Georgia A. Wilson

September 25, 2011

Georgia A. Wilson , 40, of Atmore, passed away on Friday, September 23, 2011. Georgia was born on May 5, 1971, in Pensacola, and she moved with her parents to Molino when she was 12-years old.

She graduated from Ernest Ward High School in 1989 and went on to become a medical assistant. She was a devoted mother, loving daughter, and BFF to many. Her granddaddy and grandmother Williams and Uncle John beat her to Heaven but are holding hands with her today.

The people left to carry on her memory are her daughter, Katelyn; mother and father, Betty and Stephen Williams; her fiancé, Scott Davis; great aunt June, aunt Lisa and many cousins.

Services for Georgia will be held on Tuesday, September 27, 2011, at Harper Morris Memorial Chapel. Visitation will be 10 a.m. until services beginning at 10:30 a.m.. Burial will follow in Bayview Memorial Park. Our family would like to thank all the wonderful friends and family that have prayed for us and helped us through the most terrible time of our lives.

Harper Morris Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

Great For The Kids: Free Saturdays At Turtle Point Science Center

September 25, 2011

There was an open house held Saturday at the Turtle Point Science Center in Flomaton. If you missed it, there’is one more Saturday to see the facility this year.

The next open house at Turtle Point is scheduled for November 5 from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Admission is free.

The 3,000 square foot facility offers a touch tank for children and other hands-on exhibits. It boasts an extensive collection of wildlife specimens including many Alabama birds, nests, and eggs; a butterfly and living bee exhibit; live alligators, turtles, snakes, amphibians, and fish of the East Gulf Coastal Plain geophysical region. Also, plant lovers will find six teaching gardens and a wetland nature trail.

Bird watchers are encouraged to hike the nature trail boardwalk and enjoy the red-tailed hawk, great blue heron, great egret, pileated woodpecker, red-headed woodpecker, yellow-shafted flicker, yellow bellied sap sucker, eastern bluebird, wren, killdeer, green heron, barred owl, screech owl, and many other native birds and wildlife.

Turtle Point’s goal is to provide hands-on environmental education to students and adults in the South Alabama and Northwest Florida. Turtle Point is located at 20959 Highway 31 in Flomaton, near Hurricane Park and Flomaton High School. For more information, call (251) 296-3401.

Pictured top: The Turtle Point Science Center in Flomaton. Pictured inset: A golden eagle on display at Turtle Point. Pictured below: A view of the Big Escambia Creek as seen from the nature trail at Turtle Point. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Man Charged With Attacking Woman At Gas Station, Stealing Her Car

September 25, 2011

An Escambia County man is behind bars, charged with robbing a woman as she pumped gas.

Mitchell D. Tranmer, 22, was booked into the Escambia County Jail Saturday morning on charges of aggravated battery and robbery. His bond was set at $165,000.

About 9:00 Thursday night, Tranmer allegedly physically confronted a woman as she was pumping gas at the Tom Thumb at Blue Angel Parkway and Lillian Highway before stealing her car. The woman, whose name has not been released, suffered minor injuries.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Sinking Sinkhole Rates, Rising Panhandle Senate Prez

September 25, 2011

Florida doesn’t have a year-round Legislature. But it felt that way this week.

With the 2012 session starting early because of redistricting, lawmakers, staff and lobbyists headed back up the hill to start committee meetings.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgTrue, the meetings included little real action. But committees got a clearer picture of the redistricting process, while also hearing presentations about tricky issues such as Medicaid reform and budget problems at the Agency for Persons with Disabilities.

While in town, Republican senators formally chose Niceville Sen. Don Gaetz to become the next Senate president.

Also, over in Jacksonville, former Democratic Rep. Audrey Gibson won a special election to replace Sen. Tony Hill, who announced his resignation to take a job with the city’s new mayor.

The focus at the end of the week centered on Orlando, where Republican presidential candidates Thursday night kicked off a conservative fest with a debate on Fox News Channel.

OLDIES BUT GOODIES:

Before most committees even met, the Office of Insurance Regulation weighed in on an issue that has long bedeviled the Legislature.

