Navy Receives First F-35C Lightning II

June 24, 2013

The U.S. Navy’s Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 101 received the Navy’s first F-35C Lightning II carrier variant aircraft from Lockheed Martin Saturday at the squadron’s home at Eglin Air Force Base..

The F-35C is a fifth generation fighter, combining advanced stealth with fighter speed and agility, fully fused sensor information, network-enabled operations and advanced sustainment.

The F-35C will enhance the flexibility, power projection, and strike capabilities of carrier air wings and joint task forces and will complement the capabilities of the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, which currently serves as the Navy’s premier strike fighter.

By 2025, the Navy’s aircraft carrier-based air wings will consist of a mix of F-35C, F/A-18E/F Super Hornets, EA-18G Growlers electronic attack aircraft, E-2D Hawkeye battle management and control aircraft, Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) air vehicles, MH-60R/S helicopters and Carrier Onboard Delivery logistics aircraft.

VFA 101, based at Eglin Air Force Base, will serve as the F-35C Fleet Replacement Squadron, training both aircrew and maintenance personnel to fly and repair the F-35C.

Pictured top: Lt. Cmdr. Christopher Tabert, F-35C Lightning II instructor pilot, U.S. Navy Strike Fighter Squadron VFA-101 lands Saturday afternoon at Eglin Air Force Base’s 33d Fighter Wing after a two hour flight from Ft. Worth, Texas.

Motorcyclist Killed In Early Morning Crash

June 23, 2013

A motorcyclist died in after running off the road in Santa Rosa County early Sunday morning.

The Florida Highway Patrol said 45-year old  James Mandabach of Milton was northbound on Glover Lane south of the intersection with Lambert Lane. He failed to negotiate a curve in the roadway and overturned onto the shoulder of the road. Mandabach was ejected from his Harley Davidson onto the roadway.

He was pronounced deceased at the scene of the 12:20 a.m. crash.

Scattered Showers Continue

June 23, 2013

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tonight: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
  • Monday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 10 mph in the morning.
  • Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 10pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 69. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Tuesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the morning.
  • Tuesday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 70. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
  • Wednesday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 10 mph in the morning.
  • Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 72. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Thursday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. West wind around 5 mph.
  • Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 72.
  • Friday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93.
  • Friday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.
  • Saturday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91.
  • Saturday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.
  • Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 90.

A Hero’s Goodbye: Family, Community Honor Fallen Soldier (With Photo Gallery)

June 23, 2013

Hundreds and hundreds of people turned out Saturday to honor Army Staff Sgt. Jesse Thomas, 31, who was killed June 10 while serving in  Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

Hundreds of Patriot Guard members stood guard outside the East Hill Church of God in Christ in Pensacola for the memorial service. An estimated 400 Patriot Guard riders escorted the funeral procession from the church to Barrancas National Cemetery aboard Naval Air Station Pensacola for the graveside service.

Many supporters held signs and waived flags in support for the solider and his family. Rumors were rampant prior to the service that the Westboro “church” would protest the funeral, prompting many to stand outside the service with signs targeting the Kansas hate-group “Westboro Baptist Church” — a controversial “church” that protests at the funerals of fallen soldiers.

“WBC You’re Mean”, read the sign of young girl. “God Is Love”, read a sign held by Father Nathan Monk, a Pensacola priest, as he stood next to an American flag.  “Jesus (Heart’s) The Troops and So Does Pensacola”… “WBC The Village Idiots”…”God Loves All” –  were just a few of the other signs outside the church aimed at the Westboro “church”.

For a photo gallery, click here.

During the memorial service, U.S. Rep. Jeff Miller spoke in tribute to Thomas, as did his brother Darrin Thomas and friend Randae Jordan.

Staff Sgt. Thomas attended Pensacola High School and joined the Army after graduation.

Thomas was assigned to the 39th Transportation Battalion, 16th Sustainment Brigade, 21st Theater Sustainment Command out of Kleber Kaserne, Germany. He leaves behind his wife, Michelle, also an active duty member, three stepchildren, and his mother, Irma Oliver.

