Elections Office To Provide Outreach Services In North Escambia

March 19, 2012

Escambia County Supervisor of Elections David Stafford will hold an outreach event to give North Escambia residents a chance to verify and update their voter information, register to vote, pick up a voter guide or become a poll worker.

Staff from the elections office will be in Century on Thursday at two locations:

  • 9-11 a.m. — Century Care Center, 6020 Industrial Boulevard, in the Activity Room
  • 1-3 p.m. — Century Branch Library, 7991 North Century Boulevard

Florida residents 18 years of age and older can register to vote, change their address, update their signature, change party affiliation and  sign up to vote by mail. Individuals 16 or 17 years old can preregister to vote.

The elections staff will also have poll worker applications available. Poll workers are hired and trained to work Election Day at precincts throughout Escambia County. “Standby” workers are also needed in the event that someone is unable to serve at the last minute.

For more information about outreach opportunities or serving as a poll worker, contact the Escambia County Supervisor of Elections office at (850) 595-3900.

Tate Trumpet Player Places Fourth In The Nation

March 19, 2012

A Tate High School senior was named  the nation’s fourth best high school trumpet player Sunday afternoon in Washington, D.C.

Chris Snyder took fourth among high school players in  National Trumpet Competition.

Each year, candidates from across the nation submit a video audition of themselves performing a difficult classical composition. He was  one of 30 high school students selected out of hundreds of applicants who auditioned for the opportunity.

Snyder was able to attend Master Classes led by artists the likes of Doc Severinsen, longtime band leader for the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and various other trumpet professional players from top symphonies across the United States.

Snyder, the son of Mark and Sonya Snyder, is a member of the Celebration Orchestra at Olive Baptist Church. For the past six years, he has studied trumpet privately from Darryl Evans and Tom Savage, both faculty members at Olive’s School of Performing Arts.

Pictured: Chris Snyder practices at the Olive Baptist Church School of the Performing Arts. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Portion Of Jefferson Avenue To Close

March 19, 2012

A portion of Jefferson Avenue is Century is expected to be closed Tuesday and remain closed for 10 days.

Jefferson Avenue will be closed from the Barnwell Lane intersection and east about 200 feet beginning at 7 a.m. Tuesday. The closure is due to the Jefferson Avenue and Pond Street drainage improvement project.

The road is expected to re-open by 5 p.m. on March 30.

Merle Kittrell

March 19, 2012

Merle Kittrell of Cantonment went to be with her Lord on Sunday, March 18, 2012. She will always be remembered as a loving daughter, sister, niece, aunt and great aunt.

She was preceded in death by her father, James W. Kittrell and her brother, James D. Kittrell.

Survivors include her mother, Lorraine Kittrell (Fred Peacock); sisters, Cindy Weaver, Cathy Rives (Reggie), and Debbie Funderburg; nieces, one nephew and many great nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be held Thursday, March 22, 2012, at Faith Chapel Funeral Home North. Visitation will be at 10 a.m. with services to begin at 11 a.m. with Reverend Darrell Black and Reverend John Kurtz officiating. Interment will follow at Lathram Chapel United Methodist Church Cemetery.

Active pallbearers will be Ken Irwin, Greg Carlisle, Keith Carlisle, Weston Weaver, Gabe Jackson and Billy Corley. Honorary pallbearer will be Reggie Rives.

Faith Chapel Funeral Home North is in charge of arrangements.

Eloise Linzy

March 19, 2012

Eloise Linzy, 91, of Jay went to be with the Lord on Sunday, March 18, 2012.

Mrs. Linzy was born September 8, 1920, to the late Cornelia Metcalf Burdick and Joseph Burdick in Hartford, AL. She was a wonderful and caring mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister, and aunt known to most as “Mama Weeze” or “Meeze”.  She was a member of Jay First Baptist Church. Mrs. Linzy worked for many years with Sheltex Manufacturing in Flomaton and Brewton, later devoting her days to helping tend to her grandchildren and creating many cherished childhood memories for each of them. She always enjoyed having company and rarely missed a field trip or gathering with the Jolly Jay’s church group.

She was preceded in death by her husband Bernice Linzy (1976); brother, Joseph Floyd Burdick; sister, Louise Burdick Gentry; two nieces, Betty Burdick Gatwood, and Jean McCurdy Grantham.

She is survived by her two sons, Bruce Ray Linzy (Mary Jim) and Joe Max Linzy (Elaine); one daughter, Linda Linzy Carden (Jack); six grandchildren, Bruce J. Linzy (Tammy), Brian Carden, Leigha Linzy Diamond, Gregory Carden, Jody Linzy, Steven Linzy; nine great-grandchildren, Cory Carden, Jordan Linzy, Malloray Diamond, Brooke Linzy, Jake Carden, Madeline Carden, Brenna Linzy, Lyric Linzy, Lauren Diamond; one sister, Lillian McCurdy (Leonard); one niece, Ginger McCurdy Rumbley (Charles), and one nephew, Gene Burdick (Hildegard).

