Summer Of 2012 Was Wettest On Record

September 6, 2012

The summer of 2012 was the wettest on record for the Pensacola area , according to data released Wednesday by the National Weather Service.

The Pensacola Regional Airport, the official recording location for the county, recorded 39.19 inches of rain — nearly 15 inches above normal. That broke the old record of 37.04 inches set in 1994. The high rain totals were thanks to a June flood and rains from Debbie and Isaac.

The heavy rains also kept temperatures near normal. The average summer temperature was 81.9 degrees just above the normal of 81.5 degrees.

Pictured: June flooding at the Escambia County Jail. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Bill Clinton Blasts GOP, Hails Obama At DNC

September 6, 2012

In a Democratic National Convention address that combined withering attacks on Republicans with a full endorsement of President Barack Obama, former President Bill Clinton delivered a point-by-point repudiation of the GOP case for defeating Obama and said the nation was better off now than when Obama was elected.

Clinton acknowledged that many people were still feeling the pain of a slow economic recovery, but said things were turning around.

“If you will renew the president’s contract, you will feel it,” Clinton promised.

He also discussed the Republican’s attempts to use the economic downturn as a reason to throw Obama out, laying blame for the crash on the GOP. Clinton summed up their case this way: “We left him a total mess, he hasn’t cleaned it up fast enough so fire him, put us back in.”

The campaign of GOP nominee Mitt Romney shot back, slamming Obama for looking to Clinton to validate his candidacy.

“Americans deserve a president willing to run on his own accomplishments, and not the record of a predecessor,” spokeswoman Amanda Hennenberg said.

In her own speech, Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren, a star among the Democratic base for her work on consumer protection, also nodded toward the troubled economic times.

“People feel like the system is rigged against them,” Warren said. “And here’s the painful part: They’re right.”

Clinton formally placed Barack Obama’s name up for nomination on Wednesday night.  Obama will accept his nomination Thursday night during a nationally-televised speech. The speech was planned for the city’s 74,000-seat outdoor football stadium, but the threat of severe weather has moved the event back inside the Time Warner Cable Arena, the site of the rest of the week’s activities.

By The News Service of Florida

Learn More About Starting Your Own Cottage Food Business

September 6, 2012

Escambia County Extension will host a “Cottage Foods: Starting Your Own Cottage Food Business” program for those that wish to sell food made in their homes.

The program will cover pricing, marketing, food safety, demonstrations and include a time for questions and answers with the Extension Service Small Farms and FCS Staff. Farms or individuals interested or currently marketing processed foods are encouraged to attend.

Cottage foods by definition are foods made in the home for resale that do not require refrigeration. These include but are not limited to jams, jellies, preserves, honey, cakes and pies.

The program will be held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, September 11 at the Escambia County Extension Office at 3740 Stefani Road in Cantonment. The $5 cost of the program will cover materials and handouts. For registration, contact Fran Lainhart at (850) 475-5230 or via email at lainhaf@ufl.edu to register.

Isaac Remnant May Spark New Tropical System in the Gulf of Mexico

September 6, 2012

A remnant piece of Hurricane Isaac has re-emerged into the Gulf of Mexico and has been dubbed Invest 90L by the National Hurricane Center. The system is currently disorganized but the NHC gives it a 40 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone. If a tropical storm were to form, it would be named Nadine, as the remnant was not from the main circulation of Isaac which moved into the Northeast.

The Hurricane Hunters are scheduled to fly into the system Friday afternoon, if necessary, to investigate the system.

New Suit Filed Against Florida Senate Redistricting Plan

September 6, 2012

The League of Women Voters, Common Cause and other groups are challenging the Senate’s redistricting map in a new lawsuit that alleges it violated the new constitutional requirements against using political considerations in drawing boundaries.

The challenge was filed in circuit court in Tallahassee and alleges that the Senate drew a map which “reflected blatant incumbent favoritism and partisan gamemanship.”

The map was a second attempt by the Senate, after initially having its efforts rejected by the Florida Supreme Court. But the second map – the one being challenged in the new suit – has survived a challenge in the Suprme Court already, though the plaintiffs say that wasn’t a full review of the issues, but was merely a “facial” review.

“The Legislature drew districts that will keep incumbent senators in office, assist incumbent House members with election to the Senate, impact internal Senate leaderhip battles, and make gains for the controlling party,” the lawsuit alleges.

Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, the incoming Senate president who drove the Republican redistricting effort in the Senate, was dismissive. “Today’s filing is nothing more than summer re-runs of the same complaints that were rejected by the Florida Supreme Court,” Gaetz said.

By The News Service of Florida

Football Games Tonight At Northview, Tate, Ernest Ward

September 6, 2012

Three North Escambia schools have football games scheduled for tonight.

Northview High School’s junior varsity has added a game to the schedule. The JV Chiefs will host Pensacola Catholic at 6:30 p.m. in Bratt.

The Tate High Aggie Bowl will kick off at 6:30, with the Aggie junior varsity taking on the freshman team.

Ernest Ward Middle School will open their season at 6 p.m. at home in Walnut Hill against Perdido.

Pictured: Football action at Ernest Ward Middle School last year. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Judge Dismisses Challenge To Pill Mill Law

September 6, 2012

A federal judge has dismissed a constitutional challenge to a 2010 state law aimed at cracking down on so-called “pill mills.”  U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle, in two orders , rejected the case filed by a patient, two doctors and two health clinics.

