Half Million Earned: Century Signs Off On $28 Million Bond Issue

December 8, 2010

The Town of Century has voted to approve the issuance of up to $28 million in revenue bonds for an apartment complex for the elderly and Goodwill Industries, bringing the town’s earnings over a half million dollars from a partnership with Gulf Breeze.

The approval was granted by Century and Gulf Breeze as members of the Capital Trust Agency, an independent public body for the purpose of financing or otherwise accomplishing development programs. Century entered into the Capital Trust Agency with Gulf Breeze in 1999 with Century essentially serving as the “second signature”  for CTA.

With the issuance of the most recent round of bonds, Century will have received over a half million dollars in fees since the inception of CTA.

Century and Gulf Breeze Attorney Matt Dannheisser said that the CTA is structured in such a way to indemnify Century from any financial risk, whether it be from a company that defaults on repayment or any other legal liabilities.

The first bond issue will be to Goodwill Industries of Southwest Florida for up to $20 million for the acquisition and renovation of donation and distribution centers and educational, job training, career development and mentoring facilities at several locations in the Ft. Myers and Naples areas. Dannheisser said he expects the actual bond issuance to be about $12.8 million. With $20 million in bonds, Century would be paid $7,000, while at $12.8 million Century would receive a $4,480 fee.

The second bond issue will be for up to $8 million for the 68-unit Cypress Cathedral Apartments for the elderly in Winter Haven, Florida. Dannheisser said he expects the actual bond issuance to be about $5.4 million. The Town of Century will receive a fee of $2,500 to $2,800 for their second signature.

For serving as the second signature for CTA, Century is paid $350 per $1 million financed with a$2,500 minimum fee.

“Century is blessed to be part of this to receive these funds for nothing, so to speak,” Century Councilman Gary Riley said.

Memorial Service Held For Murdered Former Molino Resident

December 8, 2010

A memorial service was held Wednesday in Pensacola for Winter Delane Wingard, the former Molino resident murdered last week in South Carolina.

Wingard is survived by her mother, Beverly Patrick of Gaffney, South Carolina; sister Summer Dawn Wingard of Pensacola; her grandmother, Mary Ann Patrick of Pensacola; and numerous other relatives and friends.

Cherokee County (SC) Coroner Dennis Fowler said Winter Delane Windguard’s body was found on the side of a rural road last Thursday.  Fowler said Monday that Wingard, 26, died as the result of  hemorrhages caused by blunt force injury to her head.  Fowler said the victim was severely beaten in the head and neck and strangled.  In addition, the coroner said Wingard sustained multiple stab wounds to the neck.

Monday, the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office charged Joey L. Clark of Mooresboro N.C. with Wingard’s death. He is being held without bond.

Wingard’s mother reported  the 26-year old missing Thursday night, saying that she was last seen about 1:30 that morning as she left her home in Gaffney, SC.,  in her mother’s vehicle to go to a store.

Winter Wingard’s sister Summer Wingard said the sisters formerly lived on Molino Road. Winter Wingard attended Molino Elementary, Ransom Middle and Tate High before completing her education online.

Gaffney is a town of about 13,000 people about 20 miles northeast of Spartanburg, South Carolina.

FFA Students Place In Sub-District Career Event

December 8, 2010

Northview High, Ernest Ward Middle, Tate High and Jay High were among schools from Escambia, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties that participated in the FFA Sub-District Career Development Events Tuesday at the Jay Community Center.

Ernest Ward Middle  placed second in parliamentary procedure. Team members were: Austin Cunningham, Miranda Vidak, Madison McGhee, Mitchell Singleton, Aden Davis, Andrea Miles and alternate Kendall Cobb.

Ernest Ward Middle  also participated in the Opening and Closing Ceremony Event. Team members: Tiffani Cruce, Jaylen Parker, Haylee Weaver, Bethany Reynolds, Haley Brown, Allison Woodfin, and Addy Lee.

Northview participated and earned awards in the following areas:

  • Second in Parliamentary Procedure, with team members being Lydia Weaver, Allie Vidak, Allyson Bullard, Lane Purvis, Devin Bell, Stephanie Solari and alternate Dillon Crutchhfield.
  • Second place in Prepared Public Speaking went to Jessica Baldwin.
  • Second place in Extemporaneous Public Speaking went to Allie Vidak.
  • First place in FFA Creed speaking went to Courtney Solari.
  • Forth place in Safe Tractor Operation went to Brandon Chambless.

