First Responders Honored On 9/11

September 12, 2013

A variety of events honored first responders on Wednesday.

The Little Escambia Baptist Church in Flomaton provide breakfast during a special service Wednesday morning for first responders, including the crew of Century’s Engine 519 and the Escambia County EMS unit stationed in Century (pictured top).

Breaking Bread, a new barbecue, sandwich and hamburger  restaurant at 6020 West Nine Mile Road, provided half price meals for first responders Wednesday, including Vicky and Stan Pagonis (picture left). Vicky is a dispatcher, and Stan is a police officer.

Georgio’s Pizza on East Cervantes Street fed first responders for free Wednesday and held their annual First Responders Pizza Eating Competition. The winner was Escambia County Deputy Scott Mashburn (pictured on the right below with restaurant owner Carl Hixon). He won $1,500 which be used to benefit law enforcement and the community.

Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Elections Supervisors Skeptical Of Renewed Purge Efforts

September 12, 2013

Secretary of State Ken Detzner will take his pitch for a revived voter scrub on the road next month, but supervisors of elections, caught in the crosshairs of last year’s problematic purge, and voting-rights advocates remain skeptical.

Detzner’s office announced Wednesday he would meet with supervisors in five cities to get their input into another attempt to identify and remove non-citizens from the voting rolls.

“Through transparency and the statutory due-process protection afforded to every voter, we can ensure the continued integrity of our voter rolls while protecting the voting rights of eligible voters from those who may cast an illegal vote,” Detzner said in a press release Wednesday announcing the “Project Integrity Roundtable Tour” of five cities beginning Oct. 3.

But despite the spin put on “Project Integrity” by Detzner’s office, his announcement immediately drew fire from Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley, who tweeted: “There is no greater ‘voter advocate’ or ‘voter roll integrity advocate’ than a Supervisor of Elections!”

Nearly all supervisors scrapped last year’s purge — the brainchild of Gov. Rick Scott — after they discovered that the majority of more than 2,600 voters, many of whom had Hispanic-sounding last names, flagged by Detzner’s office were eligible to vote. The problematic lists included the names of naturalized citizens and even some who were born in the U.S.

A coalition of voting groups representing minorities sued the state over the purge, but the lawsuit was dismissed after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling this summer that tossed out part of the federal Voting Rights Act.

Unlike last time, Detzner’s office is seeking supervisors’ input into the process. But initial reaction showed the supervisors remain dubious.

Orange County Supervisor of Elections Bill Cowles said he was contacted by Detzner’s office Tuesday and asked to provide space for a meeting, scheduled in Orlando on Oct. 7.

“All the supervisors are going to be concerned about why we’re doing it now and what has changed since the last time,” Cowles said.

Polk County elections supervisor Lori Edwards, president of the Florida State Association of Supervisors of Elections, said local officials’ willingness to participate will depend on the integrity of the data provided by the state.

Local supervisors — who have the sole authority to scrub the voter rolls — rely on the state to provide data related to felony convictions and deaths before removing voters. Those processes involve paperwork documenting when someone becomes ineligible or dies, Edwards said.

“We’re going to repeatedly request from the Division of Elections that before they send us the information, they carefully scrutinize the data and make sure it’s reliable. Providing documentation is the key. If you can show me that they’re here on a green card, fine. Then I’ll say hey, you might not be a citizen. But if you just say they’re on some list somewhere, that’s not enough,” she said.

Like Edwards, Corley said the supervisors agree that anyone who is ineligible to vote should be removed from the rolls. The non-citizen “audit” should be a part of routine voter-list maintenance like removing dead voters or convicted felons, Corley said.

“The problem is when you go through this process of doing an audit, it’s got to be done right and devoid of the perceptions of politics. I think sadly what we saw take place last year didn’t meet that litmus test,” Corley said.

In an email to the state’s 67 supervisors sent Wednesday, Division of Elections Director Maria Matthews asked the county officials to attend the meetings in Panama City, Jacksonville, Orlando, Sarasota and Fort Lauderdale.

“These meetings are expressly to discuss this issue with you, but for the sake of transparency, the press will be notified,” Matthews wrote.

Corley gave Detzner credit for reaching out to the supervisors but said it’s too early to say whether the new process will be better.

“I hope round two is a whole lot more accurate and professional than round one because that was amateur hour. That was embarrassing,” he said.

