Resurfacing Begins Today On Highway 89 South Of Jay

June 14, 2012

Today, a contractor will begin resurfacing Highway 89 south of Jay. For the next two weeks,   motorists can expect daily lane closures starting around 6 a.m. between County Road 178 and the city limits of Jay.

There will be no work on Father’s Day,  Sunday, June 17.

A 7.5 mile stretch of Highway 89 from the Jay town limits to County Road 178 (Spanish Trail) will be resurfaced. Weather permitting, the entire project is expected to last about eight months. Access to homes and businesses will be maintained at all times, according to the Florida Department of Transportation.

The total project, which includes resurfacing, drainage improvements and the construction of paved shoulders, will cost $3.2 million.

New Jobs: Two Area Family Dollar Stores Opening This Year

June 14, 2012

Construction is continuing on new Family Dollar stores in Century and Jay, with one store set to be open with a couple of months.

The Century store is scheduled to open in early August, and the Jay store should be open in time for the holidays, according to Josh Braverman, communications director for Family Dollar.

“We look forward to opening our stores in Century and Jay,” Braverman said.

Both the Century and Jay stores will average 8-10 employees. Applications will be accepted online at www.familydollar.com.

Family Dollar currently operates 7,200 stores in 45 states with about 50,000 team members.  The small format convenience and value retailer offers a mix of everyday use name brand products including food and paper products, household items, seasonal products, clothing and more.

Pictured above and below: Construction continues this week on Family Dollar on North Century Boulevard, just south of the Food Giant in Century. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Lawmakers Could OK Prison Health Privatization

June 14, 2012

With a judge still deciding whether the plan is constitutional, a legislative budget panel this month is expected to consider moving forward with the privatization of prison health services.

The Department of Corrections has requested that the Legislative Budget Commission, a joint panel of House and Senate members, take up the privatization issue June 26 and allow signing contracts with firms that would manage inmate health care.

The request comes as Leon County Circuit Judge Kevin Carroll gets ready to rule on a challenge to a legislative move last year that directed the department to go through the contracting process. The Florida Nurses Association and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees argue lawmakers violated the state constitution by putting the privatization plan in budget fine print — known as “proviso” language — instead of approving it in a more-typical bill.

Carroll heard arguments in the case May 29 but has not issued a ruling. The budget proviso calls for the department to get approval from the Legislative Budget Commission before finalizing contracts.

It was not immediately clear Wednesday what would happen if Carroll rules that the Legislature’s use of proviso language was unconstitutional. But one likely factor in taking the issue to the Legislative Budget Commission this month is that the proviso language expires with the July 1 start of the new fiscal year.

“The qualified bids received substantially meet or exceed the requirements in proviso,” the agency said in a document submitted to the Legislature. “The department is requesting Legislative Budget Commission approval of the selected health-care awards so the agency can move forward executing the health-care contracts.”

Carroll even raised questions during the May 29 hearing about what happens if the legal issues remain unresolved at the end of the current fiscal year. Regardless of when he rules, Carroll said he expects the losing party to appeal.

But Jonathan Glogau, an attorney for the state, said Carroll needed to decide whether the contracting process should go forward.

“With all due respect your honor, you’re not off the hook,” Glogau said during the hearing.

M. Stephen Turner, an attorney for the nurses association, said Wednesday that the state’s use of proviso language might leave little choice but to take the issue to the Legislative Budget Commission before July 1. But he described the way lawmakers have tried to make the privatization changes as a “mess.”

“What they’re doing doesn’t make any sense if you’re a logical person,” Turner said.

If Carroll sides with the nurses association and the employees’ union, an appeal by the state could lead to a stay of his ruling. That could give the Legislative Budget Commission a legal argument for allowing the department to sign the contracts.

Attorneys for the state and potential contractors — Corizon, Inc., and Wexford Health Sources — also have argued that the department could privatize health services without the proviso language. The opponents, meanwhile, contend that lawmakers would need to make changes to state law before privatization could take place.

The department in April recommended that Corizon receive a contract for prisons in North and Central Florida and that Wexford receive a contract in South Florida. The proviso language required cost savings of at least 7 percent compared to 2009-10 inmate-health expenses — a requirement that the department says the contracts would meet.

But privatization is a highly controversial issue, in part, because employees fear they will lose jobs or see pay or benefit cuts if the state contracts out the services. Another Leon County circuit judge, Jackie Fulford, last year blocked a legislative plan to privatize management of prisons throughout the southern half of the state, ruling that lawmakers improperly used proviso language to make the change.

By The News Service of Florida

Flag Day: A Betsy Ross History Lesson

June 14, 2012

[VOA] It’s going to be a busy day at Betsy Ross’s house in Philadelphia on Thursday. She won’t be there, since she died in 1836, but hundreds of tourists will be going through her house.