During his service to his country, he earned numerous awards: Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Army Superior Unit Award, Army Good Conduct Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, Military Outstanding Volunteer Service Medal, Non-Commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon and the NATO Medal.

Pictured: The funeral service of Army Staff Sgt. Jesse Thomas Saturday afternoon in Pensacola. Photos by Mark Taylor for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Molino’s Gindl Gets First MLB Hit

June 23, 2013

Molino’s Caleb Gindl had his first hit  Saturday for the Milwaulkee Brewers in their 2-0 win over the Atlanta Braves. Gindl picked up his first Major League hit — a single — as a pinch-hitter in the sixth, before stealing his first bag.

He was called up by the Brewers a week ago for Ryan Braunl, who is on the 15-day disabled list with a thumb injury. Thursday against the Houston Astros, Gindl made it to third on an error — hitting a drive that was dropped by an Astros’ center fielder.

Century Reports Financial Bottom Line Is In Good Shape

June 23, 2013

The financial bottom line at the Town of Century is in good shape, according to the town’s accountant.

The latest figures show the town’s water and sewer fund with about $240,000 available, including about $35,000 from a motor vehicle wrecks settlement.  Excess money from the water and sewer fund is used toward the town’s general fund.

Overall, the town’s general fund is about seven percent below projections, but expenses are over over 10 percent less.

Next month, the town will begin the budget making process for the next fiscal year.  In July, the town’s accountant will meet with department heads who will in turn present their budget requests on August 1. Tentative budget workshops are set for August 15 and August 29, if needed.

Tate’s Eion Blanchard Awarded Telluride Summer Scholarship

June 23, 2013

Tate High School junior Eion Blanchard has been awarded a full scholarship to the 2013 Telluride Association Summer Program at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, “Food”.

This year Telluride Association is co-sponsoring four programs, two with Cornell University and two with the University of  Michigan. These six-week-long educational programs involve college-level seminars for  gifted and highly motivated high school juniors.

Admission to the TASPs is highly selective. This year’s 64 participants were chosen from 1,256 applications from all parts of the United States and abroad. The Telluride Summer Programs solicit applicants from high scorers on the Educational Testing Service’s PSAT and receive recommendations of potential applicants from school  teachers and counselors.

Telluride Association is an independent not­ for­ profit educational organization that has offered summer programs to high school juniors of exceptional promise since 1954.

Photos: Nature Photography Contest At Century Care Center

June 23, 2013

The residents at Century Care Center held their own Nature Photography Contest last week.

Most of the photographs were taken around the Century Care courtyard, and they were judged by staff and resident photographers. First place went to Carolyn Moye (top), second place to Clarice Simmons (left) and third place to Mittie Allen (below).

Other photographic entries are below.

Check Out The ‘Supermoon’ Tonight

June 23, 2013

The biggest, brightest moon of the year will be visible tonight.

The “supermoon” will be closer to the Earth than at any other time during the year – it will be the closest encounter between the earth and the moon until August 2014. Tonight is the best opportunity to see the larger and brighter than-normal supermoon.

TThe “supermoon” will appear 14 percent larger than normal, but it will not be possible to see the change without special equipment.

It’s a subtle difference, Noah Petro, NASA planetary geologist, told NASA TV. “It really is a reward for people that are looking at the moon quite regularly.”

The moon may appear 30 percent brighter, though this is merely an optical illusion as it looms larger on the horizon next to trees or buildings.

Still, astronomers say that the “supermoon” is worth looking at, and are encouraging people to do so.

It gets people out there looking at the moon, and might make a few more people aware that there’s interesting stuff going on in the night sky, said Geoff Chester of the US Naval Observatory.

Like in any “supermoon” event, higher tides are forecast, though the increase will not be significant compared to the 11 other full moons of the year.

Scientists say that the phenomenon does not threaten Earth; some people make connections between lunar events and crime or behavior.

There should be no impact for anybody on Earth,” Petro added. “There should be nothing unusual except maybe for more people staring up at the moon, which should be a wonderful thing.