Some critics accused Scott, who is running for another term in 2014, of pushing the non-citizen voter purge because it resonates with tea party activists and conservatives who make up his base.

But Edwards said that, if the purge is a campaign strategy, it is also flawed.

“Why would you draw attention to something that you botched so badly the last time? If this is politically motivated, it seems silly because all it’s doing is rehashing the mess they caused prior to the presidential election,” she said.

Scott blamed last year’s faulty data on President Barack Obama’s administration because the Department of Homeland Security had refused to grant Detzner access to the “System Alien Verification for Entitlements Program,” or SAVE, database. Federal officials and the state entered an agreement allowing Detzner to use the database last summer.

On Monday, representatives from five civil-rights groups — Advancement Project, Florida New Majority, Florida Immigrant Coalition, Haitian-American Grassroots Coalition, and LatinoJustice PRLDEF — sent a policy statement to the 67 supervisors urging them not to rely on the SAVE database to remove voters.

Advancement Project led the lawsuit last year to stop a similar action by Detzner’s office. The state’s agreement with the Department of Homeland Security about the SAVE database also requires the state to create an appeals process for voters who are removed. But the groups noted that the appeals process has yet to be spelled out.

More than 80 percent of the individuals on last year’s list were minorities, the groups wrote on Monday.

“Based on this past experience, we are concerned that again this year, eligible voters of color will be wrongfully made to ’show their papers’ or otherwise reprove their citizenship before they can vote,” the statement reads.

The groups continued to question the veracity of the SAVE database used to cross-reference names on Florida’s lists of registered voters, as the federal database cannot verify U.S.-born citizens or those born overseas to U.S. citizens.

“The SAVE database is not a complete or accurate list of United States citizens; therefore it is not a definitive check for whether a person is a non-citizen,” the groups stated.

League of Women Voters President Deirdre Macnab said her group “will be paying attention” to the new plan.

“The secretary will need to pack a lot of shoe polish given the track record that previous voter purges have had in Florida,” said Macnab, noting the fears that Scott’s original plan could have caused eligible voters to be disenfranchised.

by The News Service of Florida

New Florida Gambling Rules At Odds With Poarch Creeks, Others In Industry

September 12, 2013

“Jockeys” — including those at Poarch Creek operated facility — would have to hang up their jeans and cowboy hats, and all race tracks would be required to have oval shapes under a set of new rules proposed by gambling regulators.

The proposed rules, released by the state Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering last week and up for discussion for the first time at a workshop Oct. 16, are an attempt to rein in the proliferation of questionable practices at race tracks and jai alai frontons throughout the state, ranging from “flag-drop” horse races to a fronton without a full roster of players.

But insiders say the draft rules, while a good starting place, are riddled with problems and demonstrate a lack of knowledge of Florida’s gambling industry, a cash cow for the state and for operators.

“Some of them make sense. Some of them haven’t been thought out very well,” said Kent Stirling, executive director of the Florida Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association. “One or two are pretty silly.”

Regulators’ decisions about permits and practices over the past few years have spawned 21 active lawsuits and deepened the animosity between the highly competitive operators. Lawmakers also are preparing to tackle the contentious gambling issues during the 2014 legislative session.

After getting beat up in the media and in courtrooms, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation is holding workshops on the proposed gambling rules crafted around laws the agency described in a news release as “unclear” and lacking “many standards necessary to ensure the continued integrity of pari-mutuel wagering.” The Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering is part of the department.

The draft rules as written “gut the horse industry in Florida,” said Marc Dunbar, a gambling lawyer and part-owner of a Gretna facility where regulators granted the first-ever rodeo-style “barrel racing” permit. An administrative law judge later ruled the agency erred in granting the permit, and a consent order between Dunbar and DBPR allowed Creek Entertainment Gretna — operated by the Alabama-based Poarch Band of Creek Indians — to instead hold “flag-drop” horse races and thereby keep its lucrative card room at the facility west of Tallahassee.

“I’m surprised they came out with something where they clearly didn’t understand the ramifications of the words that they put on the page,” Dunbar said.

The rules appear intended to stamp out future attempts at barrel racing or other non-traditional horse races in a variety of ways, including barring “the racing animal to change course in response to any obstacles on the racing surface” and setting up new requirements for jockeys, including that they “wear racing silks consisting of white pants and racing colors registered with the racing secretary” and weigh less than 130 pounds.