The 2010 law included such steps as registration requirements for pain-management clinics and limits on the amounts of controlled substances that doctors could dispense to patients who pay by cash, check or credit card. The Legislature in 2011 passed another law that revamped parts of the 2010 measure.

Hinkle closed the case after issuing an order that largely addressed the issues. He wrote that Florida has a “legitimate, indeed sometimes compelling, interest in regulating the distribution of prescription pain medications” and that it has leeway constitutionally in how it does so.

“Information available to the Florida Legislature in 2010, when it adopted the statutes now at issue, indicated that abuse of prescription pain medication was an acute and increasing problem that had caused a substantial number of deaths and other problems in the state,” Hinkle wrote. “Pill mills were out of control. The state enacted the challenged statutes to address the situation.”

By The News Service of Florida

Campaign Would Connect Vets To Millions In Unused Benefits

September 6, 2012

Only a fraction of Florida’s 1.6 million military veterans get the benefits they’ve earned by serving, leading the Department of Veterans’ Affairs to launch a campaign to find those who should be getting millions of dollars left on the table.

Many of the state’s veterans are paying high premiums or out-of-pocket for health care and other services they should be getting for free from the government, retired Army Col. Mike Prendergast, director of department, said Wednesday. And many vets and their family members get services via other programs that cost Florida taxpayers needlessly.

“Any type of health care, counseling, education or other services that are out there (that veterans are getting through other government programs), that could get paid for by the U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs, in effect means that potentially, our taxpayers are paying for that service twice,” Prendergast said.

Florida has the third –largest population of veterans, but only 260,000 of the 1.6 million are drawing the benefits to which they’re entitled the agency says.

The campaign will have a special focus on Florida’s 449,000 Vietnam-era vets, who make up more than a quarter of all veterans statewide.

One of them, Commander Mark Alvarez of the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Tallahassee, said Vietnam vets are often wary due to how they were treated when they returned from an unpopular war.

“We weren’t that well received,” he said. “But times have changed.”

Alvarez also said that veterans’ services, both federal and state, are much improved since that time.

“The Department of Veterans’ Affairs is reaching out more than ever to veterans, to let them know what’s out there and how they can help,” Alvarez said. “And I think we’re getting better educated and not being so reluctant.”

Homelessness is another problem for veterans, especially those of the Vietnam era. But according to Prendergast, the numbers have dropped in Florida thanks to an aggressive campaign by the federal government, dovetailed with state and local veterans’ programs.

“Just in the past year, our numbers have dwindled by about 2,000 who have reintegrated into their communities,” he said.

The state campaign is also reaching out to 140,000 women vets and to 231,000 veterans of Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom.

“Our needs are very different, depending on our stages of life,” said former Army Capt. Courtney Heidelberg, who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

For instance, James Brian Fox, a returning Air Force vet enrolled at Florida State University, said he’s now able to get a higher education thanks to paid tuition and five years of free health care.

“To all the veterans out there who are thinking of maybe separating and going to school,” he said, “there are people here waiting to help you.”

Fox also noted that the veterans agency’s outreach campaign includes new media, which he praised for its effectiveness in connecting with his contemporaries.

“The mobile app is great,” he said. “Young people use the Internet for absolutely everything nowadays.”

Prendergast urged the loved ones of Florida vets to help them qualify for services – especially Vietnam-era vets. They might not be ill now, he said, but in ten years they might be suffering from a disability related to their time in Southeast Asia, where they could have been exposed to herbicides like Agent Orange.

“Whatever branch of service we earned our stripes in,” he said, “we never leave a man behind – or a woman.”

By The News Service of Florida

Louise Roy

September 6, 2012

Our beloved mother Louise Roy passed away on August 31, 2012. She was born September 12, 1934, to George and Thelma Coleman. She was a devoted wife to Claude Roy for 54 years and an outstanding mother to her four children, Claudette, Jerry, Judy and Dennis. She was a loving “Granny” to her grandchildren and great grandchildren and also a caring sister to her five siblings.

A memorial to celebrate her life will be held on September 7, 2012 at Faith Chapel North in Cantonment, FL. at 6:30 p.m.. A gathering of friends will be held after the memorial service.

She will be missed dearly.

Faith Chapel Funeral Home North is in charge of arrangements.

Arrest Made After Escambia County Pastor Shot At His Church

September 5, 2012

An Escambia County pastor was shot in the parking lot of his church Wednesday evening, and deputies have the suspect in custody.

West Pensacola Baptist Church Pastor Laddie Pierce was shot about 6 p.m. as he was headed to a Bible study. He was transported by ambulance to Baptist Hospital in Pensacola. His injuries are not  life threatening.

Randall G. Markham, 72, was taken into custody at the scene. He was booked into the Escambia County Jail without bond.

Deputies said Markham and Pierce were involved in an argument outside the church before the shooting. Markham, deputies said, then pulled a firearm and shot the pastor in the leg. There were no other injuries.

Markham, a member of the church’s congregation, admitted to deputies that he shot the pastor because he believed his wife was having an affair with Pierce. Markham told deputies that “his intent and purpose was to shoot Pierce in the groin area one time without killing him”.

“The pastor was shot by a member of our church who suffers with mental health issues. Pastor is doing well and is expected to make a full recovery,” read a statement issued Thursday by the church.

West Pensacola Baptist Church is located on West Jackson street.

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