Livescience.com has published a number of tips for those who plan to photograph the “supermoon”, including using a tripod to avoid blurry images and a long lens to capture the dazzling lunar display.

To your camera, the moon is extremely bright, especially against a black background, explained photographer Jason Mrachina. When you’re shooting at night, the relative difference between light and dark is extremely high, so you have to take that into consideration.”

Pictured: A supermoon that occurred May 5, 2012 as seen from Walnut Hill. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Scott’s Tres Bonne Week

June 23, 2013

After a weekend where Democrats expressed confidence that they could beat Gov. Rick Scott in 2014, a pair of events this week sent them a stark reminderthat approaches cliché: In politics, 17 months is a lifetime.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgOn Tuesday, a public poll showed Scott’s approval rating improving — not enough to give him a lead on some of his possible Democratic opponents, but enough to give him a chance to put his rumored $100 million re-election budget to good use.

“Now that doesn’t mean that happy days are here again for the governor, but if he is going to make a comeback these are the kind of steps that would be required,” said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, in a news release announcing the results. “Whether it is the start of something larger, we’ll see in the coming months.”

And the governor got more encouraging news by the time he stepped off a plane Friday, returning home from a trip to Paris. The state’s unemployment rate fell to 7.1 percent in May, the lowest since September 2008.

SCOTT’S TRES BONNE WEEK

The positive news for Scott’s political fortunes could only be seen when considering where he was a few months ago. Florida voters were evenly divided on his job approval rating, with 43 percent approving and 44 percent disapproving. That’s an improvement for a governor who, in March, was staring at 36 percent approval and 49 percent disapproval.

Scott also boosted his standing in a hypothetical race against former Gov. Charlie Crist, who spent the weekend showing off his newfound Florida Democratic Party membership at the Jefferson-Jackson soiree in Hollywood, Fla., but wouldn’t directly answer questions about whether he would challenge Scott.

If Crist does take that step, the poll showed the race moving from a drubbing for Scott to a sound defeat. Crist led the poll by 10 points, instead of 16 points just three months ago. U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson would also win by 10 points if he reverses his not-quite Shermanesque insistence that he won’t run.

Scott would beat former state Sen. Nan Rich, but that could have more to do with the fact that Rich remains unknown to 84 percent of Floridians despite Republican Party of Florida Chairman Lenny Curry’s efforts to bring attention to the only current or former elected official to announce her candidacy for the Democratic nomination.

In perhaps the surest sign that the poll was good news for Scott, Democrats tried to downplay the numbers.

“Only in Rick Scott’s world does going from an F to a D- represent success,” state Democratic Party Chairwoman Allison Tant said in a statement. “While polls will go up and down, what’s certain is that Florida voters do not trust this governor to fight for them and their families, and we are confident they will vote him out of office next year”

The governor was not in town to hear about the poll numbers — he had spent the week in Paris, attending an air show while leading a trade delegation. Nor was he there to hear Brown’s advice for how Scott could continue to turn things around.

“The governor needs to make voters believe he is responsible for a better economy. That’s the key to his electoral future,” Brown said. “He isn’t going to get re-elected because he is Mr. Personality. He needs to essentially convince voters, ‘You may not like me, but I’m the guy who is making things better.’ ”

But as Scott returned to the country — voila! — the state’s unemployment rate continued its turnaround. It fell to 7.1 percent in May, the latest chance for Scott to use his campaign slogan: It’s Working.

“Each month, we continue to distance ourselves from the national unemployment rate, and it is clear we are succeeding in growing opportunities for Florida families to pursue the American Dream,” Scott said in a release. “Once again, Florida’s unemployment rate is well below the national average.”

The national mark stands at 7.6 percent.

The state’s seasonally adjusted figure is down from 7.2 percent in April, according to the Department of Economic Opportunity.

Economists said, however, that some of the drop is still due to people having dropped out of the work force, in addition to new jobs created in a clearly recovering economy.

An economic overview released Wednesday by the Florida Legislature Office of Economic and Demographic Research estimated the unemployment rate would have been 8 percent in April if the workforce participation rate hadn’t change since December 2011.