But the draft rules also would impose restrictions on current horse races that would devastate the industry if left unchanged, said Stirling, whose organization represents horse breeders and trainers.

Races that don’t comply with the eight new proposed race regulations would not count toward performances, which means they could affect tracks’ ability to simulcast other races but would have no impact on card rooms and, in Broward and Miami-Dade counties, slot machine operations.

The troubling changes would do away with races less than six furlongs in length and require at least six horses in every race.

Stirling said horses are often scratched from races after rain leaves tracks muddy. Operators would have to kill the entire race, creating problems for trainers and owners who’ve traveled to compete, Stirling said.

“We can’t live with that rule,” Stirling said.

The proposal that “no race must be shorter than 330 feet in length” — or six furlongs – “is a killer,” Stirling said. Two-year-olds that race in the summer can’t compete in such long races, he said.

“That’s silly. We run baby races at 4.5 furlongs and we’ve been doing it for a hundred years. I know they’re in Tallahassee but we have these things called phones,” he said.

Stirling also objected to a proposal that would require all horses to have at least 10 prior published races or workouts before entering a competition. That’s too many, he said.

The proposed jai alai regulations would require all permitholders to have a rotational system of at least eight different players certified by a “recognized national or international” jai alai association. The draft rule is apparently aimed at quelling a fight over jai alai games at Ocala Poker and Jai Alai, which began its 2012 season with just two players, drawing complaints from professional jai alai players.

Another proposal dealing with permits reverts to an old, unwritten requirement that applicants have zoning in place before permits are granted. The proposal would require a letter from local governments promising that zoning for pari-mutuel activities “would be viewed favorably.” Regulators, who once required only a letter from a land-use attorney saying zoning was available, later interpreted the statutes to mean that prior zoning is required before a permit is issued.

The workshops will give industry insiders the chance “to distill down some of these concerns of questions or confusion,” said Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering Director Leon Biegalski.

“They’re draft rules. They’re a starting point. We want to make sure that all the permit holders and all the stake holders are on the same page in terms of what the regulation is that’s out there and what should be out there,” he said.

Some question why DBPR, an executive agency run by Gov. Rick Scott’s office, is dealing with the rules now as the Legislature prepares for its own debate. Others say the proposals go far beyond the agency’s authority to craft rules. The agency is relying on a broad statute that gives it the power to establish “reasonable rules for the control, supervision, and direction of all applicants, permittees, and licensees and for the holding, conducting, and operating of all racetracks, race meets, and races held in this state.”

In the past, the agency has dragged its feet on promulgating regulations and has been criticized, including by judges, for making some decisions about gambling without going through the formal rule-making process.

For example, the agency’s rules about poker games are 5 years old and don’t reflect a 2010 change in state laws that did away with a $100 limit on poker games. DBPR held a workshop on the card room rules in February, the first since a July 2010 workshop that went nowhere. The agency has yet to release any formal proposed rules since this year’s card room workshop. For three years, there have been no limits on poker games, yet the rules still require dealers not to allow players to enter a game if they have more than $100 worth of chips.

The rule-making process can be lengthy. Rules require a fiscal analysis before they can become finalized. New rules can also be challenged, opening the door for expensive and drawn-out legal battles. Lawyers who successfully invalidate the rules in court can win up to $50,000 in legal fees.

There is little chance that the rules will be finalized before the Legislature convenes in March or even by the end of the session in May. Still, some industry players say they welcome the opportunity to bring Florida’s gambling more in line with traditional practices.

“Some of the issues that are there, such as what kind of races can you run, are the kinds of things that need to actually be discussed. Whether or not they pass it before the Legislature passes it or not, frankly the division should be applauded for addressing the issues,” said Wilbur Brewton, a lobbyist whose clients include Calder Race Course.

by Dara Kim, The News Service of Florida

FHP: Woman Falls Asleep, Causes Quintette Wreck

September 11, 2013

Three people received minor injuries in a Wednesday morning accident on Quintette Road in Escambia County.

The Florida Highway Patrol sayd 43-year old Pamela I. Harris of Pace was eastbound on Quintette near Rocky Branch Road when she fell asleep and crossed the center line. Her 2004 Mercedes struck a westbound Ford pickup driven by 39-year old Kimberly Sargent of Jay. Her vehicle continued until it hit 1999 Chevrolet pickup driven by 42-year old Alan L. Cook of Pace.

