Mayor, Council President Contribute To Century Council Candidates

September 9, 2010

The first round of finance reports for two council seats in Century shows support for two candidates by members of the current administration.

For the Town Council, Seat 5, candidate Annie Savage received contributions of $100 each  from Century Mayor Freddie McCall, his wife Margie and his daughter Sonja McCall. She also received a $35 contribution from former Mayor Benny Barnes, $50 from Marilyn Robinson and she contributed $100 to her own campaign. In all, Savage received $485 in contributions as of August 27.

Her opponent, Sandra McMurray-Jackson contributed $75 to her own campaign and spent $48 on her qualifying fee.

In the race for Town Council, Seat 3, Robert Lasher received a $250 contribution  from current Century Town Council President Ann Brooks, $100 from banker Bill Cox, $50 each from Mima and Jack Floyd of Jay and he contributed $80 to his own campaign.

Challenger Jacke Johnston had contributed $77 to her own campaign as of August 27. Incumbent Henry Hawkins had $200 in one contribution — listed by Hawkins as being from pharmacist Julie Moran-Booth.

Town Council, Seat 4 Incumbent Gary Riley — who does not face any competition for his seat — filed his final report Thursday morning. He showed he paid his own $48 qualifying fee.

To view a candidate’s complete finance report for the period ending August 27, click their name below:

Century Town Council, Seat 3

Century Town Council, Seat 5

Top 7: County Administrator Candidates Named

September 9, 2010

The list of finalists for the Escambia County administrator position has been released.

The new administrator will serve at the will of the Escambia County Commission on a one-year contract with provisions for renewal. The job pays $120,065 to $145,000 plus benefits.

The commission will interview the seven finalists during a special meeting from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Friday, September 17. The finalists, presented in alphabetical order, are:

  1. Melinda Carlton, town manager in Vernon Township, New Jersey
  2. Kenneth Griffin, assistant county administrator in Marion County, Florida
  3. Maurice Inkel, of Pensacola, retired Air Force colonel
  4. Gregory Lewis, county manager in Niagara County, Minnesota
  5. Charles (Randy) Oliver, a former city manager in Surprise, Arizona
  6. Rebecca Peterson, from Pace, former manager of the Solutia plant in Cantonment
  7. Steve Stevens, accountant from Pensacola

Register Now For Chief Challenge 5K Run/Walk

September 9, 2010

The First Annual Chief Challenge 5K Run/Walk is coming to Northview High School.

The event will be held Saturday, October 2 at 8:30 a.m. at the school campus in Bratt. “The course is not your typical 5K race. It includes a variety of terrains and challenging hills around the campus,” according to event organizers.

A preregistration discount is available through September 24. For a registration form and more details, click here.

The First Annual Chief Challenge 5K Run/Walk is sponsored in part by NorthEscambia.com.

Arrested Firefighter No Longer Responding To Calls

September 9, 2010

A Century volunteer firefighter arrested Tuesday is not  responding to the department’s calls for help.

Dustin Ryan Burkett, 28, of Century, is facing one felony count of lewd and lascivious battery on a victim 12 to 15 years of age, one felony count of grand theft, and misdemeanor charges of abandonment of animals and obstruction of justice.

“He is not answering calls at this time,” according to Century Assistant District Chief David Adams said Wednesday. Disciplinary action taken by the department on September 1 forbid Burkett from responding to emergency calls, Adams said.

For more on Burkett’s arrest, click here.

Florida Education Association Heads To Court Over Class Size Amendment

September 9, 2010

A proposal to relax limits on school class sizes should be thrown off the November ballot because voters may not realize the proposed change could change how much money schools will get, a lawyer for the state’s teachers union told a judge on Wednesday.

The union, the Florida Education Association, is asking the circuit court to throw the proposed Amendment 8, a centerpiece of the Republican Legislature’s agenda, off the ballot. The proposal, if it goes before voters and is approved by at least 60 percent of them, would relax the way schools count students in meeting class size caps. Currently, the caps are set at 18 students in kindergarten through third grade, 22 in fourth through eighth grade, and 25 in high school. Under the amendment, schools would only have to meet an average of that number in each grade.

FEA attorney Ron Meyer told Leon County Circuit Court Judge Charles Francis that voters won’t realize that by tweaking the 2002 constitutional provision that instituted the caps, voters may also alter how much money schools receive from the state. That information is not a part of the ballot summary or title, which is the only information printed on the ballot. Meyer said that puts the proposal in violation of a state requirement that the ballot summary and title be clear and unambiguous.

