Florida Sheriffs Promise To Protect Second Amendment Rights

February 9, 2013

Amidst calls for stricter gun control laws, the Florida Sheriff’s Association is speaking out in favor of gun rights.

At their recent conference in Destin, the Florida Sheriff’s Association passed a resolution that promises to prevent any infringement on Second Amendment rights to bear arms.

“Florida Sheriffs have continually supported the rights guaranteed under the Constitution of the United States, including the right to bear arms, and Florida Sheriffs affirm they will not assist, support or condone any unconstitutional infringement of that right,” the proclamation states.

To read the entire proclamation from the Florida Sheriff’s Association, click here.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Hello Managed Long Term Care

February 9, 2013

Florida this week won approval to begin shifting low income, long-term care residents to managed-care plans amid broader questions about whether it will go along with the federal government in expanding Medicaid.

Federal approval this week of the long-term care changes brought Republican backers a step closer to the Holy Grail — a federal waiver allowing the state to shift virtually all Medicaid patients to HMOs or similar plans.

Meanwhile, lawmakers returned to preparation for a session that although not scheduled to begin for more than a month feels in full swing.

Pensions, foreclosures, and ethics reform were just some of the big issues already being tackled by lawmakers. While those issues, – along with the death penalty, search and seizure laws and juvenile justice, sparked lively debate, Gov. Rick Scott’s budget proposal got a yawn from many lawmakers, or polite acknowledgement, along with more than a little skepticism.

The only chillier response, perhaps, was a House committee’s icy reaction to a bill repealing the state’s death penalty, which was known to be dead on arrival but sparked lively debate before being shelved for at least the year.

Outside the capital, Progress Energy Florida announced it would shut down its nuclear reactor in Crystal River after a botch do-it-yourself repair project damaged critical portions of the 35-year-old plant. Environmentalists, meanwhile, filed a legal challenge to a deal giving a pair of south Florida sugar growers 30-year leases north of the Everglades

MEDICAID WAIVER APPROVED

The week started off well for Scott and Republican leaders who have been wrangling with federal health care officials over how the state delivers medical care to low income and nursing home residents.

Federal officials on Monday approved a key part of Florida’s effort to transform its Medicaid program by allowing Medicaid-eligible seniors who need long-term care to be enrolled later this year in HMOs and another type of health plan known as a “provider service network.”

The Republican-controlled Legislature approved wide-ranging bills in 2011 aimed at shifting to a statewide managed-care system in Medicaid. The plan was to make the changes in two phases — first for seniors who need long-term care and then for the broader Medicaid population.

Backers of a statewide system argue it would help hold down Medicaid costs and better coordinate services for beneficiaries. But critics have long argued that the shift will result in managed-care plans squeezing care to save money.

Such Medicaid proposals require approval by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services before they can take effect.

PENSIONS

Legislators on both sides of the Capitol continued a two-track debate on retirement benefits for public workers. The Senate has taken the lead on how to handle the funding of some local pensions, while the House is pushing ahead with a bill on the state retirement system — a key priority for House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel.

In the Senate, lawmakers are working toward a consensus on giving cities more flexibility in using revenues from insurance premium taxes to fund police and firefighter pensions. But the effort is running into resistance from cities, which want to repeal any restrictions on which benefits they can pay with the tax revenue, in keeping with a new interpretation of the state law governing the funding of pensions following a dispute in Naples.

Lawmakers have signaled hesitance about that approach.

Anger on the part of employees and Democrats is more pronounced on the House bill dealing with state pensions. That bill would require workers hired on or after Jan. 1 to enroll in a 401(k)-style “defined contribution” plan instead of a traditional, “defined benefit” pension.

Supporters say moving now will allow them to avoid cutting current employees’ benefits. But opponents blasted Republicans for moving forward with the bill before a study on the effects of the proposal was complete.

SCOTT’S BUDGET MAKES THE ROUNDS

Gov. Scott’s $74.2 billion spending plan made the rounds this week and one of the centerpieces of the proposal, a $2,500 across-the-board raise for Florida public school teachers, was met with polite skepticism.

“The governor’s proposal seems to treat different employees differently, and we have some consternation about that as it relates to teachers being treated differently than corrections officers being treated differently than other state employees,” said House budget chairman Rep. Seth McKeel R-Lakeland.

Other aspects of Scott’s proposal, including sales tax cuts for manufacturers, appeared to fall on more receptive ears, but budget builders were careful not to commit too strongly to much.

FORECLOSURE BILL MOVES

The House this week took another crack at speeding up the foreclosure process, a controversial topic in a state that leads the nation in the percentage of homeowners facing losing their homes.

