Time To Register For 5K Race For The Blueberries
May 10, 2009
The Blueberry Jamboree 5K Race for the Blueberries will take place on Saturday, June 13 in Barrineau Park.
The race begins at 8 a.m. at the Barrineau Park Community Center & Historical Society at 6055 Barrineau Park School Road and ends at Touchablue Berry Farm at 7100 Molino Road.
Wheelchairs will start just before 8 a.m. and walkers will start just after 8:00. Transportation will be provided for participants back to the starting point.
Pre-Registration is available by filling out and turning in the 5K Race for the Blueberries entry form. Registrations must be postmarked by Friday June 5. Registration will also be available on the day of the race, from 6:30-7:30am.
The event is hosted by Escambia County Neighborhoods and Community Services Bureau and UF/IFAS Extension. The Blueberry Jamboree is sponsored in part by NorthEscambia.com.
Cow/Calf Best Management Practices Program Kickoff Dinner
May 10, 2009
The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, in cooperation with the Florida Cattlemen’s Association, and the University of Florida-IFAS, have scheduled a kickoff video conference to formally introduce the recently adopted Cow/Calf Best Management Practices (BMP) manual on May 14. This will be the official launch of the industry’s BMP program.
The meeting will provide producers with key information on the use of the manual, enrollment process, soil testing, and forage production as it relates to water quality protection. This is a very important program, given the vast number of acres of rangeland in Florida. Producers are encouraged to make every effort to attend.
The seminar will be held from 5:30 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. at the Jay Community Center, 5259 Booker Lane in Jay. This meeting will held in conjunction with the Northwest Florida Cattlemen’s Association meeting. Dinner will be served to those who call to reserve a place for the meeting. To RSVP, call (850) 475-5230 or (850) 675-3107.
Retired North Escambia Educator Releases Second Book
May 10, 2009
Former North Escambia educator Mary Alice Thomas has released her second publication, a new collection of poetry called “A Forgotten People”. It follows last year’s release of “Battle of the Soul”, a collection of religious poetry.
“It’s not hard to find inspiration and a need to write when working with young minds,” Thomas claims. “As an educator I found that my students always wanted more than they found in the textbooks. Realizing that they were gifts from God placed in my care for only a short time, I wanted to feed their hunger for knowledge. I took the responsibility to give to them the best of what I had. My students wanted fresh material for programs and celebrations. It took hours of research; yet, those inquisitive minds and searching eyes, with ears willing to listen and learn made me write poems and speeches from biographical historical facts of a forgotten people, a real people to them, so that they could have a stepping stone for history as these students tried to connect. Little did I know that one day this would become a publication that I felt was worthy of sharing.”
Thomas, who has taught at Northview High School, the former Ernest Ward and Century schools and Carver/Century K-8 School, said “I ask that you share with your classmates from my heart to yours: You are not a forgotten people, for you are still an inspiration to me even though time has had its own will and has gotten away from us, and changes for all of us have crept through the earth as the sun awakens each day. Yet, as I meet you on the byways of life, my heart leaps. You are still that part of me that makes life worth living. You inspired me to write this book. It’s for all of us.”
According to Thomas, this publication has been designed to reach back into the subconscious mind to restore the value for all humanity.
“I have chosen people from all walks of life because it has taken Jews, Blacks, Whites, Native Americans, and all other races and experiences to give this country such a rich history. As I began my research for this publication, I ultimately hearkened to the voice within. I began to drink from knowledge that could only come from the intoxication of wisdom,” she said.
Each piece of material included in this selection carries aphorisms giving a general truth about life. The theme of these works is love for humanity and pain for injustice. In Thomas’ book, “A Forgotten People”, the reader will meet those who opened their ears to the cries of the innocent, like a mother identifying the hunger pains of her young when awakened in the night and refusing to let sleep handcuff her to her bed.
Too often the Civil Rights Movement produces a picture of the African American struggle, where the streets are painted in red with blood of color, and police dogs are forcing black power to its knees while listening to the voice of racism seeking a prey in the night; however, my students of the past and I worked hard to prove that the Civil Rights Movement embraced unity for all American life — regardless of race, creed or color. “Perhaps the greatest indication of this acknowledgment of worth in all humanity is the recent presidential election, realizing that my students had a vision built on Christian love that sprung up from a seed that would not die,” Thomas said.