“They’re making a change in the funding formula,” he said. “And again, people can do that. But the Legislature can’t conceal that.”

Jonathan Glogau, an assistant attorney general, charged that the FEA could not produce any numbers that indicate how the funding will change in the next few years.

“There is no requirement that the Legislature appropriate any particular amount of money,” Glogau said.

The class size issue has been a thorn in the Legislature’s side since voters approved the caps in 2002 because of the associated costs, particularly as tax collections have shrunk.

School administrators say they have had to become creative in order to comply with the law and have voiced concerns about situations where they are at capacity and new students enroll in the district.

Lawmakers debated those concerns over flexibility and passed a proposed constitutional amendment during the spring legislative session over the objections of the teachers’ union and many Democrats. The FEA and Miami teacher Lynette Estrada filed suit in July to knock it off the ballot.

“And as a teacher, and I teach special ed, I see the difference when the class is smaller,” Estrada said after the oral arguments. “As a parent, I see a difference when the classes are smaller. My daughter, who is 12, sees a difference when the classes are smaller.”

Francis said he would try to rule by the end of the week, possibly on Thursday. Regardless of his ruling, it is likely that the Supreme Court will ultimately be the final decider as to whether the issue should be a part of the November ballot.

By Kathleen Haughney
The News Service Florida

Almost Quarter Million Dollar Lottery Ticket Remains Unclaimed

September 9, 2010

fant5.jpgFive months later, the person that purchased a lottery ticket worth a quarter million dollars  in Walnut Hill has not stepped forward to claim their prize.

As of  Wednesday afternoon, officials with the Florida Lottery said no one had claimed the $244.468.47 winning Fantasy 5 ticket that was purchased April 9, 2010, at the State Line O’Yes Lotto at 11331 Highway 97.

The Florida Lottery allows winners 180 days to claim their prize; the April 9 winning ticket will expire October 6 at which time the $244.468.47 will be split with 80 percent going to the Education Trust Fund and the remaining 20 percent returned to the prize pool.

Lottery officials said the ticket was a “Quick Pick” with numbers randomly chosen by the lottery machine. Only one ticket matched the winning numbers:  13-21-25-28-36.

There were 287 tickets on April 9 with four matching numbers worth $137 each. There were 9,650 tickets matching three numbers that were worth $11 each, and 100,219  had two numbers for a free Quick Pick ticket.



This Place Matters: Flomaton Historical Group In The Running For $25K

September 9, 2010

The Flomaton Area Railroad Museum is the running for a $25,000 “This Place Matters” grant — and they want your help.

The This Place Matters Challenge from the National Trust for Historic Preservation will award the $25,000 to one entrant to protect places in their community. The goal of the This Place Matters Community Challenge is to rally as many people around the grassroots issues of preservation in communities as possible, according to the group’s website.

“I am terribly happy that we were chosen to be on there,” Betty Jones of the Flomaton Area Railroad Museum said.

To see Flomaton’s entry and vote, click here. Voes are due by September 15.

Pictured: Levi Wagner, son of Tip Wagner and April Eicher, in photo used by the Flomaton Area Railroad Museum in their “This Place Matters” entry. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Tropical Storm Igor Forms

September 8, 2010

[Image of 5-day forecast and coastal areas under a warning or a watch]

Tropical Storm Igor formed Wednesday morning off the coast of Africa near the Cape Verde Islands. The storm is on a westward path across the Atlantic. The National Hurricane Center is forecasting Igor to become a hurricane by the weekend.

The last information on Igor can be found in the graphic above, click to enlarge.

Firefighter Charged With Felony Sexual Abuse Of Underage Girl, Grand Theft, Abandoning Dogs

September 8, 2010

A Century volunteer fireman — the son of the department chief — was arrested Tuesday night, charged with sexually abusing an underage girl and with abandoning dogs rescued by the department.

Dustin Ryan Burkett, 28, of Century, was booked into the Escambia County Jail just before 11 p.m. Tuesday on one felony count of lewd and lascivious battery on a victim 12 to 15 years of age, one felony count of grand theft, and misdemeanor charges of abandonment of animals and obstruction of justice, according to Melissa Aiken Rawson, spokesperson for the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.  Burkett was released from jail Wednesday afternoon on $15,000 bond, according to jail records.

