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.

Council Approves Cold Weather Shelter

February 18, 2009

The Century Town Council has approved the location of an inclement weather shelter for the town.

The shelter will be located at Century’s Habitat building, using the dining room for sleeping and the kitchen to provide a warm meal.

The shelter location was determined by council member Gary Riley working in conjunction with Brunie Emmanuel with the EscaRosa Coalition For the Homeless. Emmanuel approached the council in early February looking for help in establishing a shelter in Century.

The next step in the shelter plan is to determine guideline on when to open the shelter, for instance, the overnight low that would trigger the shelter opening as a cold weather shelter.

Under the plan, the American Red Cross would provide cots for the shelter, and area churches would provide volunteers and food.

The shelter would provide a refuge from the cold and other inclement weather for not just the homeless, but also for those in substandard housing.

“You have folks that may be in a house but it’s not a safe shelter for them,” Emmanuel told the council.

Emmanuel told the council that in addition to the short-term shelter solution, he hopes to look at ways to improve the substandard housing that might drive people to use the shelter.

The shelter will not be used as a hurricane evacuation shelter.

Four Qualify For Deceased Senator’s Job

February 18, 2009

Four people have qualified to replace the late Alabama Sen. Pat Lindsey of Butler.

State Rep. Marc Keahey of Grove Hill  was the only Democrat to qualify. Three Republicans met the filing deadline — Danny Joyner, a Brewton businessman; former state Rep. Greg Albritton of Range and Judy Belk, a Citronelle businesswoman.

The special election will be held  April 14 to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the senate term, which ends in November 2010.

Lindsey, 72, was discovered dead in his bed on a hunting trip while staying with friends in Boligee in west Alabama.

Lt. Gov. Jim Folsom Jr., and State Senator Roger Bedford were also on the trip and among those in the group that discovered Lindsey. He was discovered as the group was getting ready to leave the home friends where they had been hunting.

Lindsey’s senate district included Escambia County in Alabama. Other counties in the district are Baldwin, Choctaw, Clarke, Conecuh, Mobile, Monroe and Washington counties.

Fire Chiefs Expected To Resign

February 17, 2009

Escambia’s top firefighters are expected to resign.

Escambia Fire-Rescue Chief Ken Perkins and Assistant Chief Robbie Whitfield  are expected to turn in their resignations at the request of Escambia County Administrator Bob McLaughlin.

While McLaughlin would not comment on the specific reasons for the resignation request, it is believed it is related to discontent between paid and volunteer firefighters in the county department. The county’s paid daytime firefighters in Century, Molino and Pleasant Grove as well as paid crews in Pensacola Beach, Osceola and Perdido Key. The volunteer and paid crews were unified under Perkin’s command last Sepetember.

Some have suggested that Battalion Chief Curt Isaacson is also going to resign, but that has not been confirmed.

The Escambia Commission is expected to name Battalion Chief Jim Sanders acting chief while the county searches for new fire department leaders.

Council Delays Backwoods Water Action And Gives Free Water To Residents

February 17, 2009

The Town of Century has voted to not charge residents of Backwoods Road for their water while the town takes a wait-and-see approach on funding a project that improved the area’s water service.

The $1.7 million project is ready to build, except there has been a delay in acquiring a small piece of property for a booster pumping stations. The project include a new 500,000 gallon elevate water storage tank and new water lines along State Line Road, Highway 4A and Backwoods Road. It has taken the town about 10 years to address upgrading the Backwoods water service from a 2-inch to a 6-inch main.

“The bottom line is the plans are ready,” said Dale Long of Fabre Engineering. “We could build it tomorrow.”

The town was approved for a USDA Rural Development loan for the project, but never entered into a contract for the funds. Now they have voted to wait a few weeks to see if funding might be coming to the town under the federal stimulus program.

Council member Gary Riley said  he would like to wait on possible stimulus money, as did member Nadine McCaw.

“It ain’t fair to the folks on Backwoods to wait,” Council member Henry Hawkins said.  “In the meantime while they waiting, Backwoods should not have to pay no water bill.”

“That right now is very logical at this point,” McCaw said

“It gives them something in exchange for waiting,” Council President Ann Brooks agreed.

The council voted 5-0 to not charge Backwoods Road customers for their water service, beginning with the next billing cycle.

Long said that he would expect the council to know about any stimulus money within a few weeks. Once the council votes to advertise the water system upgrade, the time for the first shovel would be about two to three additional months, he said.

There are “20 something” water customers on Backwoods Road, Mayor Freddie McCall said. The town does not provide water or sewer service to those residents.

Molino Tornado One Year Later: Highland Baptist

February 17, 2009

The story of the Molino tornado one year ago and what happened inside Highland Baptist Church played out on television networks across the United States.

Highland was directly in the path of the EF-1 tornado that destroyed four Molino homes and damaged dozens more on February 17, 2008.

Highland Pastor Brian Calhoun and other church members did television interviews, beamed by satellite into homes across the Gulf Coast and the country. A front page article about the church and the tornado was in the Florida Baptist Witness. That article used photographs from NorthEscambia.com.

For Highland’s tornado story as it ran last year on NorthEscambia.com, click here.

The Sunday after the storm, worshipers at Highland Baptist Church and Victory Assembly of God viewed a video using NorthEscambia.com pictures. Click here to watch the video.