All injuries were minor; no one was transported to the hospital.

Harris was cited for driving on the wrong side of the roadway, according to the FHP.

Blog: Where Were You That September Morning?

September 11, 2013

September 11, 2001. It’s been 12 years.

Life, at least when that morning began, seemed good. I’ve always been a work at home dad, so I was home with my two girls. The youngest was almost four months old, and the oldest was approaching her fourth birthday. It was a normal morning. The little one was asleep, “fat and happy” as we used to say, after a morning bottle. The oldest was in the living room just a few feet from my office watching PBS Kids on the TV as I worked on a project for a client.

Then this arrived in my inbox:

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 08:52am

– World trade center damaged; unconfirmed reports say a plane has
crashed into tower. Details to come.

I got up, walked to the living room and flipped the TV to CNN. They were talking about how a pilot could make such an error, hitting such a large building. They were speculating that it was just a small plane. But then as the TV news helicopters zoomed their cameras in closer, the anchors were beginning to notice what I had already thought….those holes the tower were to big to have been a small plane.

I called my wife at work in Atmore. She had seen the breaking news email, and had tried to visit the CNN website to see the story. If you remember trying to use the internet that morning, it was near impossible to get a news website to load; they were all overloaded. She was unable to see the pictures. I was describing what I saw on the TV to her.

I managed to grab a picture from CNN via my web server and then download and email it to her. We were speculating about how it could happen when the second one hit.

I remember saying “wait, hold on, wait…”. I told her what I just watched on the TV. The second plane had hit the other tower. We quickly decided that we were at war as the anchors on TV speculated again that perhaps there was a problem with some navigational system, causing jetliners on a beautiful, clear morning in New York to fly into some of the tallest structures in the world.

Another breaking news email arrived:

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:21am

– Second plane crashes into World Trade Center.

She and I began to speculate ourselves that we were at war. What would we do? What should we do? What about the kids? It was not panic, understand, but just that protective momma and daddy instinct, I suppose. Prayer. That was a good idea. Maybe go to the bank and get out a little cash. That seemed like a good idea. How would you prep for a war on American soil? We were not sure.

I continued to relay information about what I was seeing on TV to my wife at work, who, in turn, would relay the information to her coworkers. They had a TV, but no cable service or antenna. They ended up fashioning a homemade antenna to see a fuzzy picture.

Meanwhile, the breaking news emails kept arriving…

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:32am

– Sources tell CNN one of two planes that crashed into World Trade
Center was an American Airlines 767.

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:42am

– President Bush calls plane crashes at World Trade Center a
terrorist act.

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:45am

– Significant fire at the Pentagon. Details to come.

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:46am

– White House evactuated. Details to come.

The Pentagon on fire? The White House evacuated? Notice that in CNN’s email they were in such a hurry that they misspelled “evacuated”. One sentence at a time, the situation became more grave.

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 09:55am

– CNN confirms a plane hit the Pentagon

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 10:03am

– One of World Trade Center towers collapses; fire forces
evacuation of State Department

Subject: CNN Breaking News
From: BreakingNews@CNN.COM
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 10:30am

– Second World Trade Center tower collapses in Manhattan

Over and over, we watched those towers collapse on TV, and we watched our Pentagon burn.

Our almost four year old asked a lot of questions. “Were people hurt? Did they need a Band-aid?” The magnitude of the event was lost on a four year old. Looking back at those first few hours, I think the magnitude of the event was lost on all of us.

Like many Americans, I sat glued to the TV that day, continuing to watch the video of the towers falling. Our almost four year old asked if another building fell down or if it was the same one. It was time to change the channel on the TV.

You might remember that many of the entertainment TV stations ran network news feeds. Others just simply ran screens about the day’s events. There was no USA network, no ESPN, no MTV. But on PBS, we found children’s programming at a time it was not normally on. For a little while, sitting in the living room floor holding my kids, the world stopped turning that September day, as we watched Big Bird and the Cookie Monster.

Country artist Alan Jackson later wrote a song “Where Were You When the World Stopped Turning?”.