OIR dramatically reduced proposed sinkhole-premium increases for customers of Citizens Property Insurance Corp. The decision, which came after an outcry from residents of sinkhole-prone areas such as Pasco, Hernando and Hillsborough counties, will raise sinkhole rates by a statewide average of 32.8 percent — less than one-tenth of a 447 percent increase requested by the Citizens board.

Citizens officials have said they were required to seek huge increases after lawmakers passed a measure this year that called for “actuarially sound” rates for sinkhole coverage. But Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, praised Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty after the decision to scale it back.

“This is a victory for consumers,” Fasano said. “I applaud OIR and Commissioner McCarty for their decision, which will allow some people to stay in their homes.”

During committee meetings, lawmakers got briefed on other issues that seem to pop up again and again.

As an example, Agency for Health Care Administration officials talked about seeking federal approval to extend a Medicaid managed-care pilot program and to go statewide with managed care.

Justin Senior, acting deputy secretary for Medicaid, said federal officials are almost certain to require that the pilot include what is known as a “medical loss ratio.” That would require managed-care plans to spend 85 percent of the money they receive on patient care.

Lawmakers this year rejected a medical-loss ratio in favor of a profit-sharing concept with HMOs. Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Chairman Joe Negron, R-Stuart, blasted the federal government’s stance, saying “they’re dictating unilateral terms of surrender.”

Also, Agency for Persons with Disabilities Director Mike Hansen let lawmakers know that the agency’s financial problems this year might be deeper than expected.

After long-running deficits, lawmakers this spring required APD to come up with plans to deal with budget shortfalls. That has already led to cuts, but Hansen said August spending was $7.6 million more than projected and that the agency could be short about $15 million to cover a 2010-11 deficit.

“If we had every agency run amok like this, we would be in chaos and look a lot like Washington,” House Health & Human Services Access Chairman Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, said.

GAETZ ON PARADE:

As chairman of the Senate Redistricting Committee, Gaetz had a busy summer attending public hearings across the state.

But he’s about to get a whole lot busier.

Republican senators Monday formally chose Gaetz to succeed Senate President Mike Haridopolos after the 2012 elections. Gaetz, who made millions in the hospice industry and later became a schools superintendent, said his priorities will include creating jobs and limiting the size of government.

“Florida must become the cradle of common sense solutions,” Gaetz said. “… Florida must be the state that’s known for fair play and rational regulations.”

Before he gets the gavel, however, Gaetz will have to shepherd the politically volatile redistricting process. The details of that process became clearer this week, as Gaetz said his committee will take up a redistricting bill the week of Dec. 5.

Also, the House and Senate redistricting committees set a Nov. 1 deadline for the public to submit proposed maps. Senators also will have to meet that deadline for offering maps, though House members will have until Nov. 14.

One of the senators who will watch the redistricting process closely is Gibson, who won a special election Tuesday in District 1. Gibson beat three other Democrats, including former Rep. Terry Fields, in a primary and later cinched the seat when her only remaining opponent — a write-in — left the race.

The district stretches from Jacksonville to Daytona Beach and was drawn to increase the chances of electing black candidates. Such districts likely will play an important legal and political role in next year’s redistricting.

REPUBLICANS ROLL INTO O-TOWN:

They might as well have hung a sign on the turnpike: Democrats Not Welcome.

At the end of the week, Orlando became the center of state and national Republican politics.

First came a GOP presidential debate Thursday night that included another heap of sniping between front-runners Rick Perry and Mitt Romney. But more than anything, the debate was a chance for the Republican field to distance themselves from all things Obama — while also offering red-meat ideas such as eliminating the U.S. Department of Education and the Environmental Protection Agency.

The debate came at a bad time for President Obama, as a new Quinnipiac poll showed his disapproval rating among Florida voters at 57 percent.

On Friday, the conservative troops rallied again for the CPAC FL conference, which was scheduled to include speeches from presidential candidates and numerous panel discussions. Among the scheduled panels: “Health Care Freedom & Constitutionalism: Reining in the Rogue Federal Government.”