Tate High School placed as follows:

  • Third place in Prepared Public Speaking  -  Emily Higdon
  • First place in Extemporaneous Public Speaking – Megan Gibbs
  • Second place in Creed Speaking  -  Victoria Beson
  • First place in Tractor Driving Operations – Jeff Hansford
  • First place in Parliamentary Procedure  -  Laura William, Megan Gibbs, Destiny Miller, Victoria Bell, Cierra Mitchell, Austin Pfeiffer, Chelsea Ward  (alternate).

Jay High School placed as follows:

  • First place in Parliamentary Procedure — Olivia Moore, Makenzie Bray, Paige Smith, Alicia Roberts, Sarah Adkinson, Satchel Starling
  • First place — Opening and Closing Ceremony Team — Olivia Moore, Makenzie Bray, Paige Smith, Alicia Roberts, Sarah Adkinson, Satchel Starling, Colby Odom

Pictured top: Members of the Northview High School FFA. Pictured below: Members of the Ernest Ward Middle School FFA. Pictured bottom: The Jay High FFA members. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.


Arrested: DNA Links Man To One Of Two Bodies Found In Woods

December 8, 2010

A Pensacola man was arrested Tuesday night in connection with the death of one of two women found dead in a wooded area off Nine Mile Road on November 29.

Joshua Wayne Douglas, 22, of Indian Oak Hills Place, is charged with the murder and sexual assault of Jamie Broxson, 25, of Pensacola. Forensic testing found DNA that linked Douglas to Broxson, according to Chris Welborn, spokesperson for the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office. Douglas has not yet been charged in connection with the death of Debra Jones, 19, whose badly decomposed body was also found in the wooded area.

Both bodies were found near a Gulf Power substation on Jernigan Road, just south of Nine Mile Road. Douglas’ home address, according to jail records, is directly across from the power substation.

Douglas is being held in the Escambia County Jail without bond. He was taken into custody without incident at about 6:30 p.m Tuesday at a Tom Thumb on East Nine Mile Road, not far from his home and the location where the bodies were found.

Northview’s School Grade Jumps From “D” To “B”

December 8, 2010

There was excitement in the air Tuesday at  Northview High School Tuesday as state school grades were released showing a jump from a D to a B.

“We are very excited; we are very proud that we are a B,” said Northview Principal Gayle Weaver.”"We knew we are a good school and we always wanted people to see beyond the school grade.”

In addition to FCAT results as in years past, school grades at the high school level this year included other factors such as graduation rates, accelerated courses and college readiness. That formula worried Weaver because, as a smaller school, Northview does not offer accelerated programs like Advance Placement or International Baccalaureate.

“No one had said what would happen to the small schools without the advanced academics,” she said.  “Now we will look at exactly how we did it. We are anxious to find out the formula was that was used.”

For results from other schools in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties, click here.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/schoolgrades10.jpgAfter Northview was graded as a D school last year, the school went to work to implement a variety of plans to help students improve their FCAT scores and overall school performance. FCAT efforts were focused on achieving learning gains for ninth and tenth grade students and increase the number of the lowest performing students that achieve success.

The primary strategy implemented was the Adviser-Mentoring Program, pairing a faculty member with a students from the lower 30 percent of ninth and tenth grade students, and the implementation of an In-School Suspension (ISS) program.

In the mentoring program, advisers meet with students periodically, review academic and discipline, connect with parents, and monitor any activities associated with the student. The mentoring program is still in place this school year.

The letter grades are based upon a  new high school grading system  designed to grade schools based not only on student performance on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT), but also on their ability to graduate students, increase student participation and performance in advanced coursework, and better prepare students for college and career. Under the new requirements, 50 percent of a high school’s grade is based on the performance of their students on the FCAT, and the remaining 50 percent is based on factors that include the following:

  • The school’s graduation rate.
  • The performance and participation of students in Advanced Placement (AP), International Baccalaureate (IB), Dual Enrollment, Advanced International Certificate of Education (AICE), and industry certification.
  • The postsecondary readiness of the students as measured by the SAT, ACT, or College Placement Test (CPT).
  • The high school graduation rate of at-risk students.
  • Growth or decline in these data components from year to year.