An arrest warrant was signed Tuesday on the sexual abuse charge stemming from a 2009 incident in which a 15 year old girl told deputies she had intercourse with Burkett at Lake Stone Campground in Century. The encounter, according to the victim, took place on or about March 28, 2009. The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office received information on April 13, 2009, that the relationship had taken place, and the victim was interviewed at her school on April 28, 2009.

Burkett retained an attorney and refused to meet with the Sheriff’s Office investigators, according to the warrant affidavit.

In an unrelated incident, a second arrest warrant was signed against Burkett on Tuesday for allegedly abandoning three dogs that were reported to be “rescued” by the Century Station of Escambia Fire Rescue last month.

The Century Station of Escambia-Rescue responded to a reported motor vehicle accident on Sunday, August 22 on North Century Boulevard just south of Tedder Road. They discovered that there was no accident; rather, a motorist had stopped after seeing the three dogs nearly in the road. Both the fire department and the Sheriff’s Office requested that Escambia County Animal Control respond, but the agency refused stating that it did not meet their call-out criteria.

Rather than leave the dogs beside the road, they were taken back to the Century firehouse as firefighters worked to determine what to do with the canines. According to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office incident report, the Burkett told his follow firefighters to, “Put them in my truck. I have a pen at my house”.

A Century Volunteer Fire Department officer emailed NorthEscambia.com that night, providing photographs of the dogs and asking for help in find the dogs’ owner. NorthEscambia.com published that story Monday, August 23.

After the article was published on NorthEscambia.com, the dogs’ owner contacted the fire department. According to the ECSO, the owner confronted Burkett at the Century fire station the next evening and asked the whereabouts of his dogs. Burkett according to the incident report, “refused to respond and acted like he didn’t know what (the victim) was talking about”.

On Wednesday, the dogs’ owner went to the Burkett’s residence on Highway 4A and spoke with the suspect’s father. The father was helpful but said that he did not see the dogs or know where his son had put them, the victim told deputies.

Burkett told a fire department officer that he had found a good home for the dogs in Walnut Hill, and the officer contact NorthEscambia.com with the information.  Based on that information from the fire department, a followup story was published by NorthEscambia.com on Thursday, August 26, reporting that  a home had been found for the dogs.

On Thursday, deputies met with both Burkett and his father. Burkett told deputies, according to their report, that he had given the dogs to a man he met. He told a deputy that he did not know how to contact the man and that the deputy should call his friend. The friend told the deputy by phone that “he did not want to be involved and that he was not going to tell a lie to keep (the suspect) out of trouble”. He said that Burkett contacted him Sunday night and “asked him to cover for him if asked the whereabouts of the missing dogs”. The friend told the deputy that Burkett told him that he took the dogs and dropped them off at the intersection of North Pine Barren Road and Highway 168.

When contacted by phone, the deputy said Burkett admitted to putting the dogs out of his vehicle on Pine Barren Road on Wednesday. About 30 minutes later, Burkett called the suspect again to advise him that he was going to face charges over the dogs. “He advised me that he didn’t kill them or sell them and that he put them out on Sunday,” Deputy David Bashore wrote in his report.

The dogs were found a few days later on Highway 4, not far from Northview High School. They were  determined to be in good condition by a veterinarian and returned the owner.

Burkett is the son of the Century District Fire Chief Reggie Burkett, according to the Sheriff’s Office. Disciplinary action was taken against Burkett by the department, according to Century Assistant District Chief David Adams. He declined to elaborate.

Pictured top: Century firefighter Dustin Ryan Burkett was arrested Tuesday night. Pictured inset: These cellphone photos show three dogs found the evening of August 22 on North Century Boulevard just south of Tedder Road. The firefighter partially in the photograph is not suspected of any wrongdoing. Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Former Teacher Sentenced To Prison On Drug, Obscene Materials Charges

September 8, 2010

A former Escambia County, Ala., teacher will spend three years in prison after pleading guilty Tuesday to  possession of obscene material and  distribution of a controlled substance.

Larry Tindell had faced up to 30 years in prison before he entered into a plea agreement with prosecutors.  He will remain on probation for 10 years after his release.

Tindell, a former special education teacher at W.S. Neal High School in East Brewton, was arrested in February, 2009, on charge that he gave Lortab to a former student at the school. He was also charged with possession of obscene material after authorities reportedly found inappropriate images of children while searching his home.

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