Scott also returned to some work that could affect his standing, at least at the margins: the final bills from the legislative session that ended in early May have now hit his desk. Among the newcomers that the governor needs to grapple with are measures to ensure the public has a right to speak at government meetings (SB 50) and block firearms purchases by some people who voluntarily admit themselves for mental-health treatment.

SUMMER SCHOOL

Despite most of their students being out, the two boards that oversee the vast majority of education in Florida spent the week considering policies concerning public schools and universities.

After hearing hours of presentations about the future plans of universities, the Florida Board of Governors shot down those schools’ proposals on student fees — even though the increases were favored by students.

The most sweeping decision came on a proposal by eight universities to increase the “capital improvement trust fund” fees, or CITF fees, which pay for construction projects approved by university panels that draw at least half their members from the student body. But the board also rejected new environmental fees at two Florida schools.

Carlo Fassi, the student body president at the University of North Florida, said he and other colleagues strongly support the increase in the construction fee and the projects it could fund.

“I truly, and the student body presidents here truly do not believe that a vote against CITF is pro-student,” Fassi said. “Not whatsoever.”

But board members said they were growing exasperated with repeated requests to boost fees by what they were constantly assured was a small amount.

“And we amount it to, well, it’s only a cup of coffee,” board member Norm Tripp told students backing one of the fees. “But what we’ve got now are gallons and gallons of coffee that you’re paying for every credit hour.”

Meanwhile, the State Board of Education was maneuvering to avoid another embarrassing rollout for school grades after last year’s release was botched. Superintendents from around the state are warning that a possible collapse could happen because of a slew of changes to testing standards.

“When you put all of that together, I don’t think anybody’s taken the time to examine the implications of the simultaneous coming together of all these variables,” Miami-Dade Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said.

The board asked Education Commissioner Tony Bennett to put together a task force to look into the issue. Bennett’s predecessor, Gerard Robinson, resigned in 2012 after less than a year on the job after the public-relations pounding the department took when FCAT scores collapsed, followed a few months later by a school grades mix-up.

SLOW-WALK THE LINES

Looming almost as large as Scott’s poll numbers in the 2014 electoral picture is whether the districts that lawmakers drew for congressional districts — and legislative districts for that matter — would stand. Leon Circuit Court Judge Terry Lewis decided Thursday to push back the trial on a case challenging the congressional maps, in part because Lewis is still working on which documents can be used during arguments over the lines.

The trial was set to begin in August, but will now likely be pushed back to December or January, Lewis said. In that trial, a coalition of voting-rights groups will argue that the maps violated the state’s new, anti-gerrymandering “Fair Districts” standards.

Lewis’ decision became despite arguments from Ashley Davis, counsel for the Florida Department of State, that the delay could impact the 2014 election cycle, with candidates facing a March 31 deadline to collect signatures for qualifying petitions.

Meanwhile, the two sides continued scuffling over whose maps were actually biased. George Meros, an attorney for the Florida House, said the coalition’s maps would intentionally favor Democrats.

“A fundamental part of their complaint is that these are non-partisan entities that joined together that wanted to draw fair districts, when we know the evidence shows to the contrary,” Meros said.

But the newest filing from the coalition also included portions of the May 16 deposition of Marc Reichelderfer, listed as a “political operative,” which indicated that he received seven electronic drafts of congressional maps a couple of weeks before they were made public. The maps were given to Reichelderfer by an aide to then-House Speaker Dean Cannon.

When asked during the deposition if he received the maps so he could analyze the political impact of the proposed lines, Reichelderfer responded, “I could have done that, yes, sir.”

STORY OF THE WEEK: The Florida Board of Governors, under pressure from Gov. Rick Scott, shot down a series of fee increases requested by students.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “We always anticipate that when former Gov. Bush doesn’t get his way, he just keeps coming back until he can try and get it.”–Florida Education Association President Andy Ford, on whether he anticipates the return of an education bill backed by former Gov. Jeb Bush


By The News Service of Florida

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