“Under the new high school grading formula, Florida has raised the bar of what our students are expected to achieve, and our schools have proven they can and will surpass those expectations,” said Education Commissioner Dr. Eric J. Smith.

Water Standards: Another Florida Versus The Feds Lawsuit In Pensacola

December 8, 2010

Florida will go to court to challenge tougher federal water standards slated to kick in next year, the state’s top legal and agricultural officials said Tuesday as they filed suit in federal court in Pensacola to block a controversial set of clean water standards they contend are inflexible and unworkable.

In the same court that is considering the state’s challenge to the federal health care reform, Florida’s Attorney General Bill McCollum, Agriculture Commissioner Charlie Bronson and their successors filed the lawsuit over federal water pollution standards that set specific numeric caps on pollutant levels for Florida lakes and rivers. The standards were announced last month by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Incoming Attorney General Pam Bondi and Ag Commissioner Adam Putnam have joined the challenge of the EPA’s water standards in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida in Pensacola, a sign they intend to continue the fight against the federal standards that have been uniformly criticized by state leaders from both sides of the political aisle.

“We all want clean water for Florida, and we all believe that scientifically sound and responsible numeric nutrient criteria will improve efforts to achieve this goal,” McCollum said in a statement announcing the lawsuit. “…The EPA numeric nutrient rule and its proposed criteria are not based on scientifically sound methodology, and were adopted in an arbitrary and capricious manner just to settle a lawsuit.”

An attorney for the group that filed the lawsuit prompting the federal standards, said Tuesday’s the state’s challenge was not unexpected and marks the next step in a case that will be decided in a higher court.

Florida environmental officials want to maintain existing state standards that base acceptable pollutant levels in Florida inland waters on a case-by-case basis based on a slate of factors including historical conditions, comparisons to similar areas or site-specific numeric limits know as total maximum daily load (TMDL).

The federal water pollutions standards, enacted in November, followed a lengthy back and forth between the EPA and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, which questioned the science behind the EPA proposals and proposed its own nutrient standards. They also argued that the standards would be too expensive to comply with and unfair because they singled out Florida from the other states.

Bronson agreed with McCollum that there were questions about the legality of the water regulations, scheduled to take effect in 2013 over the objection of Florida environmental officials, businesses, farmers and a host of recently-elected state government leaders.

“I have been concerned from the beginning that EPA’s actions related to numeric nutrient criteria in Florida waters were not based on factual, verifiable science,” said Bronson, who is a separately named as a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “Florida has always been a leader in taking steps necessary to improve water quality and I was disappointed that EPA did not incorporate many of the state’s suggestions on the proposed rule.”

McCollum and Bronson lauded Bondi and Putnam for both pledging to continuing to wage the lawsuit when they take office Jan. 4. Both newly-elected Cabinet members said Tuesday they agreed with their predecessors’ take on the water regulations. All four are Republicans.

“Our communities cannot afford these new regulations which may not, in the long run, result in any meaningful improvements to our water quality beyond what our state has already implemented,” Bondi said in a statement. “As Florida’s next Attorney General, I will continue this lawsuit and will stand up on behalf of our citizens and our taxpayers.”

Saying it would be a “top priority” of his administration Putnam said the new regulations would cost consumers and localities billions of dollars and, in some cases, require technology not yet developed or too expensive to use.

“While we all would have preferred to avoid this litigation, this is but one strategy we will pursue to see that sound science prevails,” Putnam said. “I am hopeful the end result of today’s action will be the continued protection and improvement of Florida waters in a way that makes both scientific and economic sense.”

EarthJustice attorney David Guest, who filed the originally lawsuit that led to the EPA standards, noted the irony of the lawsuit being filed in the same court that is hearing the health care lawsuit, which has sided with state officials on key elements its challenge to federal law.

“In every complaint I have seen in my embarrassingly long career, which is well over 30 years now, this is the first one I’ve ever seen that did not include an explanation why a venue was (chosen),” Guest told the News Service of Florida Tuesday. “That’s a very revealing omission.”

Guest said that normally lawsuits are filed where either the plaintiffs or defendants live or where the contested issue took place. In this case, that would seem to favor the state’s capitol, Tallahassee, or Washington, D.C., the nation’s capitol, Guest said.