Pictured top: The cross from the Highland Baptist Church steeple sites in front of the church days after the Molino tornado last year. Pictured bottom: The rest of the Highland steeple in the church parking lot. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

One Year Since Tornado Ripped Though Molino

February 17, 2009

Tuesday marked the one year anniversary of the Molino tornado that destroyed four homes, caused heavy damage and ripped the steeple of a church with worshipers inside.

The E-F1 tornado destroyed four homes in Molino about noon Sunday, February 17. Escambia County officials say at least 60 other structures were damaged by the twister along at least a two and a half mile path. At least 20 of those structures suffered major damage. There were no injuries reported.

Many homes in the Crest Lane area were damaged, with at least one house destroyed. Other suffered significant roof damage. As the tornado continued on a path to the northeast, it took the steeple off Highland Baptist Church and caused roof damage to the sanctuary. The steeple landed in the church parking lot, damaging at least four cars.

Church members said the service was about to end when they got word of the approaching tornado. Everyone evacuated the sanctuary and sought shelter in the church fellowship hall, a brick building with no windows. They prayed and sang songs as the storm approached, a church member said.

On Molino Road, near Brickyard Road, several more homes were damaged. The roof was completely gone from several houses and the Masonic Lodge building. One mobile home was flipped upside down and others were heavily damaged.

Gulf Power company cut power to about 4,500 people in the Molino area as a safety precaution. Power lines were down all around the area with many poles snapped in half.

Dozens of emergency responders conducted a door to door search in the areas with heavy damage, checking to make sure residents were not injured. Firefighters also drove all of the roads around the area, looking for any additional damage.

For a NorthEscambia.com photo gallery from the the storm’s aftermath on February 17, 2008, click here.

For cleanup photos from February 19, click here.

Pictured above: One of the homes destroyed by last year’s Molino tornado. Pictured below: Another home under repair February 17, 2008. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Council Takes No Action On Worker That Left Prisoner Unattended

February 17, 2009

The Town of Century has taken no action in regards to an employee that left a state prisoner unattended in parking lot, and after he got into a fight  that got him arrested while on the time clock.

The council mentioned the offense at their meeting Monday night and listened to Mayor Freddie McCall report on how their prison would have handle such an offense, but the council took no official action.

Escambia Sheriff’s Department reports say that Robert Allen Powell, 56, of Century got into a fight with Randall Keith Grimes, 47, of Century at the town’s Dollar General store.

Powell stopped at the Dollar General in a town truck along with a prisoner from the Century Correctional Institute that was on work detail for the town. Powell reported went into the store to purchase cold medication, leaving the prisoner unattended in the parking lot. Inside the store, Powell ended up in the altercation with Grimes.

Their stories differ on what happened. Powell told deputies that Grimes called him names and then punched him. Grimes said Powell called him a “retard” and a “bastard” before Powell punched him in the face. Powell told deputies the entire incident stemmed from Grimes’ involvement with his ex-wife.

The report says store surveillance video shows that Powell threw the first punch, according to the ECSO report. Powell was arrested on a battery warrant, and released on a $2,500 bond.

The big issue for some members of  the Century Town Council was not the fight, but the fact that Powell left the prisoner unattended outside the store.

McCall told the council member night that the prison would provide on of their employees committing the offense a verbal or written warning on the first offense. The second offense would bring a written warning. The third  offense would be met with three to 10 days suspension, and termination would take place on the fourth offense.

The council was reportedly advised by Matt Danheisser, their attorney, that any employment policy could not be made retroactively to apply to Powell.

“Out working rules call for a verbal reprimand, and I issued one,” McCall said Monday night.

Council  President Ann Brooks said that the town would address any possible future similar situations with a policy to be discussed when the town works on a policies and procedures manual.

At the council’s last meeting on February 2, Council member Henry Hawkins recommended that the town determine what punishment the prison system would inflict on a prison employee that might leave a prisoner unattended. He said the town should consider a punishment “up to” that level. His motion to take such action died without a second.

McCall said two weeks ago that the prison system will continue to allow the town to use free inmate labor. Powell will not be able to supervise an inmate until after his court process is complete, but McCall said prison officials had stated that he would be able to supervise prisoners in the future.

McCall said the prison system would “overlook” the fact that Powell stopped to get the cold medicine, and that the prison warden did not consider it a big problem.

Powell is scheduled to face Judge David Ackerman on February 19 on the misdemeanor battery charge. Grimes has not been charged in connection with the incident.

School Board To Hold Century Meeting To Discuss School Closure

February 17, 2009

The Escambia County School Board plans to hold a meeting in Century early next month to discuss their redistricting plan that will close Carver/Century K-8 School.

NorthEscambia.com has learned that the board plans to schedule the meeting in early March at the Carver/Century cafeteria. Premlinary plans call for the meeting to be held March 5 at 5:3o p.m.

On January 20, the board approved advertising the redistricting of Carver/Century students to Bratt Elementary and Ernest Ward Middle School. State law says they must advertise the plan for 28 days prior to official approving it. They plan to vote on the redistricting plan that would close Carver/Century at their March 17 board meeting.

At the January meeting, the vote was 3-2 to move forward with advertising the redistricting plan. Board members Bill Slayton, who represents District 5 where Carver/Century is located, and Linda Moultrie voted against the proposal. Jeff Bergosh,  Gerald Boone and Patty Hightower voted for Superintendent Malcolm Thomas’ plan.

Pictured above: Century resident Leola Robinson speaks to the Escambia School Board  in support of keeping Carver/Century open on January 20 while Gerald Boone (left) and Malcolm Thomas (right) look on. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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