Some of those lyrics:

Where were you when the world stopped turning that September day
Out in the yard with your wife and children
Working on some stage in LA
Did you stand there in shock at the site of
That black smoke rising against that blue sky
Did you shout out in anger
In fear for your neighbor
Or did you just sit down and cry

Did you weep for the children
Who lost their dear loved ones
And pray for the ones who don’t know
Did you rejoice for the people who walked from the rubble
And sob for the ones left below

But I know Jesus and I talk to God
And I remember this from when I was young
Faith hope and love are some good things He gave us
And the greatest is love

Where where you when the world stopped turning that September day? Your comments are welcome below.

It Literally Takes Your Heart And Breaks It – Local Students Describe Their Visit To 9/11 Memorial

September 11, 2013

It literally takes your heart and breaks it.

That’s how Northview High School senior Anna Fischer described her visit to the 9/11 Memorial in New York City.  Fischer was among nine Northview High School Yearbook staff members that visited New York City in March.

The students were just 3-5 years old when the Twin Towers fell; some of them have but faint memories of the actual day. Their memories are instead shaped by what history, television and the internet has showed them over and over. The planes, the crashes. The collapses, the unimaginable aftermath.

Tuesday, one day before 9/11 and six months after their visit to the 9/11 Memorial, we asked the Northview yearbook students to describe what they felt as they stood at Ground Zero. Below are their stories, in their own words, and their photographs.

Dalton Daniel — First going to the memorial, I thought, “This is going to be so awesome!”, which is exactly how I felt about the whole trip. But as soon as I saw the small park, the north and south pools and the new construction of the World Trade Center, I was overwhelmed with amazement. Seeing the names around the pools gave me a melancholy but inspirational feeling. Needless to say, the view of the 9/11 Memorial was perfect and was one of the greatest sights I’ve ever experienced.

Anna Fischer – Standing in the place of where the two twin towers stood was a phenomenal feeling, but it was also very emotional. Walking up to the site, everything was quiet. Friends and family members of those in the accident standing by the pools, looking for their loved one’s name. Walking through the site, its like I could see the whole incident of 9/11 reenacted in my mind. It literally takes your heart and breaks it. It was such a marvelous and emotional experience, and I’d love to be able to go back.

Tamara Green — During our trip to New York, I was able to experience the 9/11 Memorial. It was very touching scenery and definitely one that I will never forget. Seeing the names of the victims that passed away during this tragedy is really what touched me the most. It was an emotional site to visit, but I am grateful that we all had a chance to honor the victims.

Justin King– Visiting the 9/11 Memorial was a sobering experience. I felt grief for the families who lost loved ones. It was an experience I would be happy to have again.

Kamryn Brock — While at the 9/11 Memorial I realized to never take what you have for granted because you never know what the next day will bring. I felt a lot of grief for those who lost someone during this tragedy. It was an amazing feeling when we all gathered together to say a prayer.

Bethany Reynolds — Visiting the 9/11 Memorial submersed me in emotions; it was so unreal. Only being three when the attack occurred, I remember very little. Being at the location where so many innocent lives were lost was truly saddening. The emotions I felt are almost indescribable because being there in person just tugs at your feelings in so many directions. The memorial was a quiet place where those who lost their lives are remembered and where I prayed for those still mourning over their lost loved ones. Seeing all of the names of lives lost allowed me to realize how thankful I really am for my freedom.

Julia Thorpe – Being able to visit the 9/11 memorial in New York City was surreal and humbling. In the first grade, I did not understand the impact of a terrorist attack or the collective heartache it gave our nation. For the average citizen, the passing of 9/11 each year is a day of remembrance, but for the families of those victims, each and every day is a struggle full of deep sorrow because they lost a loved one for no other reason than pure hate. Seeing the names on the memorial reminded me that those people were innocent Americans living their lives, and getting caught up in an unimaginable nightmare. Despite the sadness that the memorial brought, it also deepened my immeasurable gratitude for being able to live in this country, where the nation came together for such a tragedy and where our military defends our freedoms.

Zach Johnson — At the 9/11 Monument, I felt a lot of different emotions. From sadness, caused by the loss of so many individuals, to the thankfulness for the brave first responders, various emotions moved in me. It was clear that the monument was a sacred spot, a spot that honored everyone affected by the tragedy that occurred. I was moved at the way it affected not only me, but everyone else at the monument.