In the book “A Forgotten People”, the reader will meet some who paid the ultimate price, yet we all enjoy the gift that their lives granted to American citizens. Blood, when mixed with sweat and tears and mingled with God-given love, cannot be called black or white, yellow or red. Yet, society fails to realize that a child who hears God’s voice will answer His call, totally oblivious to color. “By this shall all men know that you are my disciples because you have love one for another.”
“A Forgotten People” is available for purchase through iuniverse.com by clicking on “Bookstore,” and then typing in the author’s name or book title. It will also be available at a book signing which will be held at Carver Century School in the Media Center on Tuesday, May 12 at 1 p.m. A supplemental question and answer booklet is additionally available for educators by contacting the author at hannahraya@yahoo.com.
Good Deal: Northview Band, Ernest Ward Hold Yard Sales
May 10, 2009
Groups from two area schools held yard sales Saturday morning to raise funds for their programs. Ernest Ward Middle School held their “Super Yard Sale” at the school (above). The Northview High School Band Boosters held a yard sale (below) at the VFW in Atmore.
For more photos from the two yard sales, click here.
NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Blog: Every Knee Shall Bow
May 10, 2009
The ACLU is asking a federal court to find a Santa Rosa County School District employee in contempt for offering a prayer at a school function.
At the time administrative assistant Michelle Winkler prayed at the February 20 Employee of the Year Banquet, a federal injunction was in place ordering school employees to refrain from praying at school functions. That injunction was upheld Friday by federal judge Casey Rogers, implementing a five year ban on prayer and religion in Santa Rosa Schools. Read that story here.
Escambia County has taken note, ordering schools not to take part in events such as Baccalaureate that are religious or Christian in nature. For the first time in 13 years, there will be no school-sponsored Baccalaureate program for Northview’s graduating seniors.
Winkler was instructed by District Administrator Jud Crane to offer a two to three minute “thought for the day” that was to not include a prayer. In an email exchange, Crane assumed that Winkler would withdraw from speaking if she could not offer prayer.
“I’m still on, and be unfearful of the current events, with your ‘off the record’ permission, I would like to use the prayer that I had prayed about and received from God and will suffer whatever consequences for,” Winkler wrote in an email. “I cannot be silent as God is my very life and Christ is who I am.”
“I simply cannot compromise my LORD. Like Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah,” she wrote in another email, “I simply won’t bow down to another god.”
In our land of “free speech”, Casey Rogers’ federal order issued Friday prohibits school employees from communicating with a deity, including prayer and reading from sermons or sacred texts. Our nation and so much of world history is based upon the Bible, the mostly widely published book in the history of the world. Presidents and kings have prayed, and many of those prayers are an integral part of history. Prayer is a part of America. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said it well — ” To be a Christian without prayer is no more possible than to be alive without breathing.”
But under Rogers’ order, the Bible is not a historical or scientific text acceptable in Santa Rosa Schools. The Bible, under the order, is in the same class as a comic book.
Teachers will not be allowed to display crosses, drawings of Jesus or other items depicting their faith in their classrooms. Teachers are not allowed to pray at school events. Pastors and clergy are not allowed to pray at school events. Not even bless the food.
“School officials shall prohibit the person making the address from offering a prayer,” the order says of persons speaking at school events. That is freedom of speech?
The order does allow students to lead prayer in certain circumstances. But a teacher cannot participate in the prayer. School employees are forbidden from folding their hands, bowing their heads or kneeling. That is freedom of speech?
Teachers with web pages are forbidden from acknowledging their religious beliefs on their web pages. School student clubs cannot have a chaplain. From the FFA to the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, there’s no chaplain permitted. That’s freedom of speech?
Escambia School officials will be forced, perhaps eventually by a court order, to follow the same rules. Our teachers are at the forefront of the battle, and they need the prayer that the ACLU seeks to prohibit. We are one nation under God. We will stand and pray for our teachers and students. Our students have many rights under the court order to lead prayer, and we will see the Lord do mighty works through them.
The ACLU has a court order. Christians have the almighty power of the Word.
I ask that you share this article with your friends, your neighbors and your churches. Pray for teachers and school employees like Michelle Winkler that they stand strong.
Here are the words that Michelle Winkler spoke at a school employee awards ceremony that have the ACLU seeking the federal contempt order:
“I love the way You have created each of with a purpose which includes the need to serve one another in ways that bring encouragement and inspire each of us to help one another to excel.
Tonight we celebrate some of those who are an inspiration to us and in whose deeds we have been blessed.