Sponsored by Rep. Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, the bill (HB 87) aims to shorten the time period involved in a foreclosure proceeding and relax restrictions on who can request an expedited procedure and the standards for what can be filed.

Passidomo said the bill would help remedy a problem that extends far beyond the state and of which the state has limited authority: the relationship between lenders and those who borrow from them.

The bill would reduce from five years to one the length of time a lender could pursue a claim after a foreclosure action and require lenders to provide more. The bankers are concerned about that.

Homeowner advocates, meanwhile, are skeptical of changes making it easier for a judge to forgo further proceedings if the paperwork is in order.

ETHICS/ELECTION BILLS INTRODUCED, ADVANCE

Lawmakers dealt with both election and ethics issues this week as they debated measures to expand early voting , more accurately track contributions and more aggressively investigate suspected unethical behavior.

A Senate ethics bill passed the Senate Community Affairs Committee on Wednesday, apparently queued up for quick action when lawmakers return in March. The measure (SB 2) would limit the jobs elected officials could take with state agencies, give the Ethics Commission more power to collect fines and strengthen conflict-of-interest laws.

The committee approved an amendment that would bar elected officials from taking a job with a government agency if the official knows he or she is getting the job because of their elected position.

On the finance front, the House Ethics and Elections Subcommittee heard testimony on a bill (HB 569) that would prevent committees of continuous existence, or CCEs, from accepting contributions after Aug. 1.

The bill, which is expected to come up for a vote in the committee on Monday, also raises individual contribution limits from $500 to $10,000. House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, has made getting rid of CCEs one of his main goals on ethics reform.

Early voting issues also came up with a bill (SB 80) by Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, to add more early voting days discussed in the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee. The bill is among a handful of measures in response to long voting lines in the November election.

COURT ACTIONS PENDING

Legal challenges to a recently penned Everglades agreement and a proposed utility rate hike were filed this week.

Environmentalists called on a state administrative law judge to rescind a pair of 30-year leases awarded to Florida Crystals and A. Duda and Sons on about 14,000 acres in the Everglades Agricultural Area.

The Florida Wildlife Federation filed the challenge with the Division of Administrative Hearings, saying the long-term leases will further degrade water quality in the River of Grass.

Meanwhile, Florida’s utility consumer watchdog filed a challenge with the Florida Supreme Court, arguing that a recently approved $350 million rate hike requested by Florida Power & Light is invalid.

The dispute focuses on a settlement that FPL reached in August with groups of major power users. That settlement, which did not include the Office of Public Counsel, served as the basis for the rate hike approved by regulators in December.

The Office of Public Counsel contends that such a settlement cannot move forward without its agreement.

OTHER BILLS TRAVELING

Bills dealing with texting while driving and the use of aerial drones by law enforcement also made headway this week.

The Senate Transportation Committee amended a texting ban bill (SB 52) by Sen. Nancy Detert, R-Venice, to allow texting while a driver is stopped at a red light or stuck in traffic. This is the fourth year Detert has sponsored a texting ban.

Bills barring the use of aerial drones by the police seemed to be on autopilot this week, with a House plan flying through its first committee without debate. The bill (HB 119) would prevent law enforcement officials from using drones without a warrant.

The measure, similar to SB 92 in the Senate – which is also moving quickly – is opposed by police and sheriffs, who say they want to make sure there are carve-outs for circumstances under which they would still be able to use drones.

STORY OF THE WEEK: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services approves a waiver allowing Florida to place Medicaid beneficiaries needing long-term care into managed care plans.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “This bill’s been around nearly as long as I’ve been alive.” Rep. Matt Caldwell, R-Lehigh Acres, who is 31, talking about the annual fight between optometrists and ophthalmologists about the things each profession is allowed to do.

By The News Service of Florida

Extension Service To Offer Beekeeping Course

February 9, 2013

Escambia County Extension will be hosting a four-week beekeeping in the Panhandle interactive video course. Classes will be held on Monday evenings from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Escambia County Extension office, 3740 Stefani Road in Cantonment, starting February 18. The cost of the course is $25 per person or $40 for a family which covers course materials and refreshments.

The couse schedule is as follows:

  • February 18 — Queen and Package Bee Production
  • February 25 — Nutrition/Immunity in Honey Bees
  • March 4 — Integrated Pest Management for Disease/Pest Control
  • March 11 — History and Theory of Honey Production

For more information or to register, contact Libbie Johnson at (850) 475-5230 or libbiej@ufl.edu. .

Joe Max Rowland, Sr.