“There isn’t even a red-faced argument that there’s venue in Pensacola. And that’s why there’s nothing there,” he said. “If you tried to make allegations about why it was Pensacola, you wouldn’t be telling the truth and no self-respecting lawyer is going to do that because they wouldn’t want to face sanctions.”

McCollum said that the Pensacola court was chosen because the attorney general’s office had gotten complaints about the regulations from the area and because the health care lawsuit showed the court moved quickly to resolve controversial issues.

“I picked the one out in Pensacola because we discovered in the health care litigation they have a lighter load as a federal district court,” McCollum said during a news conference. “This is the region of North Florida, which is where we normally see the state challenges when we initiate them. We initiate them here unless there’s some reason to initiate them somewhere else.”

By Keith Laing
The News Service Florida

School Grades Released: Celebration At Northview; Good News For Tate, Jay

December 7, 2010

School accountability grades were released this morning, and there was cause for celebration at Northview High School.

Northview’s school grade from the Florida Department of Education jumped from a D last year to an B this year. The news was also good for the other two high schools in the North Escambia area. Jay High School maintained their A grade, while Tate High School held at a B.

Both Pine Forest and Escambia High Schools fell from a C to become the only two D schools in Escambia County. Washington and Pensacola were ranked at B, and West Florida was the county’s only A school

In Santa Rosa County, four of five high school were graded A — Jay, Milton, Pace and Gulf Breeze. Navarre High slipped from an A to an B.

In addition to FCAT results as in years past, school grades at the high school level this year included other factors such as graduation rates, accelerated courses and college readiness.

For more on Northview’s improvement, click here.


Panhandle Man, 84, Found After Silver Alert

December 7, 2010

A Silver Alert for a Walton County man was canceled Wednesday morning after he was found safe in Pike County, Mississippi.

Our previous story about the missing man is below:

The Walton County Sheriff’s Office and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement Missing Endangered Persons Information Clearinghouse have issued a Silver Alert for Harry George Schlosser, 84, of Walton County, Florida.

Harry George Schlosser is described as an 84-year-old white male with green eyes and gray hair. He is approximately five feet, nine inches tall and weighs approximately 160 pounds. His clothing description is unknown.

Schlosser may be occupying a 2005 white Mercedes-Benz C230 with FL Tag number L978NN. The vehicle has a Georgia Tech University license plate frame on the rear of the vehicle.

Schlosser was reported missing December 6 at approximately 9:40 p.m.

If you have information regarding the whereabouts of George Harry Schlosser, please contact the Walton County Sheriff’s Office at (850) 892-8111.

Cold Tonight, And Getting Colder Tomorrow Night

December 7, 2010

It’s going to be cold tonight and even colder tomorrow night with a low around 20.

Here is your official North Escambia are forecast:

  • Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 24. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 46. Wind chill values between 20 and 30 early. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 20. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 53. Wind chill values between 15 and 25 early. North wind around 5 mph becoming calm.
  • Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 25. Calm wind.
  • Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 63. Calm wind becoming west around 5 mph.
  • Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph.
  • Saturday: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 65. South wind between 5 and 10 mph.
  • Saturday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. South wind 10 to 15 mph becoming west.
  • Sunday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny and breezy, with a high near 54.
  • Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 28.
  • Monday: Sunny, with a high near 48.
  • Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 27.
  • Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 55.

Century Set To Pave 5 Streets Piggybacked On Escambia Contract

December 7, 2010

The ride down several Century streets will be improving — the Town Council voted Monday night to resurface five streets.

The town will resurface Freedom Road, the portion of Old Flomaton Road in the city limits, Hecker Road, Elm Street and Hilltop Road.  The streets were the top five on the town’s priority list.

The resurfacing project will cost the town just over $181,000 by piggybacking on an Escambia County contract with Roads, Inc. Of  Northwest Florida.

“It is not necessary to go out to bids,” Century Mayor Freddie McCall said, because Escambia County has already obtained the lowest contract price. “You wouldn’t get a price like this if you bid it yourself.”

There will be about a dozen roads remaining to be paved on the town’s priority list. Five of them — West Cottage Street, Academy Street, Pleasant Hill Road, Ramar Street and Lake Street — are all short or dead end streets. The remaining are dirt roads that will require extensive drainage work prior to surfacing.

The start date for the resurfacing project is still to be determined.

NorthEsambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

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