2009

The Escambia County School Board approved a short list of personnel changes Tuesday night.

The list was much shorter than usual due to a hiring freeze currently in place in the county.

The Escambia County School District issued a hiring and transfer freeze in the county’s schools effective back in January, the first in a series of expected cutbacks in the county’s school system.. That hiring freeze extends all the way to the classroom; open teaching positions will be filled with substitutes.

The hiring freeze includes both school and district office positions. The memo says that all positions which become vacant due to the resignation, retirement, promotion or leave of absence of a permanent employee will remain vacant unless otherwise approved by Superintendent Malcolm Thomas.

Two North Escambia personnel change were approved Tuesday night by the school board:

William Britt was hired as a  teacher Northview High School.

Belinda Perry was  promoted to Admin. School Secretary II at Molino Park Elementary.

Both Britt and Perry’s personnel changes went into effect prior to the implementation of the hiring freeze.

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