Also on Friday, the Republican Party of Florida was planning to choose a new chairman during the event. It was widely expected to be Lenny Curry, who was the choice of the late Dave Bitner, to replace him. Bitner died in early September.

Finally, on Saturday, the Republican Party of Florida’s Presidency 5 straw poll will give a taste of the presidential contest in the state. Gov. Rick Scott touted the straw poll as a precursor to winning the party nomination — and the White House.

“Whoever wins this straw poll on Saturday will be the Republican nominee, and I believe the Republican nominee will be the next president,” Scott said during a TV appearance.

STORY OF THE WEEK: The Office of Insurance Regulation scaled back proposed sinkhole-premium increases for customers of Citizens Property Insurance Corp. The move came after an outcry from residents in sinkhole-prone Pasco, Hernando and Hillsborough counties.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “They used to be awful, then they got bad, now they’re just a little less bad,” Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, after a new poll showed Gov. Rick Scott’s approval rating rising to 37 percent.

By Jim Saunders
The News Service of Florida

Esther Olean Emmons

September 25, 2011

Mrs. Esther Olean Emmons, age 88 of Century, passed away at her home September 24, 2011. She was a lifetime member of the Century community and was a homemaker.

Mrs. Emmons was preceded in death by her husband, Joe Emmons; parents, Ethel and Leonard Glover; three children; two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Mrs. Emmons is survived by sons, Joey (Sandra) Emmons of Salisbury, NC, and Wayne (Linda) Emmons of Pensacola; daughters, Doris (Winston) Brown and Betty (Troy) Brown, both of McDavid, and Pat Harrison of Jay; brothers, Clark Glover of Jay and Troy Glover of Washington dtate; sister, Christine Morgan of Bratt, FL; 14 grandchilden; 38 great grandchildren and four great-great grandchildren.

Visitation will be held on Sunday, September 25, 2011. at the Flomaton Funeral Home Chapel beginning at 12:30 and will continue on until service time at 2 p.m. Officiating the service will be Bro. Harold Brown and Bro. Mike Johnson. Interment will follow in Byrneville United Methodist Church Cemetery in Byrneville.

Pallbearers will be Tony Brown, Steve Brown, Mike Brown, Shannon Emmons, Jamie Waters and Dale Townson.

Cain Win In Florida Straw Poll Upends Florida Race

September 25, 2011

Herman Cain, a pizza magnate seen as a minor candidate in a crowded field for the GOP nomination, scored an upset victory Saturday in the Republican Party of Florida’s Presidency 5 straw poll, raising questions about the standing of the two front-runners and the bellwether status of the fundraising event.

Cain easily won the straw poll with 37.1 percent of the 2,657 ballots cast. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, viewed as the favorite in the event after riding to the top of opinion polls, came in second with 15.4 percent. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, the nationwide favorite before Perry entered the race, took 14 percent of the ballots.

After those three were former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania with 10.9 percent; U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, 10.4 percent; former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, 8.4 percent; former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, 2.3 percent; and U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, 1.5 percent.

In a video message to his supporters, Cain reveled in the win.

“Folks, this is what you call momentum. … The Herman Cain train is picking up steam,” he said.

The Perry campaign tried to distance itself from the notion that the loss had hurt the Texas governor’s chances of securing Florida and the nomination in the primary fight, pointing out that Perry had been in the race for less than two months.

“This is a devastating loss for Mitt Romney,” press secretary Mark Miner said. “He’s been running for president for over five years, and he came in third today.”

But Romney had long ago announced he would bypass direct competition in the straw poll event, and was one of three GOP candidates — along with Bachmann and former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, who was not on the ballot — who didn’t either present a case to the GOP delegates or send a surrogate to do so for him.

Perry, on the other hand, did contest the event, with surrogates including Florida House Speaker Dean Cannon taking to the stage to defend him. And Perry had been pummeled in the press and by conservative pundits for his performance in Friday night’s presidential debate and a remark suggesting those who opposed one of his more moderate policies on immigration were heartless.