February 9, 2013

Joe Max Rowland Sr., went to his eternal home on February 8, 2013, with his family at his side. He was a resident of Century for 27 years. Mr. Rowland was born July 29, 1932, in Ariton, AL. He was raised in Jay, working from a young age on the family cotton/peanut farm. He served his country in the U S Navy from 1952-1956 aboard the USS Floyd B Parks. He continued to serve in the Navy Reserve until 1960. He drove an employee bus to and from Chemstrand/Monsanto in Pensacola where he worked for several years. After leaving Monsanto he was a self-employed farmer in Wewahitchka, FL. He was also self-employed in the trucking industry most of his adult life until his retirement in 2006. He enjoyed the open road and meeting new friends along the way. Mr. Rowland was a member of Little Escambia Baptist Church. He favorite past time was fly fishing, however, he never found as much time as he would have liked to “go fishing”. So now he has laid down the worries and cares of this world he will be able to pursue this passion!

Mr. Roland is survived by his brothers, Harold (Flora) Rowland of Wewahitchka, Haywood (Carolyn) Rowland of Flomaton; former wife, Mary Colling of Jay; daughter and son-in-law Cherlyn and Mark McNamara of Brewton; stepchildren, Bubba (Robbie) Hammac and Kenny (Kay) Hammac of Century, Donna (Butch) Lewis of Molino,Priscilla (Earl) Forehand and Deborah Davis of Wewahitchka, Pasty Tindell of Panama City and many wonderful grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Bernice and Mary Rowland; former wives, Mamie Rowland and Ruth Rowland; son, Joe (Joey) Rowland, Jr.; daughter, Barbara Gortman and step son, Jimmy Strength.

Visitation will be held Sunday, February 10, 2012, from 2 p.m. until 3 p.m. at Jay Funeral Home. Funeral services will be at 3 p.m. with Rev. Douglas Hogg officiating and music by pianist, his grandson, Derek MaNamara. Burial will follow at Pine Level Baptist Church Cemetery.

Pallbearers are Daniel McNamara, Miles Hammac, Tim Fredericksen, Kenny Hammas,Jr, Jonathon Lewis , Christopher Rowland, John Malett Rowland and Adam Dudney.

Honorary pallbearers are Barnett Hendricks, Bo Brantley, Truss Shell and members of Little Escambia’s Men’s Sunday School Class.

The family would like to express their thanks to Covenant Hospice, Jay Hospital Staff, Baptist Hospital Staff, Dr. Bascon Raney and Staff ,Dr. Carletta Collins and Staff, Dr. Jason Roche and Staff, Century Care Center and Amedisys Home Health.

Hurley Linton DeLaFosse, Jr.

February 9, 2013

Hurley Linton DeLaFosse, Jr., 68, of Atmore, passed away Friday, February 08, 2013, at his residence. He was born on October 8, 1944, in Brewton. He served in the United States Army and was a Vietnam Veteran. He retired from Dental-EZ in Bay Minette and had worked for the Baldwin County School Board. He was a member of the First Baptist Church of Atmore and he was very active in youth sports.

He is survived by his wife Arlene Evans DeLaFosse of Atmore; mother, Beauress DeLaFosse of Atmore; sons, Anthony DeLaFosse of Bay Minette and Shannon (Maria) DeLaFosse of Daphne; daughters, Cindy (Eddie) Butler of Excel, Regina (Ernie) Wood of Stapleton, and Becky (Kevin) Brown of Pensacola; grandchildren, Brandon Butler, Neal Butler (Sarah), Michael Wood, Rachel Wood, Jacob Brown, Hannah Brown, Gibson DeLaFosse and great-granddaughter Lenora Butler.

Funeral services will be held Monday, February 11, 2013, at 10 a.m. from the Johnson-Quimby Funeral Home Chapel with Rev. Arnold Hendrix and Rev. Willie Oglesbee officiating. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery with military honors.

Active pallbearers will be Don Voight, Tommy Harrell, Aubrey Stanley, Myles “Bubba” Reed, Steven McDaniel and Melvin Middleton.

Honorary pallbearers will by Marvin Risher, Leon Lyles, Jack Ward, Floyd Adams, Carl Madison, Bill McMurphy, Bill Reed, Jerry Cochran, Jim Staff and Webb Nall.

Visitation will be held Sunday, February 9, 2013, from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. from the Johnson-Quimby Funeral Home.

In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the American Cancer Society and Community Hospice of Bay Minette.

Pine Forest Softball Drops Home Opener

February 8, 2013

The Pine Forest varsity softball team couldn’t get its bats going and struggled defensively Thursday night when the Lady Eagles lost their home opener, 14-1, to Choctawhatchee in five innings.