There is a Tree (Christ), on which grows the fruits of life: love joy and peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness and self-control.
May we each eat freely from that tree and thereby extend that same grace and mercy to one another as You have faithfully committed Yourself of lavish on us.
Thank You, Father God- in Jesus’ holy and precious name – Amen.
To our teachers and school staff — it takes courage to stand. But keep standing strong. Peter 3:14-15 says: “But even if you should suffer for the sake of righteousness, you are blessed. And do not fear their intimidation, and do not be troubled, but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence.”
And there is a final argument on this issue that all, the ACLU included, should remember.
“For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.” Romans 14:11.
Letter Carrier Food Drive Today, Help The Hungry
May 9, 2009
Last year, North Escambia area residents contributed over 20,000 pounds of food at their mailboxes for the Stamp Out Hunger food drive, and today is the time to do it again.
Mail carriers will be collecting food tomorrow at mailboxes across North Escambia and across the nation for the 17th annual Stamp Out Hunger food drive.
Residents can participate in the annual event by leaving a bag of nonperishable food by their mailboxes for their mail carrier to collect.
NALC Food Drive is a national food drive sponsored by the Letter Carrier’s Union and conducted annually all over the country on the same day. The local NALC drive benefits ACTS Ministries, Bay Area Food Bank, Manna Food Pantries, St. Vincent de Paul, Warrington Emergency Aid and We Care Ministry. For Manna, it is the largest food drive of the year and comprises almost 30 percent of annual food donations.
Here’s a breakdown of the food collected last year along the routes at each North Escambia area post office:
- Cantonment: 14,098 pounds
- Century: 1,906 pounds
- Jay: 1,998 pounds
- McDavid: 2,000 pounds
- Molino: 608 pounds
Pictured above: Food awaits collection in the Stamp Out Hunger food drive last year on Wiggins Lake Road in Walnut Hill. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.
Yard Sales Today To Benefit NHS Band, Ernest Ward Middle School
May 9, 2009
Two big Saturday yard sales will benefit area schools.
Ernest Ward Middle School is holding a Super Yard Sale at the school today until 2 p.m. There will also be a silent auction for half hog cut and wrapped. Click here for more info on the silent auction.
The Northview High School Band Booster Yard Sale is going on today at the VFW on Ashley Street in Atmore. Directions: Heading north on Main Street, turn left on Ridgeley Street (one block north of the railroad tracks). Turn right at the stop sign, go one block and look for the building with the flag.
Pictured: The Super Yard Sale this morning at Ernest Ward Middle School lives up to its name in size. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Federal Judges Orders Prayer, Religion Out Of Schools
May 9, 2009
A federal judge has upheld an order that keeps prayer and educator led religious activities out of the Santa Rosa County Schools. The order even dictates that school employees are not allowed to pray at school events.
U.S. District Court Judge Casey Rodgers signed the federal order Friday requiring school officials in Santa Rosa County to stop promoting their personal religious beliefs in public schools.
The order prohibits, among other things, any prayer in schools, “reading from a sacred text”, “calling upon a deity to offer guidance, assistance or a blessing” and religious services such as baccalaureate services. There are circumstances were student-led prayers are permissible, but school employees are prohibited to participate in the prayer, even prohibited from “a posture or manner that is likely to be perceived as an endorsement of prayer, e.g. bowing their heads, kneeling or folding their hands”.
The consent decree is the result of a lawsuit filed last year by the American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Florida on behalf of two Pace High School students who alleged that school officials regularly promoted religion and led prayers at school events. Among other things, it prohibits school officials from promoting or endorsing prayers during school functions and organizing school-sponsored religious services. The two families were awarded $1 each by the judge.
“Religious freedom is best promoted when the government stays out of religion. Now, students and their families can feel comfortable holding and expressing their own religious beliefs, knowing that school officials will no longer impose their particular religious beliefs on students at school,” said Benjamin Stevenson, an ACLU of Florida staff attorney based in Pensacola who led the case.
The ACLU lawsuit was filed in August 2008 and charged school officials with committing widespread violations of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. After months of litigation and discovery, the school board, the superintendant and the principal filed an “Admission of Liability” with the court, owning up to the district-wide constitutional violations.
Following the school board’s admission, ACLU attorneys worked closely with district officials to develop an accord that would bring the school district into compliance.