Even some of Perry’s supporters at the straw poll said those debate snags might have hurt his showing.

“I think he’s going to have to go back and talk a little more about the immigration issue,” said Marion County GOP Chairman Roy Abshier, a Perry backer.

Matt McCary, an Orange Park resident, said Cain had won his support during the straw poll and the primary itself with his showing this weekend.

“The first time I heard Herman Cain speak, that did it for me,” he said.

Cain’s final, fiery speech, shortly before delegates headed to vote, clearly electrified the crowd.

He drew repeated standing ovations by drawing on the Declaration of Independence — at one point telling delegates, “We’ve got some altering and abolishing to do” — and Ronald Reagan’s famously optimistic description of America.

“Let’s push that shining city on a hill back up to the top of the hill,” he said.

It’s unclear whether Cain can transfer the energy of the victory to the ballot box in the state’s yet-to-be-scheduled GOP primary. The former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza and cancer survivor’s only prior run for office was a bid for a U.S. Senate seat in Georgia. He finished a distant second to then-Congressman Johnny Isakson in the Republican primary, though he beat out another incumbent congressman in that race.

Bachmann, after all, won the Iowa Straw Poll last month before her last-place showing Saturday.

But party leaders have pushed for weeks the notion that the Florida event often predicts the winner of the nomination. Reagan won the event in 1979, followed by George H.W. Bush in 1987 and Bob Dole in 1995.

“As Florida goes, so goes the nation. And as you go, so goes Florida,” Gov. Rick Scott said Saturday, before the results were announced.

Cain’s upstart bid could put that theory to the test.

By Brandon Larrabee
The News Service of Florida

George Wilson Saucer

September 25, 2011

George Wilson Saucer, age 86 of Pensacola, passed away peacefully to be with the Lord on Friday, September 23, 2011. He was born in McCullough, AL on May 22, 1925. He served in the U.S. Navy during WWII at Bronson Field, Pensacola and retired from Pensacola NAS Rework Facility in 1983. He loved gardening, his daylilies and sports.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Joyce Saucer; mother and father, Oscar and Callie Bernice; brothers and sister, Rayford and Alvin Saucer, and Alma (Saucer) Slaughter.

He is survived by his daughter, Joyce Ann Pendleton (Ken) of Pensacola; son, George Stephen Saucer of Pompano Beach, FL; daughter, Ellen Kay Korecky (Rob) of Ft. Rucker, AL; two grandsons, Corey Kenneth Pendleton (Kayleigh) and Wilson Robert Korecky; sister-in-law, Wilda (Jimmie) Waller; and many dear nieces and nephews. .

Funeral services will be 11:30 a.m. Monday, September 26, 2011, at the Faith Chapel Funeral Home at 100 Beverly Pkwy. in Pensacola. Interment will follow in Elizabeth Chapel Cemetery in Chumuckla.

The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service at Faith Chapel South on Monday.

The family would like to thank the fine staff and nurses at Covenant Hospice for their wonderful care.

Two Seriously Injured In Pickup, Semi Crash (With Photo Gallery)

September 24, 2011

(Updated 9:15 a.m.) Two people were critically injured in a crash involving a pickup truck and a semi-truck Saturday morning in Molino.

The Florida Highway Patrol says 18-year old Tyler Fox of Pensacola was eastbound on Barrineau Park Road in a 1997 Ford F150 when he attempted to cross Highway 29 and pulled into the path of 2009 semi-truck driven by Kenny Lamont Moore, 37, of Florence, Ala. The 18-wheeler broadsided the pickup before jackknifing across the southbound lanes of Highway 29

Tyler and his 17-year old passenger, Destiny Trantham of Pensacola Beach, were ejected in the 6:55 a.m. crash as their truck came to rest in the median. Both, according to the FHP, were airlifted to Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola in critical condition. Moore was transported to West Florida Hospital with minor injuries.

The Molino Station of Escambia Fire Rescue and Escambia County EMS also responded to the crash.

For a photo gallery from the scene, click here.