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, March 22, 2012, at Jay First Baptist church with Dr. Jerry Keese, Bro. Earle Greene, and Pastor Will Rushing officiating. Interment will follow in Jay Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Visitation will be held Wednesday, March 21, 2012, from 6-9 p.m. at Jay Funeral Home.

Jay Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Jim Allen 1st Graders Present ‘BUGZ’

March 19, 2012

First grade students at Jim Allen Elementary School recently presented the musical “BUGZ” with plenty of singing and dancing. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Harry Edward Kelley, Sr.

March 19, 2012

Harry Edward Kelley, Sr., a resident of Georgiana, AL, died Sunday, March 18, 2012.

Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 21, 2012, at Johnson Funeral Home Chapel in Georgiana with Pastor Randy Harvill officiating. Burial will follow in Brushey Creek Cemetery in Georgiana, AL, with Johnson Funeral Home directing arrangements.

Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, March 20, 2012, at Johnson Funeral Home.

Mr. Kelley is survived by daughter and son-in-law, Susan and Frankie Schofield, Georgiana; granddaughters, Samantha Kelley, Tabitha Kelley, Christine Melton and Ivana Schofield, all of Greenville, AL; grandson, Isaac Schofield, Greenville; great grandson, Harry Landon Bethel, Greenville; and great granddaughter, Addalynn Melton, Greenville.

Johnson Funeral Home Chapel in Georgiana is in charge of arrangements.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Redistricting Begins

March 19, 2012

Sharkey’s restaurant had just gone back to regular hours in the Capitol when lawmakers returned again this week to redraw political boundaries stricken a week earlier by the state’s highest court.

Though likely not to draw the crowds that kept the 10th Floor coffee bar pumping espresso at a Neapolitan clip, the special session on reapportionment did its part to extend the capitol’s busy season, assuring another week of more people in suits than kids in school groups.

The mission? Redraw at least a handful of state Senate districts that the Florida Supreme Court said did not adhere to a constitutional amendment meant to ensure that the most political of processes – the redrawing of political boundaries – was done in a non-political manner.

While the House apparently accomplished the task with Solomon-like effect, the 40-member Senate’s plan was rejected in a 5-2 ruling by the court.

While Republican leaders returned to fight another day, former state Sen. Nancy Argenziano dropped her lance midweek after a circuit judge ruled she cannot run for Congress as a Democrat The quotable former Republican had challenged her exclusion from what is already a crowded field of Democrats hoping to unseat freshman Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Southerland.

Other than that, the capital city was largely quiet following a legislative session that brought a smile to the face of Gov. Rick Scott, whose wish list was largely filled.

REDISTRICTING BEGINS

Following an expected course of action, the Florida Senate began looking Wednesday for ways to respond to the Florida Supreme Court’s decision to throw out the upper chamber’s redistricting maps, opening an extraordinary session to repair the plan.

Unlike the House, which received the high court’s blessing, the Senate plan did not comply with provisions of Amendment 5, which requires lawmakers to draw compact districts that favor no party or candidate.

Senate leaders said the court affirmed the lion’s share of the Senate map by specifically citing just eight districts in its ruling. Changes could be narrowly aimed at fixing those districts – though minor changes in a district’s lines, by necessity, affect neighboring districts.

Still, the Senate said it will try to hone in mostly on the eight problem areas.

“If you know that 32 seats have met the criteria, why upset those 32 if you possibly can (avoid it)?” said Senate President Mike Haridopolos, R-Merritt Island.

Critics, however, said that might not prove possible.

“There is no such thing as tweaking the map,” said Florida Democratic Party chairman Rod Smith.

Along with the physical lines, the numbering of the districts is also a disputed factor. All 40 Senate districts are up for re-election this year, meaning that some senators will be elected to two-year terms and some to four-year terms.

Because of that, the districts can be numbered in such a way that most members of the chamber could serve for up to 10 years — longer than the constitutional, eight-year term limit for lawmakers.

The question now is how to allocate the numbers – in other words, how many and which should get an extra two years.

Justices said that was a problem with the plan too.

“Adopting a renumbering system that significantly advantages incumbents by increasing the length of time that they may serve by two years most assuredly favors incumbents,” Justice Barbara Pariente wrote, referring to one of the things the new amendments proscribe, helping out current seatholders. “Further, purposefully manipulating the numbering of the districts in order to allow incumbents to serve in excess of eight years would also appear to frustrate the intent of the voters when the term limits amendment was adopted.”

But in his dissent, Chief Justice Charles Canady said the majority was reaching — noting that the length of the terms doesn’t actually make it easier for any member of the Senate to win re-election.

“The numbering of the Senate districts is totally unrelated to any advantage incumbent senators will obtain vis-a-vis challenger candidates,” Canady wrote.

The session was barely noticeable this week – because lawmakers didn’t really do much. The new version of the Senate maps will be drawn up by staff this weekend, with a discussion of it and vote on it planned for Tuesday in the Senate Reapportionment Committee. With a floor vote in the Senate planned by the end of the week, the House would then be able to follow suit with a pro forma vote on the new plan by the end of the month.