You see, Thursday is Flag Day in the United States. The unofficial holiday commemorates the adoption of the stars-and-stripes design of the American flag by the Continental Congress 235 years ago, on June 14, 1777.

According to lore, the Ross House is the birthplace of the nation’s flag. That’s open to debate, but it’s a story that schoolbooks still tell.

Betsy Ross was a seamstress, busy upholstering furniture in Philadelphia, which was the focal point of the American revolution against British rule.

The Declaration of Independence by the colonists was signed there, and so was the new nation’s Constitution after independence was won.

Widowed when her husband, a member of the local militia, was killed in a gunpowder explosion, Betsy Ross often mended the clothes of the rebels’ leader and future U.S. president, George Washington.

According to what some say is history and others a stretch of what really happened, Washington asked Ross to design and sew the new nation’s flag.

The story was promoted by Ross’s grandson, who wrote that Betsy Ross had “made with her hands the first flag.”

She became a role model for girls – a shining example of women’s contributions to the nation’s history.

Most research indicates that Ross did sew the first flag.

She’s credited with substituting artful five-point white stars for six-pointed ones in the upper-left blue field.

But many other accounts indicate George Washington brought the design to Ross and simply asked her to stitch it together.

In a letter, Washington wrote: “We take the stars from Heaven, the red from our mother country, separating it by white stripes, thus showing that we have separated from her.  And the white stripes shall go down to posterity [as] representing liberty.”

That’s deeper thinking than a humble seamstress would have come up with, according to those who doubt that Betsy Ross created the first American flag from scratch.

Pensacola Reaches Labor Agreement With Union

June 14, 2012

The City of Pensacola and American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3253 have reached an agreement on a new three-year contract, which includes a number of pension reforms expected to cut the city’s unfunded pension liability by nearly $5 million and reduce annual pension costs.

The agreement would cover the city’s 145 general service employees represented by AFSCME. Union members ratified the contract Tuesday, and Mayor Ashton Hayward plans to submit the agreement to the City Council for consideration at their July meeting.

“I want to thank Local 3253 president Kimberly Aguiar and her team for negotiating in good faith,” said Hayward. “With our unfunded pension liability and annual pension costs threatening the city’s long-term fiscal stability, I appreciate AFSCME’s engagement and willingness to help us take action on these critical issues.”

In exchange for wage considerations, the union agreed to several changes in how pension benefits are calculated, as well as to changes in the Deferred Retirement Option Program (DROP) and survivor benefits to conform to those offered by the Florida Retirement System (FRS). The pension changes will help reduce the Pensacola’s annual pension costs and unfunded pension liability, which in recent years has ballooned to more than $116 million.

In return, the city will provide a 10% wage increase for AFSCME-represented employees, to be distributed over the next three years. “When we ask our employees to accept changes to their retirement benefits, it’s only fair that we use a portion of the savings to adjust compensation packages for those affected,” said Hayward.

If approved by the City Council, the new collective bargaining agreement will take effect October 1.

Pictured: Pensacola Mayor Ashton Hayward with members of AFSCME Local 3253. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Wahoos Walk With 4-3 Win

June 14, 2012

Blue Wahoos catcher Mark Fleury laid down a suicide squeeze bunt to score right fielder Josh Fellhauer from third in the bottom of the 11th to give Pensacola a 4-3 walk off victory over the Mobile BayBears on Wednesday night at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium.

The win gives the Fish a team-high fifth straight victory to improve Pensacola’s record to 32-33 in 2012, while the defeat drops Mobile to a 38-28 record this year. Before the game, Oakland Athletics first round draft pick and Pace High School grad Addison Russell was honored and threw out a ceremonial first pitch.

After Fellhauer was hit by a pitch to begin the 11th frame, CF Andrew Means drew a free pass and LF Yordanys Perez was intentionally walked to set the stage for Fleury with one out. The Blue Wahoos backstop then put down a bunt to the third base side as Fellhauer charged home and scored without a play to cue the celebration.

Pensacola also started the game’s scoring in the opening frame with a single tally, marking the sixth time in eight contests the club has scored in the first inning. CF Ryan LaMarre led off with a single and was brought home from first when SS Didi Gregorius doubled to right center to put the Blue Wahoos ahead 1-0.

Mobile however, would counter in the fifth with two scores of their own to take their first lead of the game at 2-1. LF Dan Kaczrowski started the rally with a single, moved to second on SS Wladimir Sutil’s walk and then third on a fielder’s choice, before coming plateward on a sacrifice fly off the bat of CF Evan Frey. Sutil subsequently scored on 2B David Nick’s run-scoring double to push the BayBears in front.

The Blue Wahoos then answered right back to draw the game even at 2-2 in the bottom half of the frame by playing small ball. Fleury began the inning with a double and was advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt before being sent home on LaMarre’s sacrifice fly to center.