Pictured: Two people in this pickup were seriously injured after being t-boned by a semi-truck Saturday morning in Molino. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Man Behind Planned 500 Century Jobs Behind Bars For Financial Crimes

September 24, 2011

The man behind an industry announced for Century is now behind bars in Florida awaiting extradition to Alabama to multiple financial and fraud charges.

James Leonard Craft, age 71 of Milton, is being held without bond in the Santa Rosa County Jail as a fugitive from justice. Craft was arrested without incident late Friday morning and booked into the Santa Rosa County Jail were he will remain until he is extradited to Etowah County, Alabama, to face multiple felony charges.

At last report, Craft was the manager of Century Lumber and Land, a company that held a ribbon cutting back in October 2010 for a group of new businesses that planned to locate in Century’s vacant Alger Sullivan Lumber Company property and bring up to 500 jobs to the struggling town. According to Workforce Escarosa, over 3,000 people have applied for those jobs as of earlier this year.

Sgt. Steven Hooks with the Etowah County Sheriff’s Office declined late Friday to specify exactly what securities fraud and financial charges Craft faces.

“He was indicted by a grand jury in Etowah County,” Hooks said, “and the exact charges are not public record until he is returned here and the warrant is served.” Craft’s bond is expected to be set at $30,000 once he is formally booked into the Etowah County Jail in Gasden, Alabama.

In a public order in late 2010, the Alabama Securities Commission ordered Century Lumber and Land, LLC and James Craft to cease and desist from offering or selling financial securities, within or from the state of Alabama after an alleged attempt to solicit an investment without a license for a wood products business.

Late Friday, Dan Lord, public affairs manager for the Alabama Securities Commission, referred NorthEsambia.com to the cease and desist order that names Craft and Century Lumber and Land. He declined to say if Craft’s indictment in Etowah County was related to the 2010 Alabama Securities Commission order.

Pictured top: The October 22, 2010, ribbon cutting for Century Lumber and Land. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Body Found That Could Be That Of Missing Boater, Former Jay Resident

September 24, 2011

A body has been found of the Mexican coast near where the boat belonging to a missing former Jay resident was found September 2. The body was discovered floating this week by the Mexican Navy about 60 miles from where 41-year old Alonzo Lee Kent’s boat The Monkey Bar II was found.

According to an article in the Mexican newspaper Progreso Hoy, the body was that of naked white male, but facial features were unrecognizable due to decomposition in the water. The newspaper reported that the body was like that of Kent or perhaps a that of man that went missing from an oil platform on September 8.

Kent is official listed as a missing person with the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office, but his family believes he is dead, having published an obituary just days after his disappearance.

About 8:30 a.m. on August 28, family reported Kent, now a resident of Gulf Breeze, missing after he did not return from a fishing trip south of Pensacola Pass. The Coast Guard called off their search for Kent after searching an area larger than Maryland.

Kent’s The Monkey Bar II was located near Chuburna, a small town on the Yucatan Peninsula — about 550 miles away. There was no one aboard the Boston Whaler, according to the Progreso Hoy newspaper website.

The boat was floating with the keys in the console and out of gas. There was no one aboard, according to fisherman Yam Chan who found the boat. The U.S. Coast Guard confirmed late Friday night that the Monkey Bar II was being held by Mexican authorities pending an investigation.

Back in the U.S., a warrant for Kent’s arrest was signed August 30 by an Escambia County Judge, the same day the U.S. Coast Guard ended a three-day search for him and his 32-foot Boston Whaler in the Gulf.

Pensacola Police said a 40-year old woman, whose name has not been released, reported that Kent had repeatedly stalked and harassed her for months. The woman claimed he called her over four dozen times, yelled obscenities while banging on her door and sat outside her home for four hours drinking beer.

According to Escambia County Clerk of Courts records, a temporary restraining order was issued against Kent after being filed by a Pensacola woman on August 26. He missed a scheduled court appearance.

Pictured: The Monkey Bar II, the fishing boat belonging to a former Jay resident missing since a fishing trip last week, was found in Chuburna, Mexico. Photo courtesy Progreso Hoy for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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