Judge Rodgers’ order states:
- School officials’ promotion of their personal religious beliefs in school and at school functions violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment and the “no aid” provision of the Florida Constitution;
- School officials are permanently prohibited from promoting, advancing, endorsing, participating in or causing prayers during or in conjunction with school events;
- School officials are permanently prohibited from planning, organizing, financing, promoting or sponsoring religious services, including baccalaureate services;
- School officials are permanently prohibited from holding school events at a religious venue when an alternative secular venue is reasonably suitable;
- School officials are permanently prohibited from promoting their personal religious beliefs to students in class or during a school event;
- The district shall pay damages to both plaintiffs in the amount of $1.00; and
- School officials shall comply with the Federal Equal Access Act.
The order also requires that school officials distribute it to all district employees.
Century Courthouse To Close; Tax Collector, Court Services Gone By June 1
May 9, 2009
The Escambia County Tax Collector and Escambia County Clerk of the Court are pulling out of the Billy G. Ward Courthouse in Century by the end of May. The Escambia County Sheriff’s Department will remain in the building.
“Usage of the office in Century has dropped off to the point it needs to be merged with Cantonment,” Escambia County Tax Collector Janet Holley said. “The public wants us to reduce spending, and this will save us $200,000 a year.” The money savings, mostly in salaries, will come from retiring employees and no layoffs, she said.
Holley said that her Century office, which is currently open just three days per week, sometimes sees less than 10 people per day. She said that her office sees more Century area residents in Cantonment than in Century. When we spoke to her late Friday afternoon, Holley told NorthEscambia.com that she will provide us with the numbers and documentation on Monday.
NorthEscambia.com left messages for Clerk of the Court Ernie Lee Magaha multiple times during the past week, and he has refused to return our phone calls.
Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan told NorthEscambia.com Friday afternoon that his Century precinct will remain open.
“We have never even discussed closing the Century office,” Morgan said. “We’ve never even brought it up. We plan to stay in Century.”
In addition, Morgan said he still plans to add two to three deputies to the Century precinct, and he plans to reopen the Walnut Hill office for two or three days per week.
“I’m highly disappointed,” Century Mayor Freddie McCall said. “This is not fair. This is not right. We pay our taxes like everyone else.”
McCall said the closure will be especially hard on the poor in his community because many do not have transportation go get to court in Pensacola.
“It’s a tough budget cycle,” Escambia County District 5 Commissioner Kevin White said. “We can ask them to hold off on the closures while we look at funds to see if there is way to keep it open.” But White said the commission could not force Magaha or Holley to keep their offices open because they are constitutional officers not controlled by the commission.
The nearest tax collector office to Century will be in Cantonment, 28 miles to the south of the Billy G. Ward Courthouse. The nearest physical location to access court services, including paying a traffic ticket in person, will be 45 miles away in downtown Pensacola. Both agencies do offer many services online.
The following information released Friday afternoon from Escambia County details what the county calls a “redirection” of services:
Tax Collector Services
- Effective May 29, services at the Century branch of the Escambia County Tax Collector’s office will be redirected to the Cantonment branch, 470 South Highway 29. The Cantonment office offers all tax collector services including driver’s licenses by appointment.
- Hours of operation are Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and until 6 p.m. on Wednesdays. Call 438-6500 ext. 252 for information and to schedule an appointment for a driver’s license.
- For more information including how to make payments online, visit the Tax Collector’s website, www.escambiataxcollector.com.
Clerk of the Circuit Court
- Tuesday, May 26 will be the final day of court in the Century office.
- Court appearances after May 26 will be at the M.C. Blanchard Judicial Building, 190 Governmental Center.
- The Clerk and the County have worked together with the Judiciary on this redirection.
- Payments for traffic fines and citations will be accepted at the Century office through May 29.
- Payments at the M.C. Blanchard Judicial Building are accepted Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., as well as online.
- For more information visit the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s website at www.clerk.co.escambia.fl.us.
Fish Fry, Bake Sale Today In Molino
May 9, 2009
Aldersgate United Methodist Church will hold a fish fry and bake sale today at the church from 11:00 to 1:30.
The Aldersgate UMC Men’s Fish Fry will include fried mullet with baked beans, cole slaw, hush puppies and a slice of cake for dessert. Plates are $7 each and proceeds will support the Aldersgate UMM Missions.
The Ladies Bible Study and Sunday School class will also have many types of baked goodies for sale including pies, cakes and cookies. Be sure to pick up some of these delicious baked goods to go with your fried fish dinner.
The church is located in Molino on Highway 29 just south of Highway 97.