Junior right-hander Janessa Landas struck out three and allowed only one walk, but Choctaw’s bats were hot. The Indians connected for 15 hits, including nine for extra bases, and scored in every inning but the third. Pine Forest’s defense let Landas down, committing four errors that led to six runs.

Sophomore Rebecca Rudd went 2-for-2 with a walk and a run for Pine Forest (1-1) and is hitting .600 for the season. Landas went 1-for-2 with a walk, senior Kellie Payne had a single and junior Alexis Gardner singled and drove in the Eagles’ only run.

Pine Forest is off until Tuesday, when they play host to Gulf Breeze at 6:30 p.m.

The Lady Eagles’ junior varsity improved to 2-0 as they beat Choctaw 9-1. Sophomore Brooke Lauter pitched a complete game for the victory.

Escambia Upset Pensacola May Not Turn Over Money From Gas Tax Hike

February 8, 2013

Late last year, the Escambia County Commission approved a four cent gas tax increase in 2014 to fund ECAT public transportation. The Town of Century balked, and now it appears the City of Pensacola may not play along.

The City of Pensacola has yet to agree forward the additional four cents collected within the city to the county for ECAT.  Pensacola may instead use the funds as incentives for Project Stallion, an aerospace company with 500 jobs that is considering a location at the Pensacola International Airport. Pensacola is expected to collected over $700,000  annually from the gas tax.

Thursday morning, Escambia commissioners spoke out against the plan because the gas tax was intended for public transportation.

“It was well understood that the gas tax became the earmarked funding source for mass transit,” Commissioner Gene Valentino said. “This approach is not balanced or fair, and is a last minute move the (Pensacola) administrator made us aware of.”

Valentino said Pensacola needs to head “back to the drawing board” an find another way to finance their portion of a bond issue for Project Stallion.  Escambia County does, Valentino added, remain 100 percent committed to the new company.

“The county was expecting the city to agree to reduce the mill rate with this gas tax pledged to mass transit.  At the Committee of the Whole meeting on February 14th, the BCC will discuss and decide how we collectively will agree to fund Project Stallion, but it’s only fair that the city find a way to do what they financially committed to, without taking from the gas tax revenue dedicated completely to mass transit,” he said.

The Town of Century has also refused to agree to remit their portion of the tax to the county, claiming it would potentially force the three gas stations in Century to close as drivers cross the state line and purchase cheaper gas in Flomaton.

Century asked the Escambia County State Legislative Delegation to support a bill exempting Century from the tax, but that idea failed because Florida law won’t allow the exemption. Century is now considered a push for a constitutional amendment to nix the tax in Century.

NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Cool Tonight, Sunny Saturday

February 8, 2013

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tonight: Isolated showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 42. North wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
  • Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 65. North wind 5 to 10 mph becoming east in the afternoon.
  • Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. East wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Sunday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 68. Southeast wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.
  • Sunday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a low around 62. Southeast wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
  • Monday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a high near 70. South wind 5 to 10 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
  • Monday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a low around 53. North wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
  • Tuesday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a high near 66. Southeast wind 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
  • Tuesday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46.
  • Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 62.
  • Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 34.
  • Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 61.
  • Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 37.
  • Friday: Sunny, with a high near 62.

Tate Cheerleaders Take Second Best In The State

February 8, 2013

The Tate High School Varsity Cheerleaders took second best in the state during the recent FHSAA State Cheerleading Competition in Kissimmee.

After competing in the preliminary round against 14 teams, Tate advanced to final four before taking the title of state runner-up. This was highest finish in the five years of competing at the FHSAA state compeition. The team trained for the event since tryouts in April 2012and began working on the competition routine in September.

The Tate Varsity Cheerleaders are coached by Andrea Howey, who has been coaching the varsity program since 2009. Members of the varsity team are: Sarah Al-Qahtani, Sarah Baxter, Lauren Chavers, Kaylee Coots, Katie Cutting, Brooke Fowler, Ashley Gozalka, Corissa Hammer, DeAnna Jernigan, Kirstyn Johnson, Jordan McGowan, Lauren McKinnon, Shelby Miller, Maranda Milstead, Alie Phillips and Brooke Vincent.

Pictured: The Tate High School Varsity cheerleaders. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Escambia Man Gets 50 Years For Killing His Wife

February 8, 2013

A 51-year old Escambia County man that shot and killed his wife in October 2011 has been sentenced to 50 years in prison.

James Scott Thompson was convicted of second degree murder in December, with Judge Michael Allen handing down the half century sentence Thursday. He will be required to serve at least 25 years before being eligible for release.

Thompson shot his wife, 46-year old Bobbi Thompson, in the face during a drunken rage at their home in the 4900 block of LaVentana Circle.  Deputies found Thompson leaning over his wife’s body when they arrived on scene.

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