Mobile then grabbed back the lead in the seventh courtesy of a solo shot from 3B Matt Davidson, which was his Southern League leading 15thh of the year, while the Fish tied it up in the next inning. Following a lead off double from Gregorius, and a sacrifice bunt to move him to third, RF Josh Fellhauer delivered with an RBI single to right to once again even the margin.

Fleury (3-4, 1 R, 1 2B, 1 RBI) recorded three hits in the game to lead Pensacola, while Gregorius (2-4, 1 R, 2 2B, 1 RBI, 1 BB) and 3B David Vidal (2-5, 1 2B) each collected a pair of base knocks. Kaczrowski (3-5, 1 R, 1 BB) paced the BayBears with his three base hits, while Davidson (2-4, 1 R, 1 3B, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 1 BB) and C Rossmel Perez (2-5, 1 2B) also notched multi-hit efforts.

Seven different Pensacola relievers held Mobile to just four hits and a run in their 6.2 innings of work in support of starter Tim Crabbe (4.1 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 7 SO), with RHP Curtis Partch (1.0 IP) earning his third win of the year, while Mobile LHP Eury De La Rosa (1.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB) suffered the loss after allowing the final run. BayBears starter Gaby Hernandez (6.0 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 3 SO) did not receive a decision despite yielding just two earned runs on six hits in six frames.

The Blue Wahoos and BayBears will square again Thursday night, with first pitch scheduled for 7:05 pm. LHP Tony Cingrani, the Reds’ No. 15 prospect according to Baseball America is slated to take the hill for the Fish, while Mobile is expected to counter with LHP Tyler Skaggs, who was tabbed as the third-best prospect in the Arizona Diamondbacks’ system, and the 14th best prospect overall before the season.

By Andrew Green

Pictured top: Mark Fleury’s suicide squeeze in the 11th gave the Wahoos a 4-3 walk off win. Photo by Chris Nelson for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Century Awards Contract For Housing Rehab

June 14, 2012

The Town of Century has been awarded a grant-funded contract to rehabilitate another private home in the town.

The town was awarded a $650,000 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) last year to rehabilitate or replace  homes that are currently occupied by persons of low or moderate income. The town also received $100,000 in Residential Construction Mitigation Program Funds for hurricane retrofits.

The latest project contract was $12,698, awarded to Bill Walther Construction, Inc. The bid includes $5,698 in rehabilitation costs and $7,000 in hurricane retrofits for the home at 301 East Hecker Road

According to the Escambia County Property Appraiser, the house owned by Richard and Eva Carter has a taxable value of $5,525. The 1,264 square foot home was constructed in 1913.

The town has previously awarded about $430,000 in contracts to rehabilitate eight other homes in the town.

Pictured: The residence at 301 East Hecker Road in Century. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

4-H Offers A “Growing Pizza” Program For Kids 8-12

June 14, 2012

Escambia County 4-H invites kids to participate in a “Growing a Pizza” program on Tuesday, June 19, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., at the Escambia County Extension office, at3740 Stefani Road.  This program is open to kids ages eight to 12.

Participants will learn about how pizza is “grown,” tour the Extension pizza garden, play some pizza games, learn about the nutrients in pizza, make their own healthy pizza for lunch and take home their own “pizza” plant.

The cost of this program is $5 which can be paid the day of the event or prior to the program. Participating youth will need to bring clothes that are appropriate for both indoor and outdoor activities.  Participants must be registered by Friday, June 15.

For more information or to pre-register, contact Angela Hinkle, at ahinkle@ufl.edu or by telephone at the Extension office  at (850) 475-5230.

Free 151st Army Band Concert On June 18

June 14, 2012

The 151st Army Band will perform a free concert next Monday, June 18 at Pensacola’s Community Maritime Park. The performance will begin at 6:00 p.m. at the park’s Hunter Amphitheater.

The amphitheater overlooks Pensacola Bay and can accommodate nearly 5,000 visitors. Lawn chairs and blankets are welcome, but coolers and glass containers are prohibited. Food and drink vendors will be available during the concert.

The 151st Army Band is based in Montgomery. A unit of the Alabama Army National Guard, the band consists of “citizen soldiers” who meet two days a month for rehearsals and performances. The band performs throughout the United States for military and civilian functions, and has traveled to Costa Rica and Columbia performing on United States Embassy Goodwill tours.

The concert marks the first performance at the park, after the weekend’s inclement weather rained out the planned Grand Opening celebration. The canceled performance by the Charlie Daniels Band will be rescheduled.

Pictured: The 151ast Army Band. Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

VIDEO: Pensacola Blue Wahoos Kidnap Mobile Baybears’ Mascot

June 14, 2012

The Pensacola Blue Wahoos have released a video of the kidnapping of Baby Bear, the Mobile BayBears’ mascot, in anticipation of the Bay to Bay Series in Pensacola that continues through Sunday.

Courtesy Pensacola Blue Wahoos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

(If you do not see the video above, it is because your work or home firewall is blocking external videos.)

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