COURT: ARGENZIANO CAN’T RUN AS A DEM.

For at least one candidate, the upcoming decision over whether the state drew Congressional boundaries in a fair way will have little effect because the former Republican found out this week she can’t run in the party with which she now identifies.

Argenziano wanted to join a Democratic primary field that now includes state Rep. Leonard Bembry, former Sen. Al Lawson, attorney Alvin Peters and environmental activist Jay Liles in the bid to unseat Southerland..

Argenziano, a political moderate who has done well with independent voters, had hoped she could do well in a race in which a plurality would be enough to advance into the general election.

She sued over a state elections law overhaul last year that requires candidates who want to run as a member of one party to have not been a member of another party for at least one year before qualifying – about 17 months before an election.

Circuit Court Judge James Shelfer said Argenziano did not prove that she had a “fundamental right” to run as a Democrat — something that would have required the state to prove that the elections law was constitutional. And, she had not proven the law was unconstitutional.

After having some time to think, following the ruling, Argenziano said she would not continue to fight the law.

“The cost to appeal is too much, as well as the time involved,” she wrote on her Facebook page. She’ll likely still run as a member of the Independent Party.

While Argenziano continues to think about a new job, many Floridians have already found one.

Statistics released this week show the state’s unemployment rate in January fell to its lowest level in three years. The 9.6 percent rate was 0.3 percentage points lower than December and a hefty 1.3 points below January 2011.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “Contrary to what Senator (Don) Gaetz suggests, the score is not 32-8. The score is 0-1.” Florida Democratic Chairman Rod Smith talking about the Republican way of looking at its loss in the Supreme Court over the district maps, versus the Democrats’ perspective.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Lawmakers returned for an extraordinary session to redraw state Senate maps after the chamber’s initial attempt got shot down by the Supreme Court.

By The News Service of Florida

Escambia Murder Under Investigation

March 18, 2012

An overnight murder in Escambia County is under investigation.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office responded to a fight at the Oakwood Terrace Apartments off Truman Avenue about 1 a.m Sunday. They did not find anyone hurt at the apartments.

But someone had driven 22-year-old Shernique Kemp to Sacred Heart Hospital where she died from multiple stab wounds. Authorities said she received the injuries in the Oakwood Terrace fight.

Kemp was a resident of Merito Street, several miles from Oakwood Terrace. Deputies are not sure who stabbed her, and their investigation is continuing.

Senate Maps Carve Out New Escambia, Santa Rosa Districts

March 18, 2012

The chairman of the Senate Reapportionment Committee unveiled a new proposal for his chamber’s legislative districts Saturday in an effort to answer criticisms from the Florida Supreme Court, which rejected the original plan last week.

The plan creates a new District 1 for Escambia and Santa Rosa counties that also includes a portion of northern Okaloosa County — and Baker, the home of Sen. Greg Evers.

Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, said the new maps would meet the rules laid out in the anti-gerrymandering Fair Districts Amendments approved by voters in a 2010 referendum.

“The districts were redrawn, along with any affected districts, in accordance with constitutional standards as defined by the Supreme Court,” Gaetz wrote in a memo accompanying the release.

The Supreme Court threw out the plan because of problems in eight districts, though Gaetz’s plan would also shift other lines to offset population changes in districts struck down by the ruling. All Senate districts are supposed to have relatively equal populations under both the Fair Districts standards and the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution.

The previously-drawn Panhandle districts of Gaetz and Evers were struck down for being drawn horizontally instead of vertically. The new map would align the two districts more vertically, but would keep Gaetz, the Senate president-designate, and Evers from a faceoff by splitting Okaloosa County in half horizontally along I-10, with the exception of aligning Crestview with the more southern District 3.

Under the plan unveiled by Gaetz on Saturday, 25 of the Senate districts would have been won by Gov. Rick Scott in the 2010 election; Alex Sink, his Democratic opponent, would have carried 15. The original map had a 26-14 edge for Republicans, who currently hold a 28-12 advantage in the upper chamber.

Gaetz also said that the numbering system for Florida districts — thrown out because it would have given many of the chamber’s members up to 10 years in office instead of the constitutionally-mandated eight — would be determined by a pair of public, random drawings.

The Florida Democratic Party, which argued against the maps at the Supreme Court, blasted the new plan.

“The map Sen. Don Gaetz has proposed brings us no closer to complying with the court’s ruling and is nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt by the GOP Senate leadership to stall the implementation of Fair Districts and cling to their gerrymandered power,” said Chairman Rod Smith in a statement issued by the party. “Not only have they thwarted the will of 63-percent of Florida voters, they are now thumbing their nose at Florida’s Supreme Court.”

Gaetz said lawmakers should offer any amendments to the plan by noon Monday; the Senate Reapportionment Committee is set to meet Tuesday.

The News Service Florida contributed to this report.

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