Maranda Moye – Visiting the 911 memorial was something that really made an impact on the way I think about things. Seeing the actual place where so many people were killed was almost surreal. I felt true reverence for the lives that were lost that day. I think what really shook me up was seeing a mother’s name on the memorial followed by, “her unborn child”. It makes you stop and think how fragile life truly is.

The students are pictured at the bottom of the page, scroll down.

9/11 Memorial photos by Anna Fischer, Justin King and Bethany Reynolds for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Above: Memorial to the first responders that perished at the World Trade Center site.

Above: St. Paul’s Chapel, constructed in 1766. It is the oldest public building in continuous use in Manhattan. It hosted George Washington on his Inauguration Day and survived the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.

Pictured above, at the 9/11 Memorial last March, are Northview High Yearbook staff members Julia Thorpe, Kamryn Brock, sponsor Alison Robinson, Anna Fischer, Maranda Moye, Bethany Reynolds, Zach Johnson, Tamara Green, Zach Johnson and Justin King. Not pictured is Megan Carroll. Julia Thorpe, Maranda Moye and Dalton Daniel have since graduated from Northview.

Grant Funds Economic Development Plan For Town Of Century

September 11, 2013

The Town of Century is set to design a Economic Development Strategic Plan.

The town was awarded a $25,000 technical assistance grant from the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity to develop the plan.  The town received proposals from four companies to create the plan.

A workshop will be held on Monday, September 23 at 5:30 p.m. at town hall to hear presentations from the four firms. The full town council will then select a firm.

Man Tosses Brick Through Credit Union Door

September 11, 2013

A Century man is charged with throwing a brick through a glass door at a local credit union because he was allegedly upset with the customer service he received.

Brooks Griggs, 44, of East Pond Street, was charged with felony criminal mischief with property damage for the incident at the Pen Air Federal Credit Union on North Century Boulevard. He remained in the the Escambia County Jail Wednesday with bond set at $2,500.

“Yeah I was down there,” Brooks told Escambia County Sheriff’s deputies, according to an arrest report. “I threw a brick through the door.”

He first told deputies it was none of their business why he was upset with the financial institution, but he later said he was disrespected by the staff, according the report.  Griggs stated “he threw the brick through the glass door to show them they cannot treat him that way”.

The Sheriff’s Office report does not state if Griggs is a member of the credit union. He was given a trespass warning, forbidding him from returning to the business.

Search Continues For Missing Woman

September 11, 2013

Police and family members are continuing their investigation into the disappearance a Pensacola State College theater technician.

Tiffany Daniels, 25, was last seen August 12 as she left work early. Her 1999 Toyota 4Runner was found August 20 in a parking lot of Park West, near Ft. Pickens, on Pensacola beach. Her bicycle and phone were in the vehicle. Extensive searches have been conducted in the area near where her vehicle was found.

Pensacola Police Chief Chip Simmons said police are still asking the public to contact his department with any information they may have regarding Daniels’ location. At this point, police have said they have no reason to suspect foul play in Daniels’ disappearance.

Daniels is 5-feet 7-inches tall with blond hair and blue eyes. She has tattoos of plants growing from seeds on the top of both feet.  Anyone who may have information on Daniels’ location, or her activities before, during  and after her disappearance are asked to contact Detective Danny Harnett at  (850) 435- 1979 or the  Pensacola Police Department at (850)435-1900.

Pictured above and below.  Search and rescue volunteers prepare to search Pensacola Beach near Fort Pickens for Tiffany Daniels. File photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Northview Beats Central

September 11, 2013

The Northview Lady Chiefs JV and varsity teams beat the Central Jaguars in straight sets Tuesday evening.

In junior varsity action, Northview beat Central 25-18, 25-22.

Dimonique Brown had two aces and one kill for the Chiefs, while Mallory Merchant recorded four aces.

In varsity action, Northview swept three from Central, 25-16, 25-15, 27-25.

Danielle Steadham had four aces, three kills and six blocks for Northview, and Kyndall Hall had four aces and two assists.

The Lady Chiefs will head across the river to take on the Lady Royals of Jay High School on Thursday. The junior varsity plays at 5:00 and the varsity takes the court at 6 p.m. in a district game.

For a photo gallery, click here.

Pictured: Northview’s varsity swept three sets from Central Tuesday in Bratt. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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